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The University of Salford is a public research university in Salford, Greater Manchester, England, 1 mile (1.6 kilometres) west of Manchester city centre.The Royal Technical Institute, Salford, which opened in 1896, became a College of Advanced Technology in 1956 and gained university status in 1967, following the Robbins Report into higher education.
Salford Business School is located 3 km west of Manchester city centre in the Maxwell Building on the Peel Park Campus of the University of Salford. As a business school it offers business management courses, [1] business services [2] and business focused research. [3] It is one of the university's four constituent schools.
People associated with the University of Salford (4 C, 10 P) Pages in category "University of Salford" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
Originally the home for Salford Royal Technical Institute it was opened by the then Duke and Duchess of York (latterly George V and Queen Mary) in 1896.The building was renamed Peel Building in 1967 as the Royal College of Advanced Technology (as it had evolved into) was granted university status.
The second anechoic chamber at University of Salford. The first acoustic laboratories were established in Salford in 1965; in the early 1970s the Department of Applied Acoustics was formed. [1] In 1996 the university merged with University College Salford and a Department of Acoustic and Audio Engineering was formed.
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Edited by Martin Hall, Marvin Krislov and David L. Featherman. University of Michigan Press. Hall, Martin 2009. "New knowledge and the university". Anthropology Southern Africa, 32 (1 and 2): 69–86. Hall, Martin. 1987. Farmers, Kings, and Traders: The People of Southern Africa, 200-1860. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.