Who has been using the archives?
The Modern Records Centre supports academic and non-academic research at many different levels. The wide range of subjects which have been researched using our collections can be seen, in part, through the publications which reference or acknowledge documents or online resources at the MRC. Lists of citations are available for the following years.
Most of the citations included in these lists have been found through Google Scholar. If you know of a publication that we may have missed, please let us know.
Books:
Françoise Baillet:
Invincible brothers: The pen and the press in The Compositors’ Chronicle, 1840–43 in British Writers, Popular Literature and New Media Innovation, 1820–45, Alexis Easley (ed.) (Edinburgh University Press)
Rachel E Bennet:
Motherhood confined: Maternal health in English prisons (Manchester University Press)
David Cowan:
Politics of the past: Inter-war memories and the making of British popular politics, 1939–2009
Mike Day, NUS:
Student representation in the UK: In the face of criticism and maintaining legitimacy chapter 36 in 'The Bloomsbury Handbook of Student Politics and Representation in Higher Education'. Manja Klemencic (ed.) (Bloomsbury Academic)
Sharon Dror:
Politicizing and de-politicizing childhood: The case of the North Stoneham Basque Children’s Camp chapter in 'Untold Stories of the Spanish Civil War'. Raanan Rein and Susanne Zepp (eds.) (Routledge)
R Parker:
Attachment aware schools—changing education or social control? in: Attachment Aware Schools. (Palgrave Studies in Alternative Education)
Sarah Street, University of Bristol:
Managerial culture and labour relations at Pinewood chapter in 'Pinewood' (Palgrave Macmillan)
Mathew Thomson, University of Warwick:
Mental hygiene in Britain during the first half of the twentieth century: The limits of international Influence in 'International Relations in Psychiatry: Britain, Germany, and the United States to World War II'
Edward M Young:
Building engines for war: Air-cooled radial aircraft engine production in Britain and America in World War II (SAE International)
Articles:
Maya Adereth, LSE:
When do trade unions support universal demands? Organizational context and trade union strategies in the US and UK at the turn of the 20th century. (Cambridge University Press/International Labor and Working-Class History)
Trevor Boyns:
Measuring profit and performance, a cautionary tale: Birmingham Small Arms c.1911–c.1936 (Accounting History Review)
Susan L. Carruthers, University of Warwick:
Re-education: The imperial pre-history and afterlives of a pedagogical conceit (The International History Review)
Ruth Davidson, Queen Mary University of London:
Harriett Wilson, Audrey Harvey and Margaret Wynn: poverty, research and social action in 1950–1970s Britain (Women’s History Review, 1–21)
Matthew Graham & Christopher Fevre, University of Dundee/University of the Free State:
International solidarity at the grassroots: A case study of the British anti-apartheid movement, (Taylor & Francis/ Journal of Southern African Studies)
Eleanor Tiplady Higgs, Brunel University London:
The Young Women’s Christian Association in anglophone Africa (Oxford University Press/African History)
Richard Jobson:
A different species: the British Labour Party and the militant ‘other’, 1979-1983 (Taylor & Francis, Online/ Contemporary British History)
Andrew Johnston, University of Warwick:
The Bank of England and the ‘prehistory’ of corporate governance (Taylor & Francis/Business History)
Simon Renner, Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet:
Canadian nickel for Nazi Germany – how government-business relationships affected British blockade strategies in the 1930s (Taylor & Francis/The International History Review)
Klára Řiháková, University of Edinburgh:
Engaging across the “Iron Curtain”: Transnational student exchanges between Czechoslovakia and the United Kingdom, 1948–1970 (Carnival)
B T Rosendahl:Semi-militarized in war and lack of recognition in peace: Norwegian and other allied seafarers in the Second World War. (International Journal of Maritime History)
Katharina Troll, Hamburg Institute for Social Research:
Debating Europe transnationally: The Council of European Industrial Federations and the struggle over European integration, 1950–1962 (Journal of Modern European History Vol. 22(3)
Television:
Books:
Gordon Barrett:
China's Cold War Science Diplomacy (Cambridge University Press)
Stefan Berger, Klaus Weinhauer (eds.):
Rethinking Revolutions from 1905 to 1934: Democracy, Social Justice and National Liberation around the World (Palgrave Macmillan)
María Jesús Pena Castro (ed.):
Patrimonios vivos: música, performatividad y representación (Ediciones Universidad Salamanca)
Andy Clark:
Fighting Deindustrialisation: Scottish Women’s Factory Occupations, 1981-1982 (Liverpool University Press)
Joshua Cohen:
British Antifascism and the Holocaust, 1945–79(Routledge)
Tony Collins:
Raising the Red Flag: Marxism, Labourism, and the Roots of British Communism, 1884–1921 (BRILL)
Mary Davis:
Unite history volume 5 (1974-1990: The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): From zenith to nadir? (Liverpool University Press)
John Foster:
UNITE History Volume 4 (1960-1974): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): 'The Great Tradition of Independent Working Class Power' (Liverpool University Press)
Toral Jatin Gajarawala, Neelam Srivastava, Rajeswari Sunder Rajan, Jack Webb (eds.):
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Postcolonial Print Cultures (Bloomsbury)
Peter Grant
'Charitable work' Part III - People The British Home Front and the First World War (Cambridge University Press)
David M Higgins:
National Brands and Global Markets (Routledge)
Tom Kew:
The multicultural Midlands (Manchester University Press)
Diane Kirkby, Lee-Ann Monk, Dmytro Ostapenko:
Maritime Men of the Asia-Pacific: True-Blue Internationals Navigating Labour Rights 1906-2006 (Liverpool University Press)
Dick van Lente (ed.):
Prophets of Computing: Visions of Society Transformed by Computing (Association for Computing Machinery)
Wulf Livingston, Jo Redcliffe, Abyd Quinn Aziz (eds.):
Social Work in Wales (Bristol University Press)
Marjorie Mayo:
UNITE History Volume 3 (1945-1960): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): Post War Britain, the Welfare State and the Cold War (Liverpool University Press)
Gareth Millward:
Sick Note: A History of the British Welfare State (Oxford University Press)
Colm Murphy:
In Futures of Socialism: ‘Modernisation', the Labour Party, and the British Left, 1973–1997 (Cambridge University Press)
David Paulson:
Family Firms in Postwar Britain and Germany: Competing Approaches to Business (Boydell Press)
Daisy Payling:
'Political women: Class, feminism and the labour movement' in Socialist Republic (Manchester University Press)
'The labour movement: Marching forward' in Socialist Republic (Manchester University Press)
David Pitcher; Beverley Burke (eds.):
The Advancement of Social Work: Studies in Social Work to mark the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Social Workers’ Educational Trust, 1972-2022 (British Association of Social Workers)
Setara Pracha:
The Pathology of Desire in Daphne du Maurier’s Short Stories (Lexington Books)
Sally Robinson (ed.):
Principles and Practice of Health Promotion and Public Health (Routledge)
Andrew Seaton:
Our NHS: A History of Britain's Best Loved Institution (Yale Press)
Roger Seifert:
UNITE History Volume 2 (1932-1945): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): 'No turning back', the road to war and welfare (Liverpool University Press)
Sally Sheldon, Gayle Davis, Jane O'Neill, Clare Parker:
The Abortion Act 1967: A Biography of a UK Law (Cambridge University Press)
Hew Strachan (ed.):
The British Home Front and the First World War (Cambridge University Press)
Eileen Turnbull:
A Very British Conspiracy: The Shrewsbury 24 and the Campaign for Justice (Verso Books)
Richard Wallace; Jon Burrows:
Reel Change: A History of British Cinema from the Projection Box (John Libbey & Co Ltd)
Sam Warner:
Who governs Britain? Trade unions, the Conservative Party and the failure of the Industrial Relations Act 1971 (Manchester University Press)
Ryosuke Yokoe:
Alcohol and Liver Cirrhosis in Twentieth-Century Britain (Alcohol and Liver Cirrhosis in Twentieth-Century Britain)
Articles:
Pavel Alam:
Racism and resistance, from Windrush to recession: What were the responses by Black workers and Trade Unions to racism at work in the key industrial disputes that occurred in England between 1948 - 1981, and what was the impact of these responses?
Ahmad Azhar, Institute of Business Administration, Karachi:
“We don't need no education”: Lessons from the (Un)making of Lahore's Proletarian Vanguard (ca. 1920–2000) (International Labor and Working-Class History)
Christine Bachman-Sanders, University of Minnesota:
Reading Smart: Queering and Contextualising a Cycling Diary(onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
Matthew Cooper, University of York:
The return of forced labour in the workfare state: Enforced work for benefits in the UK in the 1930s and since 2010 (Journal of Poverty and Social Justice)
Jennifer Crane, University of Bristol:
The NHS’s forgotten workforce - a historical essay (British Medical Journal)
Lucy Delap, University of Cambridge:
Slow Workers: Labelling and Labouring in Britain, c. 1909–1955 (Social History of Medicine)
Paul Griffin, Northumbria University:
Unemployed Workers’ Centres (1978–): Spatial Politics, “Non-Movement”, and the Making of Centres (Antipode)
Richard Johnson:
‘Women Against the Common Market’ (Contemporary British History)
Kat Jungnickel, Goldsmiths’ College:
Speculative sewing: Researching, reconstructing, and re-imagining wearable technoscience (Social Studies of Science)
Diarmaid Kelliher:
Disruption and Control: Contesting Mobilities through the Picket Line (Taylor & Francis Group / Annals of the American Association of Geographers)
Kirsty Lohman, Ruth Pearce, Gary Craig:
'Learning from the history of community development' (Community Development Journal)
Marc Matera, University of California:
'The African Grounds of Race Relations in Britain' in Twentieth Century British History (Oxford Academic)
John McIlroy, Middlesex University and Alan Campbell, University of Liverpool:
A Scholarly Life: Richard Croucher (1949–2022)
Philip Ollerenshaw, University of the West of England:
Business, politics and the transition from war to peace: The Federation of British Industries, 1916-25 (Taylor & Francis Group/Business History)
Maja Pandžić, University of Zadar, Croatia:
Major Pronin Stories by L. Ovalov – The Beginning of a Mythological Hero (Journal of Literature, Culture and Literary Translation)
Josh Patel, University of Warwick:
Midlands Industrialists, Liberal Education and the Founding of the University of Warwick in 'Midland History' (Taylor & Francis online)
Carol Propper, Imperial College Business School:
Socio-economic inequality in the distribution of healthcare in the UK (IFS Deaton Review of Inequalities)
Matthew Roberts, Sheffield Hallam:
Popular politics, heritage and memories of Chartism in England and Wales, 1918–2020 (Historical Research)
S.M. Rodriguez:
African feminisms for abolitionist futures: archival hauntings in a speculative geography. Empowering women for gender equity (Black Transnational Feminisms and the Question of Structure, Taylor & Francis online)
Gavin Schaffer & Saima Nasar, University of Birmingham:
Black lives and the ‘Archival pulse’: the murder of Neil “Tommy” Marsh and other stories
Lizzie Seal, University of Sussex, and Roger Ball, University of the West of England:
The Howard League and liberal colonial penality in mid-20th-century Britain: The death penalty in Palestine and the Kenya Emergency (The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice)
Louise Settle,Tampere University, Finland :
Rehabilitating homes and humans: probation, gender and domesticity in Britain, 1907–1960 (Women's History Review)
Joseph Sharples, University of Glasgow:
The Workers Who Built the University of Glasgow, 1867–71 (Architectural History)
Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick:
About a Play: Stanley Middleton’s Pentrich Revolution (History Workshop Journal)
D. Strittmatter:
The Peterloo Massacre Site. In: Memory, Heritage, and Preservation in 20th-Century England. Britain and the World.
Valeria Zanier, University of Bologna:
Forging new meanings of Europe. The cross-ideological logic of Western Business Interest Associations (BIAs) promoting trade with Mao’s China (Business History)
Counterbalancing low expectations with high hopes: Integrating global technology and pre-1949 legacy in China’s motor vehicle industry in the 1950s (European Review of History)
Books:
Clare Anderson, University of Leicester:
Convicts: A Global History (Cambridge University Press)
Aurélie D. Andry, Emmanuel Mourlon-Druol, Haakon A. Ikonomou, Quentin Jouan (eds.):
Rethinking European Integration History in Light of Capitalism (Routledge)
Gordon Barrett, University of Oxford:
China's Cold War Science Diplomacy (Cambridge University Press)
Paula Bartley:
Women’s Activism in Twentieth-Century Britain (Palgrave Macmillan)
Romain Bonnet, Amerigo Caruso and Alessandro Saluppo:
The First Revolution of the Twentieth Century: Fears of Socialism and Anti-Labour Mobilisation in Europe After the Russian Revolution of 1905, chapter inRethinking Revolutions from 1905 to 1934: Democracy, Social Justice and National Liberation around the World, eds. Stefan Berger and Klaus Weinhauer (Palgrave Macmillan)
Katherine Bruce-Lockhart, University of Waterloo:
Carceral Afterlives: Prisons, Detention, and Punishment in Postcolonial Uganda (Ohio University Press)
Andy Clark, Newcastle University:
Fighting Deindustrialisation: Scottish Women’s Factory Occupations, 1981-1982 (Liverpool University Press)
Joshua Cohen, University of Leicester:
British Antifascism and the Holocaust, 1945–79 (Routledge)
Catherine Cox, University College Dublin, and Hilary Marland, University of Warwick:
Disorder Contained: Mental Breakdown and the Modern Prison in England and Ireland, 1840-1900 (Cambridge University Press)
Jennifer Crane and Jane Hand (eds.):
Posters, protests, and prescriptions: Cultural histories of the National Health Service in Britain (Manchester University Press)
Henry Dee:
Clements Kadalie, the ICU and the transformation of Communism in Southern Africa, 1917–31, chapter in Revolutionary lives of the Red and Black Atlantic since 1917, eds. David Featherstone, Christian Høgsbjerg and Alan Rice (Manchester University Press)
Leon Fink, University of Illinois at Chicago:
Undoing the Liberal World Order: Progressive Ideals and Political Realities Since World War II (Columbia University Press)
John Foster, University of the West of Scotland:
UNITE History Volume 4 (1960-1974): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): 'The Great Tradition of Independent Working Class Power' (Liverpool University Press)
Ronnie Fraser:
British Trade Unions, the Labour Party, and Israel’s Histadrut (Palgrave Macmillan)
Isabel Gejo-Santos, IES Francisco Salinas:
Katharine Atholl en Norteamérica: entre la política y la philantropía (1938) / Katherine Atholl in North America, between politics and philantropy (1938), chapter in Patrimonios vivos: música, performatividad y representación, ed. María Jesús Pena Castro (Ediciones Universidad Salamanca)
Paul Griffin, Northumbria University:
Protest: Contested Hierarchies and Grievances of the Sea, chapter in The Routledge Handbook of Ocean Space, eds. Kimberley Peters, Jon Anderson, Andrew Davies and Philip Steinberg (Routledge)
Diane Kirkby, University of Technology Sydney, Lee-Ann Monk, La Trobe University, and Dmytro Ostapenko, La Trobe University:
Maritime Men of the Asia-Pacific: True-Blue Internationals Navigating Labour Rights 1906-2006 (Liverpool University Press)
Keith Laybourn, University of Huddersfield:
The Football Pools and the British Working Class: A Political, Social and Cultural History (Routledge)
Marjorie Mayo, Goldsmiths, University of London:
UNITE History Volume 3 (1945-1960): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): Post War Britain, the Welfare State and the Cold War (Liverpool University Press)
Keith Mc Loughlin, University of Bristol:
The British Left and the Defence Economy: Rockets, Guns and Kidney Machines, 1970-83 (Manchester University Press)
Gareth Millward, University of Birmingham:
Sick Note: A History of the British Welfare State (Oxford University Press)
David Pitcher; Beverley Burke (eds.):
The Advancement of Social Work: Studies in Social Work to mark the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Social Workers’ Educational Trust, 1972-2022 (British Association of Social Workers)
Setara Pracha, University of Buckingham:
The Pathology of Desire in Daphne du Maurier’s Short Stories (Lexington Books)
Sally Robinson (ed.), Canterbury Christ Church University:
Principles and Practice of Health Promotion and Public Health (Routledge)
Roger Seifert, University of Wolverhampton:
UNITE History Volume 2 (1932-1945): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): 'No turning back', the road to war and welfare (Liverpool University Press)
Louise Settle, University of Helsinki:
Probation and the Policing of the Private Sphere in Britain, 1907-1962 (Bloomsbury)
Sally Sheldon, University of Bristol and University of Technology Sydney; Gayle Davis, University of Edinburgh; Jane O'Neill, University of Edinburgh; Clare Parker, University of Adelaide:
The Abortion Act 1967: A Biography of a UK Law (Cambridge University Press)
James Sumner:
The United Kingdom: Going it Alone?, chapter inProphets of Computing: Visions of Society Transformed by Computing, ed. Dick van Lente (Association for Computing Machinery)
Melsia Tomlin-Kräftner, University of Bristol:
A Narrative Exposition of British Colonial Rule in the Americas, chapter inContemporary Intersectional Criminology in the UK: Examining the Boundaries of Intersectionality and Crime, eds. Jane Healy and Ben Colliver (Bristol University Press)
Eileen Turnbull:
A Very British Conspiracy: The Shrewsbury 24 and the Campaign for Justice (Verso Books)
Richard Wallace and Jon Burrows:
Reel Change: A History of British Cinema from the Projection Box (John Libbey & Co. Ltd.)
Charters Wynn, University of Texas at Austin:
The Moderate Bolshevik: Mikhail Tomsky from The Factory to The Kremlin, 1880-1936 (Brill)
Articles:
Hakim Adi, University of Chichester, and Mario Soares Neto, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Salvador:
Pan-Africanism and Internationalism in 1945: “Labour cannot emancipate itself in the white skin where in the black it is branded” (Revista Direito e Praxis)
Trevor Boyns, Cardiff University:
Organizational change, budgetary control and success and failure in Formula 1: Rubery Owen and British Racing Motors, 1947–1977 (Management & Organizational History)
Scott Burnett, University of Gothenburg, and John E. Richardson, Keele University:
‘Breeders for race and nation’: gender, sexuality and fecundity in post-war British fascist discourse (Patterns of Prejudice)
Marc Collinson, Bangor University:
The Loughborough ‘Mansfield Hosiery’ Strike, 1972: Deindustrialisation, Post-war Migration, and Press Interpretation (Midland History)
Matthew Cooper, University of York:
The return of forced labour in the workfare state: enforced work for benefits in the UK in the 1930s and since 2010 (Journal of Poverty and Social Justice)
Jennifer Crane, University of Bristol:
The NHS’s forgotten workforce - a historical essay (British Medical Journal)
Jamie M. Emerson, Purdue University, West Lafayette:
Organized Savagery: Legitimization of British Occupation in the Post-Ottoman State (The Purdue Historian, vol.10)
Paul Griffin, Northumbria University:
Unemployed Workers’ Centres (1978–): Spatial Politics, “Non-Movement”, and the Making of Centres (Antipode)
Charlotte Heath-Kelly and Šádí Shanaáh, University of Warwick:
The long history of prevention: Social Defence, security and anticipating future crimes in the era of ‘penal welfarism’ (Theoretical Criminology)
Max Hodgson, University of Warwick:
Pathologising ‘Refusal’: Prison, Health and Conscientious Objectors during the First World War (Social History of Medicine)
John Hudson and Neil Lunt, University of York:
The contested jurisdiction of Social Policy in UK universities since 1972 (Journal of Social Policy)
Kat Jungnickel, Goldsmiths’ College:
Speculative sewing: Researching, reconstructing, and re-imagining wearable technoscience (Social Studies of Science)
Laura López Martin, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos:
Redes transnacionales de propaganda a favor de la Republica: Guillermo Fernández Zuñiga y la producción cinematográfica Spain in exile (Historia y comunicación social)
Alan McNee, Institute of English Studies:
“Scorchers”, “wheelmen”, and “road lice”: visitors’ books and cycling culture in late-Victorian Britain (Studies in Travel Writing)
Ian F. Mcneely, University of Oregon:
Research excellence and the origins of the managerial university in Thatcher's Britain (Contemporary British History)
Maja Pandžić, University of Zadar, Croatia:
Major Pronin Stories by L. Ovalov – The Beginning of a Mythological Hero (Journal of Literature, Culture and Literary Translation)
Carol Propper, Imperial College Business School; Institute for Fiscal Studies:
Socio-economic inequality in the distribution of healthcare in the UK (IFS Deaton Review of Inequalities)
Felix Römer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin:
Poverty, Inequality Statistics and Knowledge Politics Under Thatcher (English Historical Review)
Louise Settle, Tampere University, Finland:
Rehabilitating homes and humans: probation, gender and domesticity in Britain, 1907–1960 (Women's History Review)
Ihab Shabana, Hellenic Open University:
From an Understanding to a Securitizing Discourse: The British Left’s Encounter with the Emergence of Political Islam, 1978–2001 (Religions)
Joseph Sharples, University of Glasgow:
The Workers Who Built the University of Glasgow, 1867–71 (Architectural History)
Peter Sloman, University of Cambridge:
‘Better off with Labour’? Fiscal policy, electoral strategy and the road to John Smith’s shadow budget, 1979–92 (Historical Research)
Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick:
About a Play: Stanley Middleton’s Pentrich Revolution (History Workshop Journal)
Greig Taylor, University of New South Wales, Sydney; Matthew McDonald, Fulbright University, Ho Chi Minh City:
"Selling their jobs?": Thatcherism, voluntary redundancy and worker resocialisation (Labour History)
Valerio Torreggiani, University of Lisbon:
Corporatism in Early Twentieth-Century Britain: Three Alternatives for a Post-Liberal Order (Contemporary European History)
Valeria Zanier, University of Bologna:
Forging new meanings of Europe. The cross-ideological logic of Western Business Interest Associations (BIAs) promoting trade with Mao’s China (Business History)
Exhibitions
Breaking the News, British Library, Apr-Aug 2022
The Persistence of the Victorian Prison, Lincoln Central Library, Nov 2022
Books:
Matheus Cardoso da Silva, University of São Paulo:
The Left Book Club and its associates: The transnational circulation of socialist ideas in an Atlantic network, chapter inThe Red and the Black: The Russian Revolution and the Black Atlantic, eds. David Featherstone and Christian Høgsbjerg.
Elinor Cleghorn:
Unwell Women: A Journey Through Medicine And Myth in a Man-Made World(W&N)
Richard Cohen:
Making History: The Storytellers Who Shaped the Past(Orion)
Ross Cranston, London School of Economics and Political Science:
Making Commercial Law through Practice 1830–1970: Law as Backcloth(Cambridge University Press)
Guillermo P. Curbera:
William Henry Young, an Unconventional President of the International Mathematical Union, chapter inMathematical Communities in the Reconstruction After the Great War 1918–1928: Trajectories and Institutions, eds. Laurent Mazliak, Rossana Tazzioli (Birkhäuser)
Mary Davis, Royal Holloway, University of London, and John Foster, University of the West of Scotland:
UNITE History Volume 1 (1880-1931): The Transport and General Workers' Union (TGWU): Representing a mass trade union movement(Liverpool University Press)
Andrew Dilley, University of Aberdeen:
The tale of two Commonwealths? The (British) Commonwealth of Nations, decolonisation and the break-up of Greater Britain, chapter inThe break-up of Greater Britain, eds. Christian D. Pedersen and Stuart Ward
Jill Felicity Durey, Edith Cowan University:
John Galsworthy’s Compassion: All Beings Great and Small(Palgrave Macmillan)
James Gregory, Plymouth University:
Mercy and British Culture, 1760-1960(Bloomsbury)
Tania Hershman, Ailsa Holland & Jo Bell:
On This Day She: Putting Women Back Into History, One Day At A Time(Metro Publishing)
Diarmaid Kelliher, University of Glasgow:
Making Cultures of Solidarity: London and the 1984–5 Miners’ Strike(Routledge)
Neville Kirk, Manchester Metropolitan University, and Yann Béliard, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3 (eds,):
Workers of the Empire, Unite: Radical and Popular Challenges to British Imperialism, 1910s-1960s(Liverpool University Press)
Julia Kölbl, Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz:
The Babel of Tongues: Englischsprachige Freiwillige und ihr Beitrag zur Kommunikation im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg(Lit Verlag)
Elizabeth Krasemann:
Teaching the Holocaust by Inquiry(Lit Verlag)
David Kynaston:
On the Cusp: Days of '62(Bloomsbury)
Gordon Lynch, University of Kent:
UK Child Migration to Australia, 1945-1970: A Study in Policy Failure(Palgrave Macmillan)
Linda Maynard:
Brothers in the Great War: Siblings, masculinity and emotions(Manchester University Press)
Seán McConville, Queen Mary University of London:
Irish Political Prisoners 1960-2000: Braiding Rage and Sorrow(Taylor & Francis)
Duncan Money, Leiden University:
White Mineworkers on Zambia's Copperbelt, 1926-1974(Brill)
Stephen James Murray, Swansea University:
The Experiences of Basque and Spanish Iron Workers and their Descendants in Wales from 1900(Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
Laura Newman, King's College London:
Germs in the English Workplace, c.1880–1945(Routledge)
Matt Perry, Newcastle University:
The Global Challenge of Peace: 1919 as a Contested Threshold to a New World Order(Liverpool University Press)
John H. Pierson:
A New History of Social Work: Values and Practice in the Struggle for Social Justice(Routledge)
Vike Martina Plock, University of Exeter:
The BBC German Service during the Second World War: Broadcasting to the Enemy(Palgrave Macmillan)
Daniel Renshaw, University of Reading:
The Discourse of Repatriation in Britain, 1845-2016: A Political and Social History(Routledge)
Fern Riddell:
Sex: Lessons From History(Hodder & Stoughton)
Joanna Rzepa, University of Essex:
Modernism and Theology: Rainer Maria Rilke, T. S. Eliot, Czesław Miłosz(Palgrave Macmillan)
Mike Taber (ed.):
Under the Socialist Banner: Resolutions of the Second International, 1889-1912(Haymarket Books)
Michael Tichelar, University of the West of England:
Why London is Labour: A History of Metropolitan Politics, 1900-2020(Routledge)
Selina Todd, Oxford University:
Snakes and Ladders: The Great British Social Mobility Myth(Chatto & Windus)
James R. Vaughan:
The media, antisemitism, and political warfare in Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party, 2015‒2019, chapter inResearch Handbook on Political Propaganda, eds. Gary D. Rawnsley, Yiben Ma and Kruakae Pothong (Edward Elgar Publishing)
Jonathan Whitehead:
Spanish Republicans and the Second World War: Republic Across the Mountains(Pen & Sword History)
John F. Wilson, Steven Toms, Ian Jones (eds.):
The Role of Governments in Markets: Interventions and Unexpected Consequences in Industrial History(Routledge)
Waqar H. Zaidi, Lahore University of Management Sciences:
Technological Internationalism and World Order: Aviation, Atomic Energy, and the Search for International Peace, 1920–1950(Cambridge University Press)
Steven E. Zipperstein, University of California, Los Angeles:
Zionism, Palestinian Nationalism and the Law: 1939-1948(Routledge)
Articles:
Wendy Andrews and James W. P. Campbell, University of Cambridge:
How wallpaper archives contribute to our understanding of historic building interiors(Journal of Architectural Conservation)
Zaib un Nisa Aziz, Yale University:
Songs of Sisterhood: Feminist Political Practice between Empire and Internationalism 1910–20(Gender & History)
Emanuel Nicolas Bourges Espinosa, University of Birmingham:
Managing industrial discontent in Britain, 1927-1930: the industrial cooperation talks and the segregation of the national unemployed workers’ movement(Labor History)
Kate Bowan, Australian National University:
Some British Musical Responses to the Spanish Civil War(Journal of War and Culture Studies, vol.14, issue 4)
Mike Burt:
Introducing Social Workers: Their Roles and Training(The British Journal of Social Work)
Thomas Da Costa Vieira and Emma A. Foster, University of Birmingham:
The elimination of political demands: Ordoliberalism, the big society and the depoliticization of co-operatives(Competition & Change)
David Clayton, University of York:
Conflict and conciliation: industrial relations in an industrialising Hong Kong, ca. 1946-1960(Labor History)
Matthew Cooper, University of York:
‘Blind alley’ to ‘steppingstone’? Insecure transitions and policy responses in the downturns of the 1930s and post 2008 in the UK(Journal of Youth Studies)
Rodrigo Fracalossi de Moraes, Institute for Applied Economic Research, Rio de Janeiro:
Arming a few dictators but not others: The politics of UK arms sales to Chile (1973–1989) and Argentina (1976–1983)(The British Journal of Politics and International Relations)
David Featherstone, University of Glasgow:
Maritime Labour, Circulations of Struggle, and Constructions of Transnational Subaltern Agency: The Spatial Politics of the 1939 Indian Seafarers’ Strikes(Antipode)
Sam Harrison:
The 'protest' Olympics that never came to be(Smithsonian Magazine)
Alex Heslop, University of Reading:
Open Shop: Technological Change in London’s Printing Industry, 1980–1992(Perspectives on Design and Digital Communication II)
Dan Hodgkinson, Oxford University:
Politics on liberation's frontiers: Student activist refugees, international solidarity, and the struggle for Zimbabwe, 1965-79(The Journal of African History, vol.62, issue 1)
Edgar Jones, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, London:
Covid-19 and the Blitz compared: mental health outcomes(The Lancet)
Doug Munro, University of Queensland:
George Rudé: The Contours of a Career(French History and Civilization)
Mark Neuendorf, University of Adelaide:
Keeping the Light Shining: The National Asylum Workers' Union Magazine and the Print Culture of British Trade Unionism, ca. 1912–14(Victorian Periodicals Review, vol.54, no.1)
Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University:
Middle-class interests, redistribution and the postwar success and failure of the solidaristic welfare state(Journal of European Social Policy)
Jose Parra-Martinez, Nicolás Stutzin-Donoso, Juan Manuel López Carreño:
Playgrounds y espacio común. A propósito del juego en la ciudad suspendida(Revista Proyecto Progreso Arquitectura)
Eleanor Peters, University of Aberdeen:
‘On the fringe of the Technical World’: female electrical appliance demonstrators in interwar Scotland(Women's History Review)
Martin Powell, University of Birmingham, and Claire Hilton, Royal College of Psychiatrists:
How the Sans Everything and Ely inquiries put reform of psychiatric hospitals onto the United Kingdom government agenda(International Journal of Health Governance)
Alison Ribeiro de Menezes, University of Warwick:
Recovering Refugee Stories: Chilean Refugees and World University Service(Journal of Refugee Studies)
Boram Shin, Hanyang University:
The Origins of Soviet Russia’s Public Diplomacy: The Russian Famine (1921-1922) and the Creation of VOKS(The Journal of Slavic Studies, vol.36, no.3)
Jeannette Strickland, University of Liverpool:
European sources for advertising and marketing history(Journal of Historical Research in Marketing)
Sandra Trudgen Dawson:
Refugee Children and the Emotional Cost of Internationalism in Interwar Britain(Journal of British Studies)
James Vernon, University of California, Berkeley:
Heathrow and the Making of Neoliberal Britain(Past & Present)
E. James West, Northumbria University:
Hunt the Wizard! Race, Immigration, and British Tabloid Coverage of David Duke’s 1978 Tour(Contemporary British History, vol.35, issue 1)
Kathryn Woods, Pierre Botcherby, Joshua Patel, Lauren Sleight and Rebecca Stone, University of Warwick:
Then & Now - Arts at Warwick(Exchanges: The Interdisciplinary Research Journal, vol.8, no.4)
Ryosuke Yokoe, University of Tokyo:
Brewers, Booze and Medicine: Industrial Funding of Alcoholic Liver Disease Research in 1980s Britain(Social History of Medicine)
Books:
Kasper Braskén, Nigel Copsey, David Featherstone (eds.):
Anti-Fascism in a Global Perspective: Transnational Networks, Exile Communities, and Radical Internationalism(Routledge)
Morris Brodie, Queen’s University Belfast:
Transatlantic Anarchism during the Spanish Civil War and Revolution, 1936-1939: Fury Over Spain(Routledge)
Tom Buchanan, University of Oxford:
Amnesty International and Human Rights Activism in Postwar Britain, 1945–1977(Cambridge University Press)
Mike Burt, University of Chester:
A History of the Roles and Responsibilities of Social Workers: From the Poor Laws to the Present Day(Routledge)
Neil Carter, De Montfort University:
Cycling and the British: A Modern History(Bloomsbury Academic)
Zachary D. Carter:
The Price of Peace: Money, Democracy, and the Life of John Maynard Keynes(Random House USA Inc)
Saul Dubow and Richard Drayton (eds.):
Commonwealth History in the Twenty-First Century(Palgrave Macmillan)
Robbie Duschinsky, University of Cambridge:
Cornerstones of Attachment Research(Oxford OUP)
Keith Gildart and David Howell (eds.):
Dictionary of Labour Biography: Volume XV(Palgrave Macmillan)
Emma Griffin, University of East Anglia:
Bread Winner: An Intimate History of the Victorian Economy(Yale University Press)
Ben Harker, University of Manchester:
The Chronology of Revolution: Communism, Culture, and Civil Society in Twentieth-Century Britain(University of Toronto Press)
Tim Harper, University of Cambridge:
Underground Asia: Global Revolutionaries and the Assault on Empire(Allen Lane)
Kerrie Holloway:
'£50,000 is too small a fine to pay': The British Red Cross and the Spanish refugees of 1939, chapter inThe Red Cross Movement: Myths, Practices and Turning Points, eds. Neville Wylie, Melanie Oppenheimer and James Crossland (Manchester University Press)
Frank Jacob, Nord University:
Emma Goldman and the Russian Revolution: From Admiration to Frustration(Walter de Gruyter)
Matthew Kidd, University of Oxford:
The renewal of radicalism: Politics, identity and ideology in England, 1867-
Ralph Leighton, Canterbury Christ Church University, and Laila Nielsen, Jönköping University:
The Citizen in Teaching and Education: Student Identity and Citizenship(Palgrave Macmillan)
Sarah Lonsdale:
Rebel Women Between the Wars: Fearless Writers and Adventurers(Manchester University Press)
Helen McCarthy, University of Cambridge:
Double Lives: A History of Working Motherhood(Bloomsbury)
Michael A. Meyer, Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, Cincinnati:
Rabbi Leo Baeck: Living a Religious Imperative in Troubled Times(University of Pennsylvania Press)
Matteo Millan, Alessandro Saluppo, eds.:
Corporate Policing, Yellow Unionism, and Strikebreaking, 1890-1930: In Defence of Freedom(Routledge)
Thomas C. Mills, Rory M. Miller (eds.):
Britain and the Growth of US Hegemony in Twentieth-Century Latin America(Palgrave Macmillan)
Christopher Phillips, Aberystwyth University:
Civilian Specialists at War: Britain's Transport Experts and the First World War(Institute of Historical Research)
Ali Raza, Lahore University of Management Sciences:
Revolutionary Pasts: Communist Internationalism in Colonial India(Cambridge University Press)
Shana L. Redmond, University of California, Los Angeles:
Everything Man: The Form and Function of Paul Robeson(Duke University Press Books)
Fred Reid, University of Warwick:
The Panopticon: Towards an intimate history of special schools for the blind, chapter inDisability and the Victorians: Attitudes, Interventions, Legacies, eds. Iain Hutchison, Martin Atherton and Jaipreet Virdi (Manchester University Press)
Christina Reimann, Martin Öhman (eds.):
Migrants and the Making of the Urban-Maritime World: Agency and Mobility in Port Cities, C. 1570–1940(Taylor & Francis)
Evan Smith, Flinders University:
No Platform: A History of Anti-Fascism, Universities and the Limits of FreeSpeech(Routledge)
Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick:
History and the Law: A Love Story(Cambridge University Press)
John Stewart, Glasgow Caledonian University:
Richard Titmuss: A Commitment to Welfare(Policy Press)
Dan Stone, Royal Holloway, University of London:
Fascism, Nazism and the Holocaust: Challenging Histories(Routledge)
Hitoshi Suzuki:
Japanese Investment and British Trade Unionism: Thatcher and Nissan Revisited in the Wake of Brexit(Palgrave Macmillan)
Miles Taylor, University of York, and Jill Pellew, University of York (eds.):
Utopian Universities: A Global History of the New Campuses of the 1960s(Bloomsbury Academic)
Sam Warner, University of Manchester:
Industrial Relations: Reappraising the Industrial Relations Act 1971, chapter inPolicies and Politics Under Prime Minister Edward Heath, Andrew S. Roe-Crines, Timothy Heppell, eds. (Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Alan Angell:
Supporting Exiles: The Role of Academics for Chile(Journal of Refugee Studies)
Jonathan Aylen, University of Manchester:
Stalinism, autarchy, espionage and Marshall Aid: How US strip mill technology came to Europe(International Journal for the History of Engineering & Technology)
Gopalan Balachandran, University of London:
Trabalhadores no mundo: marinheiros indianos, c. de 1870-1940(Mundos do Trabalho, vol.12)
Roberta Bivins, University of Warwick:
Serving the nation, serving the people: echoes of war in the early NHS(Medical Humanities)
Kate Bradley, University of Kent, and Sophie Rowland, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
A poor woman's lawyer? Feminism, the labour movement, and working-class women's access to the law in England, 1890–1935(Women's History Review)
Thomas Bray, Wellcome:
Global Solutions and Local Needs: Transnational Exchanges in Post-War British Social Work(Culture and Social History)
Juliana Broad, University of Cambridge:
Working in cases: British psychiatric social workers and a history of psychoanalysis from the middle, c.1930–60(History of the Human Sciences)
Neil Carter, De Montfort University:
Marguerite Wilson and other ‘hard-riding … feminine space eaters’: cycling and modern femininity in interwar Britain(Sport in History)
Iker Itoiz Ciáurriz, University of Edinburgh:
Looking for a Dream, Surviving a Time of Nightmares: Eric Hobsbawm, Marxism Today and the Resignification of Antifascism During Thatcher’s Time(Fascism, vol.9, issue 1-2)
Joshua Cohen, University of Leicester:
‘Somehow Getting Their Own Back on Hitler’: British Antifascism and the Holocaust, 1960–1967(Fascism, vol.9, issue 1-2)
Marc Collinson, Bangor University:
A ‘fertile ground for poisonous doctrines’? Understanding far-right electoral appeal in the south Pennine textile belt, c.1967-1979(Contemporary British History, vol.34, issue 2)
Matthew Cooper, University of York:
‘21st Century Welfare’ in Historical Perspective: Disciplinary Welfare in the Depression of the 1930s and Its Implications for Today(Sociological Research Online)
Christopher Frank, University of Manitoba:
Cashless pay, deductions from wages, and the repeal of the Truck Acts in Great Britain, 1945-1986(Labor History, vol.61)
Helen Glew, University of Westminster:
‘[A] stronger position as women alone’: women’s associations in the British civil service and feminism, 1900–1959(Women's History Review)
In a Minority in Male Spaces: The Networks, Relationships and Collaborations between Women MPs and Women Civil Servants, 1919–1955(Open Library of Humanities)
Sarah Hellawell, University of Sunderland:
'A Strong International Spirit': Negotiating Co-operative Internationalism in the Women's Co-operative Guild during the Inter-war Period(Twentieth Century British History)
Diarmaid Kelliher, University of Glasgow:
Class struggle and the spatial politics of violence: The picket line in 1970s Britain(Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers)
Pete King, Swansea University, and Shelly Newstead, UCL:
Demographic data and barriers to professionalisation in playwork(Journal of Vocational Education & Training)
Anne Logan, University of Kent:
An Examination of the Public Work of Selected Women during the Early Years of Women’s Enfranchisement (c.1920–1931)(Open Library of Humanities)
Alan McNee, University of London:
‘Arry and ‘Arriet ‘out on a spree’: trippers, tourists and travellers writing in late-Victorian visitors’ books(Studies in Travel Writing)
Romina Miorelli, University of Westminster, and Valentina Piersanti, University of Padua:
Staying Alive: 1970s Southern Cone Exiles in the UK(Bulletin of Latin American Research)
Rafaelle Nicholson, Bournemouth University, and Matthew Taylor, De Montfort University:
Women, sport and the people’s war in Britain, 1939–45(Sport in History)
Laraine Porter, De Montfort University:
OK for Sound? The Reception of the Talkies in Britain, 1928–32(Journal of British Cinema and Television, vol.17, issue 2)
‘The film gone male’: Women and the transition to sound in the British film industry 1929–1932(Women's History Review)
Stefanie Rauch, University College London:
Good Bets, Bad Bets and Dark Horses: Allied Intelligence Officers’ Encounters with German Civilians, 1944–1945(Central European History, vol.53, issue 1)
Hannah Reeves:
The place of peripheral “railway towns” in transport history(Journal of Transport History)
Stuart Smedley, King's College London:
Making a Federal Case: Youth Groups, Students and the 1975 European Economic Community Referendum Campaign to Keep Britain in Europe(Twentieth Century British History)
David Stevenson, London School of Economics:
Britain's Biggest Wartime Stoppage: The Origins of the Engineering Strike of May 1917(History)
Greig Taylor, University of New South Wales:
Intra-union conflict and the 1970 dock strike in Britain(Labor History, vol.61)
Rowan G. E. Thompson:
‘Millions of Eyes Were Turned Skywards’: The Air League of the British Empire, Empire Air Day, and the Promotion of Air-mindedness, 1934–9(Twentieth Century British History)
Aashish Velkar, University of Manchester:
“Imperial Folly”: Metrication, Euroskepticism, and Popular Politics in Britain, 1965–1980(Journal of Modern History, vol.92, no.3)
Books:
Paul Almond, University of Reading, and Mike Esbester, University of Portsmouth:
Health and Safety in Contemporary Britain: Society, Legitimacy, and Change since 1960(Palgrave Macmillan)
Maggie Andrew, Alison Fell, Lucy Noakes, June Purvis (eds.):
British Women's Histories of the First World War: Representing, Remembering, Rewriting(Routledge)
Rabia Arif and Elisabetta Mori, Middlesex University, and Giuseppe Primiero, University of Milan:
Validity and Correctness Before the OS: the Case of LEO I and LEO II, chapter inReflections on Programming Systems: Historical and Philosophical Aspects, eds. Liesbeth De Mol and Giuseppe Primiero (Springer)
Paula Bartley:
Labour Women in Power: Cabinet Ministers in the Twentieth Century(Palgrave Macmillan)
Wolfgang Bialas:
Aurel Kolnai's The War AGAINST the West Reconsidered(Routledge)
Kate Bradley, University of Kent:
Lawyers for the poor: Legal advice, voluntary action and citizenship in England, 1890–1990(Manchester University Press)
Paul Bridgen, University of Southampton:
British employers and the development of state protection for unemployment, sickness and old age, 1900–1990, chapter inBusiness Interests and the Development of the Modern Welfare State, ed. Dennie Oude Nijhuis
Peter Dorey, Cardiff University:
Comrades in Conflict: Labour, the Trade Unions and 1969's in Place of Strife(Manchester University Press)
Richard J. Evans, Cambridge University:
Eric Hobsbawm: A Life in History(Little, Brown)
David Featherstone, University of Glasgow:
Reading Subaltern Studies Politically: Histories from Below, Spatial Relations, and Subalternity, chapter inSubaltern Geographies, eds. Tariq Jazeel and Stephen Legg (University of Georgia Press)
Christopher Frank, University of Manitoba:
Workers, Unions and Payment in Kind: The Fight for Real Wages in Britain, 1820–1914(Routledge)
Chris Hanvey:
Shaping Children's Services(Routledge)
Anne J. Kershen, Queen Mary, University of London:
Pragmatism or politics: Leeds Jewish tailors and Leeds Jewish tailoring trade unions, 1876–1915, chapter inLeeds and its Jewish Community, ed. Derek Fraser.
Jon Lawrence, University of Exeter:
Me, Me, Me?: Individualism and the Search for Community in Post-War England(Oxford University Press)
Keith Laybourn, University of Huddersfield:
Going to the dogs: A history of greyhound racing in Britain, 1926–2017(Manchester University Press)
Vicky Long, Newcastle University:
Citizens, Patients or Paupers? Class and Mental Health in Post-War Britain, chapter inSocial Class and Mental Illness in Northern Europe, eds. Petteri Pietikäinen and Jesper Vaczy Kragh (Routledge)
Louise Miskell (ed.):
New Perspectives on Welsh Industrial History(University of Wales Press)
Jonathan Moss, University of Sussex:
Women, workplace protest and political identity in England, 1968-85(Manchester University Press)
Gyan Prakash, Princeton University:
Emergency Chronicles: Indira Gandhi and Democracy's Turning Point(Princeton University Press)
Nancy Rosoff, Arcadia University, and Stephanie Spencer, University of Winchester:
Sociability, chapter inBritish and American School Stories, 1910–1960(Palgrave Macmillan)
Jack Saunders, University of Warwick:
Assembling cultures: Workplace activism, labour militancy and cultural change in Britain’s car factories, 1945–82(Manchester University Press)
Laura Schwartz, University of Warwick:
Feminism and the Servant Problem: Class and Domestic Labour in the Women's Suffrage Movement(Cambridge University Press)
Oliver Soden:
Michael Tippett: The Biography(Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
Paul Spence, King’s College London:
Digitally Mediated Memory and the Spanish Civil War, chapter inPublic Humanities and the Spanish Civil War: Connected and Contested Histories, eds. Alison Ribeiro de Menezes, Antonio Cazorla-Sanchez and Adrian Shubert (Palgrave Macmillan)
Christopher Stray, Christopher Pelling and Stephen Harrison (eds.):
Rediscovering E. R. Dodds: Scholarship, Education, Poetry, and the Paranormal(OUP Oxford)
Robert Teigrob, Ryerson University:
Four Days in Hitler’s Germany: Mackenzie King’s Mission to Avert a Second World War(University of Toronto Press)
David Thackeray, University of Exeter:
Forging a British World of Trade: Culture, Ethnicity, and Market in the Empire-Commonwealth, 1880-1975(OUP Oxford)
Geert Van Goethem, Universiteit Gent:
La Federación Sindical Internacional (1913-1945) : la primera organización sindical supranacional, chapter inInternacionalismo y diplomacia sindical (1888-1986), ed. Manuela Aroca Mohedano (Los Libros de la Catarata)
Susan Zimmermann, Central European University, Budapest:
Framing Working Women’s Rights Internationally: Contributions of the IFTU Women’s International, chapter inThe Internationalisation of the Labour Question: Ideological Antagonism, Workers’ Movements and the ILO since 1919, eds. Stefano Bellucci and Holger Weiss (Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Jörg Arnold, University of Nottingham:
‘That rather sinful city of London’: the coal miner, the city and the country in the British cultural imagination, c. 1969–2014(Urban History)
Matthew Broad, Leiden University:
Negotiating ‘outer Europe’: the Trades Union Congress (TUC), transnational trade unionism and European integration in the 1950s(History of European Ideas)
Phil Child, University of Birmingham:
Blacktown, Mass-observation, and the Dynamics of Voluntary Action in Mid-Twentieth-Century England(The Historical Journal)
David Collins and Nick Butler:
Success and Failure in Professional Projects: The Nature, Contours and Limits of Consulting Professionalism(British Journal of Management)
Kieran Connell, Queen's University, Belfast:
PROS: The Programme for the Reform of the Law on Soliciting, 1976–1982(Twentieth Century British History)
Jack Copley, University of Warwick:
Why were capital controls abandoned? The case of Britain’s abolition of exchange controls, 1977–1979(The British Journal of Politics and International Relations)
Henry Dee, University of Edinburgh:
‘I am a bad native’: Masculinity and marriage in the biographies of Clements Kadalie(African Studies, vol.78, issue 2)
Maria-Daniella Dick, Kirsty Lusk and Willy Maley, University of Glasgow:
“The Agitator’s Wife” (1894): the story behind James Connolly’s lost play?(Irish Studies Review, vol.29, issue 1)
Sara Dominici, University of Westminster:
New mobile experiences of vision and modern subjectivities in Late Victorian Britain(Science Museum Group Journal)
Christos Efstathiou, University of Warwick:
‘The Great Debate’: Welfarism, Objectivity, and Cold War Ideology in the Workers’ Educational Association(Labour History Review, vol.84, issue 1)
Roger Fagge, University of Warwick:
Eric Hobsbawm and the Significance of Jazz(Cultural and Social History)
R.H. Fryer:
Reforming Trade-Union Governance: The Reorganization of the National Union of Public Employees(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, vol.40)
R.H. Fryer and Stephen Williams:
Latecomers to Trade-Union Democracy: The Emergence, Growth, and Role of Union Stewards in the National Union of Public Employees(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, vol.40)
Sophie Greenway, University of Warwick:
Producer or Consumer? The House, the Garden and the Sourcing of Vegetables in Britain, 1930–1970(Cultural and Social History)
Noemi de Haro García, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid:
“Escribimos libertad con mano encadenada”. Notas sobre una pintura realizada por Agustín Ibarrola en la cárcel de Burgos(Archivo Español de Arte, vol.92, no.365)
Claire Hilton:
A Tale of Two Inquiries: Sans Everything and Ely(The Political Quarterly)
Jonathan Hyslop:
British Steamship Workers, c. 1875–1945: Precarious before Precarity(Labour History, vol.116)
Rami Kaplan, Open University of Israel, and Daniel Kinderman, University of Delaware:
The business-class case for corporate social responsibility: mobilization, diffusion, and institutionally transformative strategy in Venezuela and Britain(Theory and Society, vol.48, issue 1)
Rachel Leow, University of Cambridge:
A Missing Peace: The Asia-Pacific Peace Conference in Beijing, 1952 and the Emotional Making of Third World Internationalism(Journal of World History)
Laura López-Martín, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos:
Help Spain by showing films. British film production for humanitarian aid during the Spanish Civil War(Culture & History Digital Journal, 8(2))
Gordon Lynch, University of Kent:
Pathways to the 1946 Curtis Report and the post-war reconstruction of children’s out-of-home care(Contemporary British History)
J. Patrice McSherry, University of Santiago, Chile:
Operation Condor and Transnational State Violence against Exiles(Journal of Global South Studies, vol.36, no.2)
Elisabetta Mori, Middlesex University:
Coping With the “American Giants”(IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, vol.41, issue 4)
Shelly Newstead, University College London:
Le playwork à la recherche d’une identité perdue(Sciences de Jeu)
Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University:
Business, labour and the costs of welfare state development(Journal of European Social Policy)
Linda Palfreeman, Universidad CEU Cardinal Herrera, and Peter Pinkerton, University of Toronto:
Transfusion in the Spanish Civil War: Supply and demand, the role of the “blood transfusion officer” and British planning for the outbreak of the Second World War(Transfusion and Apheresis Science, vol.58, issue 6)
Francesco Petrini, University of Padua:
Stabilization through integration: the European rescue of Italian capitalism(European Review of History, vol.26, issue 4)
Sian Rhiannon Williams:
The 'troublous question of the married women teachers': The Aberdare dismissals of 1908(Cylchgrawn Addysg Cymru / Wales Journal of Education, vol.21, no.1)
John E. Richardson, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia:
British fascism, fascist culture, British culture(Patterns of Prejudice)
Emma Robertson and Lee-Ann Monk, La Trobe University:
“When Women Do the Work of Men”: Representations of Gendered Occupational Identities on British Railways in World War I Cartoons(Labour History)
Alessandro Saluppo, University of Padua:
Strikebreaking and Anti-Unionism on the Waterfront: The Shipping Federation, 1890–1914(European History Quarterly)
Jack Saunders, University of Warwick:
Emotions, Social Practices and the Changing Composition of Class, Race and Gender in the National Health Service, 1970–79: ‘Lively Discussion Ensued’(History Workshop Journal)
Paul Smith, Keele University:
Rookes v. Barnard and the trade union question in British politics(Industrial Relations Journal)
James F. Stark and Catherine Stones, University of Leeds:
Constructing representations of germs in the twentieth century(Cultural and Social History)
Sam Warner, University of Birmingham:
The ‘majesty of the law’: depoliticisation, the Rule of Law and judicial independence(British Politics)
(Re)politicising ‘the governmental’: Resisting the Industrial Relations Act 1971(British Journal of Politics and International Relations)
Michael Weatherburn, Imperial College, London:
Human Relations’ invented traditions: Sociotechnical research and worker motivation at the interwar Rowntree Cocoa Works(Human Relations)
Books:
Paul Aichroth:
A Brief History of Westminster Hospital: Tercentenery 1719-2019(CW+)
Paddy Ashdown:
Nein!: Standing up to Hitler 1935–1944(William Collins)
Emmanuelle Avril and Yann Béliard, eds.:
Labour United and Divided from the 1830s to the Present(Manchester University Press)
Jordanna Bailkin, University of Washington:
Unsettled: Refugee Camps and the Making of Multicultural Britain(OUP Oxford)
Sebastian Browne, Canterbury Christ Church University:
Medicine and Conflict: The Spanish Civil War and its Traumatic Legacy(Routledge)
Anthony Carew, University of Manchester:
American Labour's Cold War Abroad: From Deep Freeze to Détente, 1945-1970(Athabasca University Press)
Jenny Crane, University of Warwick:
Child Protection in England, 1960-2000: Expertise, Experience, and Emotion(Palgrave Macmillan)
Tricia Dawson, Keele University:
Gender, Class and Power: An Analysis of Pay Inequalities in the Workplace(Palgrave Macmillan)
Danny Evans, University of Leeds:
Revolution and the State: Anarchism in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939(Routledge)
Elizabeth F. Evans, University of Notre Dame, Indiana:
Threshold Modernism: New Public Women and the Literary Spaces of Imperial London(Cambridge University Press)
Alistair Fair, University of Edinburgh:
Modern Playhouses: An Architectural History of Britain's New Theatres, 1945-1985(OUP Oxford)
Alison S. Fell, University of Leeds:
Women as Veterans in Britain and France after the First World War(Cambridge University Press)
David M. Higgins, Newcastle University:
Brands, Geographical Origin, and the Global Economy: A History from the Nineteenth Century to the Present(Cambridge University Press)
Rose Holmes:
“Make the Situation Real to Us without Stressing the Horrors”: Children, Photography and Humanitarianism in the Spanish Civil War, chapter inHumanitarianism and Media: 1900 to the Present, ed. Johannes Paulmann
Arne Hordt:
Kumpel, Kohle Und Krawall: Miners' Strike Und Rheinhausen als Aufruhr in Der Montanregion(Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht)
Joan B. Huffman:
Lady Frances: Frances Balfour, Aristocrat Suffragist(Matador)
Richard Jobson, University of Oxford:
Nostalgia and the post-war Labour Party: Prisoners of the past(Manchester University Press)
Angela V. John, Swansea University:
Rocking the Boat: Welsh women who championed equality, 1840-1990(Parthian Books)
John Kelly, Birkbeck College, University of London:
Contemporary Trotskyism: Parties, Sects and Social Movements in Britain(Routledge)
Andrew Brower Latz:
The Social Philosophy of Gillian Rose(Cascade Books)
Thomas Linehan, Brunel University:
Scabs and Traitors: Taboo, Violence and Punishment in Labour Disputes in Britain, 1760-1871(Routledge)
A.Z. McKenna:
100 Years of Government Communication(HM Government)
Christopher Miller, University of Glasgow:
Planning and Profits: British Naval Armaments Manufacture and the Military Industrial Complex, 1918-1941(Liverpool University Press)
Julia Moses, University of Sheffield:
The First Modern Risk: Workplace Accidents and the Origins of European Social States(Cambridge University Press)
Ann Oakley, University College London:
Women, peace and welfare: A suppressed history of social reform, 1880-1920(Policy Press)
Quentin Outram and Keith Laybourn (eds.):
Secular Martyrdom in Britain and Ireland: From Peterloo to the Present(Palgrave Macmillan)
Gianetta Rands (ed.):
Women's Voices in Psychiatry: A Collection of Essays(Oxford University Press)
Aditya Sarkar, University of Warwick:
Trouble at the Mill: Factory Law and the Emergence of the Labour Question in Late Nineteenth-Century Bombay(OUP India)
Robert Saunders, Queen Mary University of London:
Yes to Europe!: The 1975 Referendum and Seventies Britain(Cambridge University Press)
David Thackeray, Andrew Thompson and Richard Toye (eds.):
Imagining Britain's Economic Future, c.1800-1975: Trade, Consumerism, and Global Markets(Palgrave Macmillan)
Michael Tichelar, University of the West of England:
The Failure of Land Reform in Twentieth-Century England: The Triumph of Private Property(Routledge)
Antonio E. Weiss:
Management Consultancy and the British State: A Historical Analysis Since 1960(Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Edward Anderson, University of Cambridge, and Patrick Clibbens, University of Oxford:
‘Smugglers of Truth’: The Indian diaspora, Hindu nationalism, and the Emergency (1975–77)(Modern Asian Studies)
Gordon Barrett, University of Oxford:
China's “People's Diplomacy” and the Pugwash Conferences, 1957–1964(Journal of Cold War Studies)
Angela Bartie, Linda Fleming, Mark Freeman, Tom Hulme, Alexander Hutton and Paul Readman:
‘History taught in the pageant way’: education and historical performance in twentieth-century Britain(History of Education)
Matthew Broad:
Ignoring Europe? Reassessing the British Labour Party’s Policy towards European Integration, 1951-60(Journal of European Integration History)
Phoebe Brown:
‘Othering’ and the Persistence of Imperial Attitudes: Media Representations of Ethnicity, Gender and Class in the Grunwick Dispute(Midlands Historical Review)
Katherine Bruce-Lockhart, University of Cambridge:
The Archival Afterlives of Prison Officers in Idi Amin’s Uganda: Writing Social Histories of the Postcolonial State(History in Africa)
Stefanie Börner, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, and Monika Eigmüller, Europa-Universitaet Flensburg:
Social security in Europe. Towards a diachronic perspective for analysing social policy rescaling(Culture, Practice & Europeanization, vol. 3, no. 1)
Andrew Burchell, University of Warwick:
In Loco Parentis, Corporal Punishment and the Moral Economy of Discipline in English Schools, 1945–1986(The Journal of the Social History Society)
Mike Burt:
The ‘Younghusband Report’ Recommendation of Two-Year Training Courses and the Development of Social Work(Practice)
Eve Colpus, University of Southampton:
Women, Service and Self-actualization in Inter-War Britain(Past and Present, vol.238, issue 1)
Jennifer Crane, University of Warwick:
Why the History of Public Consultation Matters for Contemporary Health Policy(Endeavour)
‘Save our NHS’: activism, information-based expertise and the ‘new times’ of the 1980s(Contemporary British History)
Lucy Delap, University of Cambridge:
“Disgusting Details Which Are Best Forgotten”: Disclosures of Child Sexual Abuse in Twentieth-Century Britain(Journal of British Studies, vol.57, no.1)
Feminism, Masculinities and Emotional Politics in Late Twentieth Century Britain(Cultural and Social History)
Pilar Domínguez Prats, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria:
El papel de las mujeres socialistas en los organismos internacionales durante los años treinta(Hispania, vol. LXXVIII, no.259)
Tom Ellis, University of Portsmouth, and Akira Kyo, Kwansei Gakuin University:
Youth Justice in England & Wales: Past, Present & Future(Ryukoku Corrections and Rehabilitation Center Journal, no.8 2018)
David Featherstone, University of Glasgow:
Politicizing In/Security, Transnational Resistance, and the 1919 Riots in Cardiff and Liverpool(Small Axe, vol.22, no.3 (57))
A. Fedorov:
NKVD in the Spanish Civil War(Latin American Historical Almanac, no. 20)
Mark D. Harmon, University of Tennessee, Knoxville:
A war of words: the British Gazette and British Worker during the 1926 General Strike(Labor History)
Louise Hide, Birkbeck, University of London:
In Plain Sight: Open Doors, Mixed-sex Wards and Sexual Abuse in English Psychiatric Hospitals, 1950s—Early 1990s(Social History of Medicine)
Jonathan Hyslop, Colgate University and the University of Pretoria:
German seafarers, anti‐fascism and the anti‐Stalinist left: the ‘Antwerp Group’ and Edo Fimmen's International Transport Workers' Federation, 1933–40(Global Networks)
M. Gómez León and H. J. de Jong, University of Groningen:
Inequality in turbulent times: income distribution in Germany and Britain, 1900–50(The Economic History Review)
Vicky Long and Victoria Brown:
Conceptualizing work-related mental distress in the British coalfields (c.1900–1950)(Palgrave Communications volume 4)
Gary McCulloch, UCL:
Educational research: Which way now?(British Educational Research Journal, vol.44, no.2)
Elisabetta Mori, Middlesex University:
LEO, Olivetti e i primi computer commerciali in Europa: un'occasione perduta?(Mondo Digitale, Oct. 2018)
Anna Muggeridge, University of Worcester:
The Missing Two Million: The Exclusion of Working-class Women from the 1918 Representation of the People Act(Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique, XXIII-1)
Grant Olwage, Wits University:
Paul Robeson's Microphone Voice and the Technologies of Easy Singing(Technology and Culture, vol.59, no.4)
Richard Overy, University of Exeter:
The bombing of British cities in the Second World War(Storia Urbana, no.158)
Linda Palfreeman, University of Cardenal Herrera, Elche:
Fernanda Jacobsen and the Scottish Ambulance Unit during the Spanish Civil War (1936–39)(International Journal of Iberian Studies, vol.31, no.3)
David Paulson, University of Cambridge:
The professionalisation of selling and the transformation of a family business: Kenrick & Jefferson, 1878–1940(Business History)
Jonathan Roscoe, Oxford Brookes University:
‘The age of shouting had arrived’: Victor Gollancz, Stanley Morison, and the reimagining of marketing at Victor Gollancz, Ltd and the Left Book Club(Oxford Brookes University)
David S. Rowbottom:
A Contribution to the History of the National Union of Public Employees: A View from Cumbria, 1969–1979(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, vol.39)
Dan Alexandru Savoaia:
Human Rights and Independent Trade Unionism in Late 1970's Romania: The Case of SLOMR(Anuarul Institutului de Istorie »A.D. Xenopol«)
Peter Sloman, Churchill College, Cambridge:
Redistribution in an Age of Neoliberalism: Market Economics, ‘Poverty Knowledge’, and the Growth of Working-Age Benefits in Britain, c. 1979–2010(Political Studies)
Pere Soler Paricio:
L’État irlandais et les aides humanitaires destinées au peuple espagnol durant la guerre civile espagnole(Études Irlandaises)
Jo Stanley, Liverpool John Moores University:
Black Salt: Britain’s black sailors(International Journal of Maritime History)
Stephanie Ward, Cardiff University:
Labour Activism and the Political Self in Inter-War Working-Class Women’s Politics(Twentieth Century British History)
Andrew Waterman, University of Portsmouth:
The Limits of Embedded Liberalism: TUC Strategies to Influence the Multi-Fibre Arrangement and the GATT Social Clause, 1973–1994(Labour History Review, vol.83, issue 2)
Exhibitions / workshops
The Production of Truth, Justice and History, Tate Modern workshops, June 2018
Books:
Paul David Blanc, University of California:
Fake Silk: The Lethal History of Viscose Rayon(Yale University Press)
Suan Sheridan Breakwell, University of Oxford:
‘Knowing how to be a Mother’: Parenting, Emotion and Evacuation Propaganda during the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939- chapter inParenting and the State in Britain and Europe, c. 1870-1950: Raising the Nation, eds. Hester Barron and Claudia Siebrecht (Palgrave Macmillan)
Matthew Broad, University of Turku:
Harold Wilson, Denmark and the making of Labour European policy(Liverpool University Press)
Jodi Burkett (ed.), University of Portsmouth:
Students in Twentieth-Century Britain and Ireland(Palgrave Macmillan)
Paul Caruana Galizia, Humboldt University:
The Economy of Modern Malta: From the Nineteenth to the Twenty-First Century(Palgrave Macmillan)
Helena Chance, Buckinghamshire New University:
The Factory in a Garden: A History of Corporate Landscapes from the Industrial to the Digital Age(Manchester University Press)
Aled Davies, University of Bristol:
The City of London and Social Democracy: The Political Economy of Finance in Britain, 1959 - 1979(OUP Oxford)
Janet Douglas and Christian Høgsbjerg (eds.):
British Labour and the Russian Revolution(Spokesman)
John Fisher, Effie G. H. Pedaliu and Richard Smith (eds.):
The Foreign Office, Commerce and British Foreign Policy in the Twentieth Century(Palgrave Macmillan)
Aimée Fox, King's College London:
Learning to Fight: Military Innovation and Change in the British Army, 1914–1918(Cambridge University Press)
Isabel Gejo-Santos:
Katharine Ramsay: Visión de una parlamentaria escocesa sobre la Guerra Civil española;De Liverpool a Madrid: Eleanor Florence Rathbone y la Guerra Civil española; andDe Leah Manning a Rosita García Ascot cantar y bailar para vivir. Redes filantrópicas en torno a los niños vascos refugiados en Gran Bretaña (1937-1939)- chapters inLiberales, cultivadas y activas: redes culturales, lazos de amistad, ed. Adelaida Sagarra Gamazo (Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca)
George Campbell Gosling, University of Wolverhampton:
Payment and philanthropy in British healthcare, 1918-48(Manchester University Press)
John A. Hargreaves, Keith Laybourn and Richard Toye (eds.):
Liberal Reform and Industrial Relations: J.H. Whitley (1866-1935), Halifax Radical and Speaker of the House of Commons(Routledge)
Henry Hemming:
M: Maxwell Knight, MI5's Greatest Spymaster(Preface Publishing)
Marie Hicks, Illinois Institute of Technology:
Programmed Inequality: How Britain Discarded Women Technologists and Lost its Edge in Computing(MIT Press)
Claire Hilton:
Improving Psychiatric Care for Older People: Barbara Robb's Campaign 1965-1975(Palgrave Macmillan)
Neil Johnson:
The Labour Church: The Movement & Its Message(Routledge)
Neville Kirk, Manchester Metropolitan University:
Transnational Radicalism and the Connected Lives of Tom Mann and Robert Samuel Ross(Liverpool University Press)
Keith Laybourn and John Shepherd (eds.):
Labour and Working-Class Lives: Essays to Celebrate the Life and Work of Chris Wrigley(Manchester University Press)
Jon Lawrence, University of Cambridge:
Individualism and community in historical perspective- chapter inAusterity, community action, and the future of citizenship in Europe, eds. Shana Cohen, Jan-Jonathan Bock and Christina Fuhr (Policy Press)
Anne Logan, University of Kent:
The Politics of Penal Reform: Margery Fry and the Howard League(Routledge)
Chi-Kwan Mark, Royal Holloway College, University of London:
Crisis or Opportunity? Britain, China, and the Decolonization of Hong Kong in the Long 1970s- chapter inChina, Hong Kong, and the Long 1970s: Global Perspectives, eds. Priscilla Roberts and Odd Arne Westad (Palgrave Macmillan)
Angus McLaren, University of Victoria:
Playboys and Mayfair Men: Crime, Class, Masculinity, and Fascism in 1930s London(Johns Hopkins University Press)
Chris Moores, University of Birmingham:
Civil Liberties and Human Rights in Twentieth-Century Britain(Cambridge University Press)
Kevin Morgan, University of Manchester:
International Communism and the Cult of the Individual: Leaders, Tribunes and Martyrs under Lenin and Stalin(Palgrave Macmillan)
Jonathan Parker and Sara Ashencaen Crabtree, Bournemouth University:
Social Work with Disadvantaged and Marginalised People(Learning Matters)
Paul-André Rosental (ed.):
Silicosis: A World History(Johns Hopkins University Press)
Ryan Shaffer, Stony Brook University, New York:
Music, Youth and International Links in Post-War British Fascism: The Transformation of Extremism(Palgrave Macmillan)
Evan Smith, Flinders University:
British Communism and the Politics of Race(BRILL)
David Swift, Queen Mary University of London:
For Class and Country: The Patriotic Left and the First World War(Liverpool University Press)
Jim Tomlinson, University of Glasgow:
Managing the Economy, Managing the People: Narratives of Economic Life in Britain from Beveridge to Brexit(OUP Oxford)
Laurent Warlouzet, University of Littoral-Côte d’Opale:
Governing Europe in a Globalizing World: Neoliberalism and its Alternatives following the 1973 Oil Crisis(Routledge)
Geoff Whitty and John Furlong (eds.):
Knowledge and the Study of Education: An international exploration(Symposium Books)
Articles:
Nicholas Barnett, University of Plymouth, and Evan Smith, Flinders University:
‘Peace with a Capital P’: The Spectre of Communism and Competing Notions of ‘Peace’ in Britain, 1949–1960(Labour History Review, vol.82, no.1)
Roberta Bivins, University of Warwick:
Picturing Race in the British National Health Service, 1948-1988(Twentieth Century British History)
Matheus Cardoso da Silva, Universidade de São Paulo:
Ecos da Guerra Civil espanhola na Grã-Bretanha através das publicações do Left Book Club(Topoi (Rio J.) vol.18 no.36)
Mick Carpenter, University of Warwick, and Ben Kyneswood, Coventry University:
From self-help to class struggle: revisiting Coventry Community Development Project's 1970s journey of discovery(Community Development Journal, vol.52, issue 2)
Kim Christiaens, KADOC-KU, Leuven:
‘Communists are no Beasts’: European Solidarity Campaigns on Behalf of Democracy and Human Rights in Greece and East–West Détente in the 1960s and early 1970s(Contemporary European History, vol. 26, issue 4)
Jack Copley, University of Warwick:
Financial Deregulation and the Role of Statecraft: Lessons from Britain’s 1971 Competition and Credit Control Measures(New Political Economy)
Stephen Dippnall, University of Central Lancashire:
Hating America? Great Britain and the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg(Cold War History)
Ryan C. Edwards, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga:
Convicts and conservation: Inmate labor, fires and forestry in southernmost Argentina(Journal of Historical Geography, vol.56)
Robert Fitzgerald, Royal Holloway, University of London:
International Business and the Development of British Electrical Manufacturing, 1886–1929(Business History Review, vol.91, issue 1)
Whyeda Gill-McLure, University of Wolverhampton:
Adaptation, evolution and survival? The political economy of Whitleyism and public service industrial relations in the U.K. 1917–present(Labor History, vol.59, issue 1)
George Campbell Gosling, University of Wolverhampton:
Gender, money and professional identity: medical social work and the coming of the British National Health Service(Women's History Review)
Tobias Harper, Providence College, Rhode Island:
The Order of the British Empire after the British Empire(Canadian Journal of History, vol.52, no.3)
Jonathan Hyslop, University of Pretoria:
Southampton to Durban on the Union Castle Line: An Imperial Shipping Company and the limits of globality c. 1900–39(The Journal of Transport History)
Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones, University of Edinburgh:
The sensitivity of SIGINT: Sir Alfred Ewing’s lecture on room 40 in 1927(Journal of Intelligence History)
Hannah Jobling, Ian Shaw, Ik Hyun Jang, Sarah Czarnecki and Ann Ramatowski, University of York and University of St Louis:
A Case Study of Applied Scholarship: The British Journal of Social Work 1971–2013(The British Journal of Social Work, vol. 47, issue 8)
Anthony Keating, Edge Hill University:
Saving Tammoland: a microhistory of children’s action to save a wasteground playground, 1965–1968(International Journal of Play, vol.6, issue 2)
Diarmaid Kelliher, University of Glasgow:
Contested Spaces: London and the 1984–5 Miners’ Strike(Twentieth Century British History)
Matthew Kidd, University of Nottingham:
Class without Conflict: Popular Political Continuity in Late Victorian Bristol, 1867–1900(Labour History Review, vol.82, issue 2)
Dieter Krohn:
The Society for the Furtherance of the Critical Philosophy (SFCP): A Foundation of German Female Refugees and their British Comrades in 1940(Yearbook of the Research Centre for German & Austrian Exile Studies)
Catherine Lee, Open University:
‘Giddy Girls’, ‘Scandalous Statements’ and a ‘Burst Bubble’: the war babies panic of 1914–1915(Women's History Review)
Marc Lenormand, Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3:
L’« hiver du mécontentement » de 1978-1979 : du mythe politique à la crise interne du mouvement travailliste(Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique)
Jennifer Luff, University of Durham:
Covert and Overt Operations: Interwar Political Policing in the United States and the United Kingdom(The American Historical Review, vol.122, issue 3)
David Malcolm, National Union of Students:
A curious courage: the origins of gay rights campaigning in the National Union of Students(History of Education)
Keith McLoughlin, University of Exeter:
Socially useful production in the defence industry: the Lucas Aerospace combine committee and the Labour government, 1974–1979(Contemporary British History)
Helen Mercer, Greenwich University:
The making of the modern retail market: economic theory, business interests and economic policy in the passage of the 1964 Resale Prices Act(Business History)
Duncan Money, University of the Free State:
Trouble in paradise: The 1958 white mineworkers’ strike on the Zambian Copperbelt(The Extractive Industries and Society)
Ray Physick, University of Central Lancashire:
The Olimpiada Popular: Barcelona 1936, Sport and Politics in an Age of War, Dictatorship and Revolution(Sport in History, vol.37, issue 1)
Peter M. Scott and James T. Walker, Henley Business School, University of Reading:
The impact of ‘stop-go’ demand management policy on Britain's consumer durables industries, 1952–65(The Economic History Review)
Ian F. Shaw, University of York and National University of Singapore:
The craft of journal practice(Qualitative Social Work)
Paul Smith, Keele University:
The Law behind the Law: Rookes v. Barnard [1964], the Common Law and the Right to Strike(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, vol.38)
Greig Taylor, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Vietnam:
From ‘unofficial militants’ to de facto joint workplace control: the development of the shop steward system at the port of Liverpool, 1967–1972(Labor History)
Jeremy Tranmer, Université de Lorraine:
Political Commitment of a New Type? Red Wedge and the Labour Party in the 1980s(Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique , XXII-3 2017)
Books:
Calum Aikman, University of Edinburgh:
Frank Chapple: A Thoughtful Trade Union Moderniser- chapter inAlternatives to State-Socialism in Britain: Other Worlds of Labour in the Twentieth Century, eds. Peter Ackers and Alastair J. Reid (Palgrave Macmillan)
Vivian Bickford-Smith, University of Cape Town:
The Emergence of the South African Metropolis: Cities and Identities in the Twentieth Century(Cambridge University Press)
Philip M. Coupland:
Farming, Fascism and Ecology: A life of Jorian Jenks(Routledge)
Christophe Farquet, Université de Genève:
La défense du paradis fiscal suisse avant la Seconde Guerre mondiale : une histoire internationale(Editions Alphil)
Helen Glew, University of Westminster:
Gender, Rhetoric and Regulation: Women's Work in the Civil Service and the London County Council, 1900-55(Manchester University Press)
Jameel Hampton, Liverpool Hope University:
Disability and the Welfare State in Britain: Changes in Perception and Policy 1948-1979(Policy Press)
Matt Houlbrook, University of Birmingham:
Prince of Tricksters: The Incredible True Story of Netley Lucas, Gentleman Crook(University of Chicago Press)
Antony Lentin:
Mr Justice McCardie (1869-1933): Rebel, Reformer, and Rogue Judge(Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
Roger Lloyd-Jones and M.J. Lewis, Sheffield Hallam University:
Arming the Western Front: War, Business and the State in Britain 1900-1920(Routledge)
Nick Mansfield, University of Central Lancashire:
Soldiers as Workers(Liverpool University Press)
Brian Marren:
We shall not be moved: How Liverpool's working class fought redundancies, closures and cuts in the age of Thatcher(Manchester University Press)
Terri Mullholland:
British Boarding Houses in Interwar Women's Literature: Alternative domestic spaces(Routledge)
Steven Parfitt, University of Nottingham:
Knights Across the Atlantic: The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland(Liverpool University Press)
Greg Patmore, University of Sydney:
Worker Voice: Employee Representation in the Workplace in Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK and the US 1914–1939Link opens in a new windowLink opens in a new window(Liverpool University Press)
Kimberley Reynolds, University of Newcastle:
Left Out: The forgotten tradition of radical publishing for children in Britain 1910-1949(OUP Oxford)
Dave Rich, Birkbeck College, University of London:
The Left's Jewish Problem: Jeremy Corbyn, Israel and Anti-Semitism(Biteback Publishing)
Lynn Schler, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev:
Nation on Board: Becoming Nigerian at Sea(Ohio University Press)
Ian Shaw, Aalborg University:
Social Work Science(Columbia University Press)
Caroline Shenton:
Mr Barry's War: Rebuilding the Houses of Parliament after the Great Fire of 1834(OUP)
Christopher Sirrs, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
Risk, Responsibility and Robens: The Transformation of the British System of Occupational Health and Safety Regulation, 1961–74- chapter inGoverning Risks in Modern Britain: Danger, Safety and Accidents, c. 1800–2000, eds. Tom Crook and Mike Esbester (Palgrave Macmillan)
Jo Stanley, University of Hull:
Cabin 'Boys' to Captains: 250 Years of Women at Sea(The History Press)
Michael Tichelar, University of the West of England:
The History of Opposition to Blood Sports in Twentieth Century England: Hunting at Bay(Routledge)
Reiner Tosstorff, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz:
The Red International of Labour Unions (RILU) 1920 - 1937(BRILL)
Roland Wales:
From Journey's End to the Dam Busters: The Life of R.C. Sherriff, Playwright of the Trenches(Pen & Sword Military)
Richard Whiting, University of Leeds:
Trade Unions: Voluntary Associations and Individual Rights- chapter inAlternatives to State-Socialism in Britain: Other Worlds of Labour in the Twentieth Century, eds. Peter Ackers and Alastair J. Reid (Palgrave Macmillan)
John Williamson and Martin Cloonan, University of Glasgow:
Players' Work Time: A History of the British Musicians' Union, 1893-2013(Manchester University Press)
Nina Willner:
Forty Autumns: A family's story of courage and survival on both sides of the Berlin Wall(Little, Brown)
Susan Zimmermann, Central European University:
The International Labour Organization, transnational women's networks, and the question of unpaid work in the interwar world- chapter inWomen in Transnational History: Connecting the Local and the Global, eds. Clare Midgley, Alison Twells and Julie Carlier (Routledge)
Articles:
Peter Anderson, University of Leeds:
The Struggle over the Evacuation to the United Kingdom and Repatriation of Basque Refugee Children in the Spanish Civil War: Symbols and Souls(Journal of Contemporary History)
Jörg Arnold, University of Nottingham:
Vom Verlierer zum Gewinner – und zurück Der Coal Miner als Schlüsselfigur der britischen Zeitgeschichte(Geschichte und Gesellschaft, vol.42, issue 2)
Bryan John Ayres:
‘“Navvy” import alions [sic]’: the schooling of navvy children in the Midlands in the 1890s(History of Education)
G. Balachandran, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva:
Indefinite transits: mobility and confinement in the age of steam(Journal of Global History, vol.11, issue 2)
Tom Buchanan, University of Oxford:
‘Loyal Believers and Disloyal Sceptics’: Propaganda and Dissent in Britain during the Korean War, 1950–1953(History, vol.101, issue 348)
Nick Butler, Lund University, and David Collins, Hull University:
The failure of consulting professionalism? A longitudinal analysis of the Institute of Management Consultants(Management & Organizational History, vol 11, issue 1)
Matheus Cardoso da Silva, Universidade de São Paulo:
Victor Gollancz: um editor socialista nos anos do Popular Front britânico(Revista Mundos do Trabalho, vol.8, no.15)
Stephen Constantine, Lancaster University:
Governor Sir John Field in St Helena: Democratic Reform in a Small British Colony, 1962–68(The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History)
Steve Coulter, London School of Economics and Political Science:
Signalling Moderation: UK Trade Unions, ‘New Labour’ and the Single Currency(LSE ‘Europe in Question’ Discussion Paper Series No. 121/2016)
Mark J. Crowley, Wuhan University:
'Inequality' and 'value' reconsidered? The employment of post office women, 1910-1922(Business History)
Technological change and Post Office communications in Britain, 1918–1945(History and Technology)
Gareth Curless, University of Exeter:
‘The people need civil liberties’: trade unions and contested decolonisation in Singapore(Labor History, vol.57, issue 1)
Pilar Domìnguez Prats, Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria:
The Presence and Absence of Spanish Socialist Women in the International Trade Unions during the Interwar Period(Ventunesimo Secolo 38/2016)
Christos Efstathiou, University of Warwick:
E.P. Thompson, the Early New Left and the Fife Socialist League(Labour History Review, vol.81, issue 1)
Jed Fazakarley, University of Oxford:
Race as a separate sphere in British government: From the Colonial Office to municipal anti-racism(Callaloo, vol.39, no.1)
David Featherstone, University of Glasgow:
Harry O’Connell, maritime labour and the racialised politics of place(Race & Class, vol. 57, no. 3)
Maria Framke, Universität Rostock:
Political humanitarianism in the 1930s: Indian aid for Republican Spain(European Review of History, vol.23, issue 1-2)
Antonina Gentile, University of Milan:
World-system hegemony and how the mechanism of certification skews intra-European labor solidarity(Mobilization: An International Quarterly 21(1))
Noemi De Haro Garcia, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid:
Voces de seda. Las pinturas clandestinas de Agustín Ibarrola (1962-1965)(Archivo Español de Arte, vol.89, no.355)
Rhodri Hayward, Queen Mary University of London:
Busman’s stomach and the embodiment of modernity(Contemporary British History)
Claire Hilton:
Whistle-blowing and duty of candour in the National Health Service: a ‘history and policy’ case study of the 1960s and 2010s(Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, vol.109, no.9)
V.C. Hollman, Universidad de Buenos Aires:
Glass lantern slides and visual instruction for school teachers in early twentieth-century Argentina(Early Popular Visual Culture, vol.14, issue 1)
Grace Huxford, University of Bristol:
The Korean War never happened: Forgetting a conflict in British culture and society(Twentieth Century British History)
Diarmaid Kelliher, University of Glasgow:
Constructing a culture of solidarity: London and the British coalfields in the long 1970s(Antipode)
John Kelly, Birkbeck College, University of London:
The discursive reconstruction of poor electoral performance: the British Trotskyist left and the 2010 General Election(Journal of Political Ideologies, volume 21, issue 1)
Diane Kirkby and Dmytro Ostapenko, La Trobe University:
Pursuing Trade Union Internationalism: Australia's Waterside Workers and the International Transport Workers Federation, c. 1950–70(Labour History, no.110)
Jake Lagnado:
Contribution to the history of Latin American Workers Association in London(Pacarina del Sur)
Michael Lambert, Lancaster University:
In pursuit of “the welfare trait”: recycling deprivation and reproducing depravation in historical context(People, Place and Policy, vol.10, issue 3)
Marc Lenormand, Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3:
"Crisis ? What crisis ?" Discours de crise et critique du consensus en Grande-Bretagne (1964-1979)(Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique, XXI-1)
John McIlroy, Middlesex University:
The revival and decline of rank and file movements in Britain during the 1930s(Labor History, vol.57, issue 3)
Spencer Mawby, University of Nottingham:
The Limits of Anticolonialism: The British Labour Movement and the End of Empire in Guiana(History, vol.101, issue 344)
Jessica Medhurst, Newcastle University:
Representing and Repetition: Victor Gollancz's In Darkest Germany and the Metonymy of Shoes(German Life and Letters, vol.69, issue 4)
Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University:
Labour divisions and the emergence of dual welfare systems(Journal of European Social Policy)
Bobbie Oliver, Curtin University:
The Impact of Union Amalgamation on Membership: An Australian Case Study(SAGE Open)
Tommaso Pardi, ENS Cachan:
Industrial policy and the British automotive industry under Margaret Thatcher(Business History)
Renaud Payre, Sciences Po Lyon:
Une République mondiale de l’administration ? Circulations internationales, sciences de gouvernement et réforme administrative (1910-1945)(Revue Internationale de Politique Comparée 2016/1)
Jacopo Perazzoli, Università degli Studi di Milano:
Psi e Labour inglese alla ricerca del dialogo. Il rapporto Nenni-Bevan 1953-1957(Italia Contemporanea)
Christopher Phillips, Leeds Trinity University:
Logistics and the BEF: The development of waterborne transport on the Western Front, 1914-1916(British Journal for Military History, vol.2, issue 2)
Daniel Renshaw, Brunel University:
Prejudice and paranoia: a comparative study of antisemitism and Sinophobia in turn-of-the-century Britain(Patterns of Prejudice, vol.50, issue 1)
Andrew Sackville, Edge Hill University:
Edith Emily Mudd (1863-1941) – pioneer almoner(Bulletin of the Social Work History Network, vol. 3, issue 1)
Charles Sharpe:
From the individual, to the relational and communal: the Kirk’s influence on three Scottish thinkers: Ronald Fairbairn, John Macmurray and Ian Suttie(Ethics and Social Welfare)
Carolyn Steedman, University of Warwick:
Threatening Letters: E. E. Dodd, E. P. Thompson, and the Making of ‘The Crime of Anonymity’(History Workshop Journal)
Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, University College London:
The decline of deference and the left: An egalitarian moment for localism(Juncture, vol.23, issue 2)
Alex Sutton, University of St Andrews:
British Imperialism and the Political Economy of Malayan Independence(The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History)
Matthew Taylor, De Montfort University:
Les joueurs de football sont-ils des esclaves ? Conditions d’emploi dans le milieu du football professionnel en Angleterre et au Pays de Galles (1945-1961)(Le Mouvement Social, 2016/1, n° 254)
Tony Topham:
A Difficult Childhood: The Formative Years of the Transport and General Workers’ Union(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no.37)
Kevin Whitston, Universities of Bristol and the West of England:
The politics of production in the engineering industry(Labour History Review, vol.81, issue 1)
Adrian Williamson, University of Cambridge:
The Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act 1927 Reconsidered(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no.37)
Matthew Worley, University of Reading:
Marx–Lenin–Rotten–Strummer: British Marxism and youth culture in the 1970s(Contemporary British History)
Valéria Zanier, London School of Economics and Political Science:
Redéfinir la relation de l’Europe et de la Chine après 1945 : les organisations économiques britanniques à la recherche d’échanges commerciaux « politiquement corrects » (1952-1963)(Relations internationales 2016/3)
Books:
Matthew Anderson, University of Portsmouth:
A History of Fair Trade in Contemporary Britain 2015: From Civil Society Campaigns to Corporate Compliance(Palgrave Macmillan)
Roberta Bivins, University of Warwick:
Contagious Communities: Medicine, Migration, and the NHS in Post War Britain(OUP Oxford)
Stefanie Börner, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena:
From National to European Solidarity? The Negotiation of Redistributive Spaces- chapter inEuropean Integration, Processes of Change and the National Experience, eds. Stefanie Börner and Monika Eigmüller (Palgrave Macmillan)
Anne Borsay, Pamela Dale, Christine Hallett and Jane E. Schultz (eds.):
Mental Health Nursing: The Working Lives of Paid Carers in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries(Manchester University Press)
Eve Colpus, University of Southampton:
Fitting in by being yourself: Avenues Unlimited and youth work in the East End c. 1960s–2000s- chapter inDiasporas Reimagined: Spaces, Practices and Belonging, eds. Nando Sigona, Alan Gamblen, Giulia Liberatore and Hélène Neveu Kringelbach (Oxford Diasporas Programme)
Mustafah Dhada, California State University and Coimbra University:
The Portuguese Massacre of Wiriyamu in Colonial Mozambique(Bloomsbury)
Julie V. Gottlieb (ed.):
Feminism and Feminists After Suffrage(Routledge)
Masuda Hajimu, National University of Singapore:
Cold War Crucible: The Korean Conflict and the Postwar World(Harvard University Press)
Mark Hampton, Lingnan University:
Hong Kong and British culture, 1945–97(Manchester University Press)
David Howell, University of York:
Ramsay Macdonald- chapter inBritish Labour Leaders, eds. Charles Clarke and Toby James (Biteback Publishing)
Joseph Melling, University of Exeter:
Labouring stress: Scientific research, trade unions and perceptions of workplace stress in mid-twentieth century Britain- chapter inStress in Post-War Britain, ed. Mark Jackson (Routledge)
Martin Minchom:
Spain's Martyred Cities: From the Battle of Madrid to Picasso's Guernica(Sussex Academic Press)
Alex Mold, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine:
Making the Patient-Consumer: Patient Organisations and Health Consumerism in Britain(Manchester University Press)
Stephanie Olsen (ed.):
Childhood, Youth and Emotions in Modern History: National, Colonial and Global Perspectives(Palgrave Macmillan)
Linda Palfreeman, University of Cardenal Herrera, Elche:
Spain bleeds: The development of battlefield blood transfusion during the Civil War(Sussex Academic Press)
Chandrika Patel:
The Taste of British South Asian Theatres: Aesthetics and Production(Lulu Publishing Services)
Matthias Reiss, University of Exeter:
Blind Workers Against Charity: The National League of the Blind of Great Britain and Ireland, 1893-1970(Palgrave Macmillan)
Richard Rhodes, Stanford University:
Hell and good company: The Spanish Civil War and the world it made(Simon & Schuster UK)
Matthew Richardson:
The Hunger War: Food, Rations and Rationing 1914-1918(Pen & Sword Military)
Linsey Robb, University of Strathclyde:
Men at Work: The Working Man in British Culture, 1939-1945(Palgrave Macmillan)
Eugenia Russell and Quentin Russell:
Watford and South West Herts in the Great War(Pen & Sword Military)
Sarah L. Silkey, Lycoming College:
Black Woman Reformer: Ida B. Wells, Lynching, and Transatlantic Activism(The University of Georgia Press)
Paul Smethurst, University of Hong Kong:
The Bicycle - Towards a global history(Palgrave Macmillan)
Dan Stone, Royal Holloway, University of London:
The liberation of the camps: The end of the Holocaust and its aftermath(Yale University Press)
Peter Thorsheim, University of North Carolina, Charlotte:
Waste into Weapons: Recycling in Britain during the Second World War(Cambridge University Press)
Stephen Wade, University of Hull:
The Justice Women: The Female Presence in the Criminal Justice System 1800-1970(Pen & Sword Military)
Noel Whiteside, University of Warwick:
Organising labour markets: the British experience- chapter inThe History of Labour Intermediation: Institutions and Finding Employment in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries, eds. Sigrid Wadauer, Thomas Buchner, Alexander Mejstrik (Berghahn Books)
Richard Whiting, University of Leeds:
The Conservatives and radical reform: The 1971 Industrial Relations Act and North America- chapter inThe Tory World: Deep History and the Tory Theme in British Foreign Policy, 1679-2014, ed. Jeremy Black (Ashgate)
William Whyte, St John's College, Oxford:
Redbrick: A social and architectural history of Britain's civic universities(OUP Oxford)
Adrian Williamson:
Conservative economic policymaking and the birth of Thatcherism, 1964-1979(Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Imogen Clarke and James Mussell, University of Leeds:
Conservative attitudes to old-established organs: Oliver Lodge and Philosophical Magazine(Notes and Records: the Royal Society journal of the history of science)
Andrew Cohen, University of the Free State, South Africa:
Britain and the breakdown of the colonial environment: The struggle over the Tanzam oil pipeline in Zambia(Business History Review, vol.88, issue 4)
Stephen Constantine, Lancaster University:
Cledwyn Hughes, MP for Anglesey – And St Helena(The Welsh History Review, vol. 27, no. 3, June 2015)
Jennifer CraneLink opens in a new windowLink opens in a new window, University of Warwick:
Painful Times: The Emergence and Campaigning of Parents Against Injustice in 1980s Britain(Twentieth Century British History)
Mark J. Crowley, Wuhan University:
Preparing for a Future War: Pre-War Planning in the British Post Office, 1918–1939(History, vol.100, issue 343)
Mike French, University of Glasgow:
“Slowly Becoming Sales Promotion Men?”: Negotiating the Career of the Sales Representative in Britain, 1920s–1970s(Enterprise & Society)
Paul Griffin, University of Glasgow:
Labour struggles and the formation of demands: The spatial politics of Red Clydeside(Geoforum, volume 62, June 2015)
Christopher R. Hill, Birmingham City University:
Nations of Peace: Nuclear Disarmament and the Making of National Identity in Scotland and Wales(Contemporary British History)
Diarmaid Kelliher, University of Glasgow:
The 1984-5 miners' strike and the spirit of solidarity(Soundings, no.60, Summer 2015)
Frank Land, London School of Economics and Political Science:
Early history of the information systems discipline in the UK: An account based on living through the period(Communications of the Association for Information Systems, vol.35, article 6)
Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University:
Incomes policies, welfare state development and the notion of the social wage(Socio-Economic Review)
Ann Oakley, Institute of Education, University of London:
The history of gendered social science: a personal narrative and some reflections on method(Women's History Review, vol.24, issue 2)
Amy Palmer, University of Roehampton:
Nursery schools or nursery classes? Choosing and failing to choose between policy alternatives in nursery education in England, 1918–1972(History of Education)
Christopher Phillips, University of Leeds:
Early Experiments in Civil–Military Cooperation: The South-Eastern and Chatham Railway and the Port of Boulogne, 1914–15(War & Society, vol.34, issue 2, May 2015)
Vincent Porter:
The slow death of a labour aristocracy: Rugby’s carpenters, 1898–1914(Midland History, vol.40, issue 1)
John Privilege, Ulster University:
The Northern Ireland government and the welfare state, 1942–8: the case of health provision(Irish Historical Studies, vol.39, issue 155, May 2015)
Bjørn Tore Rosendahl, Stiftelsen Arkivet, Kristiansand / University of Agder:
Patriotism, money and control: Mobilization of Norwegian merchant seamen during the Second World War(Scandinavian Journal of History)
Christopher Sirrs, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
Accidents and Apathy: The Construction of the ‘Robens Philosophy’ of Occupational Safety and Health Regulation in Britain, 1961–1974(Social History of Medicine, May 2015)
Peter Sloman, Churchill College, Cambridge:
Beveridge’s rival: Juliet Rhys-Williams and the campaign for basic income, 1942–55(Contemporary British History)
James R. Vaughan, Aberystwyth University:
‘Mayhew's outcasts’: anti-Zionism and the Arab lobby in Harold Wilson's Labour Party(Israel Affairs, volume 21, issue 1)
James T. Walker, University of Reading:
Voluntary export restraints between Britain and Japan: The case of the UK car market (1971–2002)(Business History)
John K. Walton:
Revisiting the Rochdale Pioneers(Labour History Review, vol.80, issue 3)
Roseanna Webster, Manchester University:
‘A Spanish Housewife is Your Next Door Neighbour’: British Women and the Spanish Civil War(Gender & History, volume 27, issue 2, August 2015)
Noel Whiteside, University of Warwick:
Who were the unemployed? Conventions, classifications and social security law in Britain (1911-1934)(Historical Social Research, Vol. 40 (2015) 1)
Kevin Whitston, Universities of Bristol and the West of England:
The ideologies of practical men: Trade unions and the politics of public ownership(Contemporary British History, volume 29, issue 1
Adrian Williamson:
The Bullock Report on Industrial Democracy and the Post-War Consensus(Contemporary British History)
Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska, University of Illinois, Chicago:
Royal death and living memorials: the funerals and commemoration of George V and George VI, 1936–52(Historical Research)
Books:
Lars Amenda, Universität Osnabrück:
Between Southern China and the North Sea: Maritime Labour and Chinese Migration in Continental Europe, 1890–1950-chapter inAsian Migrants in Europe: Transcultural Connections,eds. Sylvia Hahn, Stan Nadel (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht)
Graham Bannock:
Range Rover - The creators of an icon(Brooklands Books)
Tilly Blyth (ed.):
Information Age(Science Museum)
James Booth:
Philip Larkin: Life, Art and Love(Bloomsbury)
Georgina Brewis, Institute of Education, University of London:
A Social History of Student Volunteering: Britain and Beyond, 1880-1980(Palgrave Macmillan)
Steve Coulter, London School of Economics:
New Labour Policy, Industrial Relations and the Trade Unions(Palgrave Pivot)
Howard Cox, University of Worcester, and Simon Mowatt, AUT University Business School, Auckland:
Revolutions from Grub Street: A History of Magazine Publishing in Britain(OUP Oxford)
Sally Dixon:
Great War Britain. Kidderminster: Remembering 1914-1918(The History Press)
Paul Fantom, University of Birmingham:
Industry, Labour and Patriotism in the Black Country: Wednesbury at War, 1914-1918- chapter inThe Great War: Localities and Regional Identities(Cambridge Scholars Publishing), eds. Nick Mansfield and Craig Horner
Jed Fazakarley, University of Oxford:
British Multiculturalism: An Emerging Field for Historians- chapter inAssembling Identities(Cambridge Scholars Publishing), ed. Sam Wiseman
Joyce Goodman and Zoe Milsom, University of Winchester:
Performing Reforming and the Category of Age: Empire, Internationalism and Transnationalism in the Career of Reta Oldham, Headmistress- chapter inWomen Educators, Leaders and Activists: Educational Lives and Networks 1900-1960(Palgrave Macmillan), eds. Tanya Fitzgerald and Elizabeth M. Smyth
Pamela Horn:
Life Below Stairs: The Real Lives of Servants, 1939 to the Present(Amberley Publishing)
David Howell, University of York:
Mosley and British Politics 1918-32: Oswald's Odyssey(Palgrave Macmillan)
Cathy Hunt, Coventry University:
The National Federation of Women Workers, 1906-1921(Palgrave Macmillan)
Louise A. Jackson, University of Edinburgh, and Angela Bartie, University of Strathclyde:
Policing Youth: Britain, 1945-70(Manchester University Press)
Ann Jones, Australian National University:
No Truck with the Chilean Junta! Trade Union Internationalism, Australia and Britain, 1973–1980(free online versionLink opens in a new windowLink opens in a new windowavailable through the Australian National University Press website)
Seth Koven, Rutgers:
The Match Girl and the Heiress(Princeton University Press)
David Kynaston, Kingston University:
Modernity Britain: A shake of the dice, 1959-62(Bloomsbury)
Vicky Long, Glasgow Caledonian University:
Destigmatising Mental Illness?: Professional Politics and Public Education in Britain, 1870-1970(Manchester University Press)
Ann Oakley, Institute of Education, University of London:
Father and Daughter: Patriarchy, gender and social science(Policy Press)
Matt Perry, Newcastle University:
'Red Ellen' Wilkinson: Her ideas, movements and world(Manchester University Press)
Deirdre Raftery, University College Dublin:
Lives, Networks and Topographies of Time and Place: New Turns in the History of Women and Education -chapter inWomen Educators, Leaders and Activists: Educational Lives and Networks 1900-1960(Palgrave Macmillan), ed. Tanya Fitzgerald and Elizabeth M. Smyth
Mathew Richardson:
Leicester in the Great War(Pen & Sword Military)
Mike Savage, London School of Economics:
The History of British Sociology from the Perspective of its Archived Qualitative Sources: Ruminations and Reflections- chapter inThe Palgrave Handbook of Sociology in Britain, ed. John Holmwood and John Scott (Palgrave Macmillan)
Michael Shattock, Institute of Education, University of London, former Registrar of the University of Warwick:
University governance in the UK: Bending the traditional model- chapter inInternational Trends in University Governance: Autonomy, self-government and the distribution of authority, ed. Michael Shattock (Routledge)
Nico Slate, Carnegie Mellon University:
The Prism of Race: W.E.B. Du Bois, Langston Hughes, Paul Robeson, and the Colored World of Cedric Dover(Palgrave Macmillan)
Jerome Teelucksingh, University of the West Indies in Trinidad and Tobago:
Labour and the Decolonization Struggle in Trinidad and Tobago(Palgrave Macmillan)
Nicklaus Thomas-Symonds:
Nye: The Political Life of Aneurin Bevan(I.B.Tauris)
Daniel Tilles, Pedagogical University of Cracow:
British Fascist Antisemitism and Jewish Responses, 1932-40(Bloomsbury)
Selina Todd, University of Oxford:
The People: The Rise and Fall of the Working Class, 1910-2010(John Murray)
Jim Tomlinson, University of Glasgow:
Dundee and the Empire: 'Juteopolis' 1850-1939(Edinburgh University Press)
John Tully, Victoria University, Melbourne:
Silvertown - the lost story of a strike that shook London and helped launch the modern labor movement(Monthly Review Press, New York)
Simon Vaukins:
The Isle of Man TT Races: Motorcycling, Society and Identity(Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
Cal Winslow (ed.), University of California, Berkeley:
E.P. Thompson and the Making of the New Left: Essays and Polemics(Monthly Review Press)
Katsuhiko Yokoi, Meiji University:
The Colombo Plan and industrialization in India: Technical cooperation for the Indian Institutes of Technology- chapter inThe Transformation of the International Order of Asia: Decolonization, the Cold War, and the Colombo Plan, eds. Shigeru Akita, Gerold Krozewski and Shoichi Watanabe (Routledge)
Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska, University of Illinois at Chicago:
Prince Philip: Sportsman and youth leader- chapter inThe Man behind the Queen: Male Consorts in History, eds. Charles Beem and Miles Taylor (Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Anthony J. Arnold, University of Leicester:
‘A paradise for profiteers’? The importance and treatment of profits during the First World War(Accounting History Review)
G. Balachandran, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva:
Subaltern cosmopolitanism, racial governance and multiculturalism: Britain, c. 1900–45(Social History, vol. 39, issue 4)
Caitríona Beaumont, London South Bank University:
Fighting for the ‘Privileges of Citizenship’: the Young Women's Christian Association (YWCA), feminism and the women's movement, 1928–1945(Women's History Review)
Jonathan Browne, University of Kent:
History of anaesthesia: anaesthetics and the Spanish Civil War: The start of specialisation(European Journal of Anaesthesiology, vol.31, issue 2)
Jodi Burkett, University of Portsmouth:
The National Union of Students and transnational solidarity, 1958–1968(European Review of History, vol.21, issue 4)
Jae Hee Choi:
Reciprocal relation between 'History from Below' and archives: with reference to the History Workshop Movement in England(Journal of the Korean Biblia Society For Library And Information Science, vol.25 no.3)
Paul Corthorn, Queen’s University, Belfast:
Cold War Politics in Britain and the Contested Legacy of the Spanish Civil War(European History Quarterly, vol.44, no.4)
Steven Crewe, De Montford University:
What about the Workers? Works-based Sport and Recreation in England c.1918–c.1970(Sport in History)
Mark Dennis, Coventry University:
The ascent from the maelstrom: Art Students Observed and its descriptive resonance 40 years on(Journal of Visual Art Practice)
Christos Efstathiou:
E. P. Thompson's Concept of Class Formation and its Political Implications: Echoes of Popular Front Radicalism in The Making of the English Working Class(Contemporary British History)
Sylvia A. Ellis, Northumbria University:
Promoting solidarity at home and abroad: the goals and tactics of the anti-Vietnam War movement in Britain(European Review of History, vol.21, issue 4)
Antonina Gentile, University of Milan:
Labour repertoires, neoliberal regimes and US hegemony; what 'deviant' Italy tells us of OECD unions' paths to power(European Political Science Review)
Katie Graham, King’s College London:
The WISEArchive Cohen interviews: conversations with social work pioneers(Bulletin of the Social Work History Network, vol.1, issue 1)
Erika Hanna, University of Edinburgh:
Seeing like a cyclist: visibility and mobility in modern Dublin, c. 1930–1980(Urban History)
Matthew Kavanagh, University of Salford:
‘Against fascism, war and economies’: the Communist Party of Great Britain’s schoolteachers during the Popular Front, 1935–1939(History of Education, vol.43, issue 2)
Matthew Kidd, University of Nottingham:
The Evolution of the Northampton Labour Party, 1888-1918(Ex Historia, vol.6)
Vicky Long, Glasgow Caledonian University:
Situating the factory canteen in discourses of health and industrial work in Britain (1914-1939)(Le Mouvement social, 2014, 2(247))
Wade Matthews:
Escolas de experiência: 1956, a New Left e A formação da classe operária inglesa(História e Perspectivas)
Linda McDowell, University of Oxford, Sundari Anitha, University of Lincoln, and Ruth Pearson, University of Leeds:
Striking Narratives: class, gender and ethnicity in the ‘Great Grunwick Strike’, London, UK, 1976–1978(Women's History Review)
Stuart Middleton, University of Cambridge:
‘Affluence’ and the Left in Britain, c.1958–1974(The English Historical Review, vol.129, issue 536)
Gareth Millward, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
Social Security Policy and the Early Disability Movement—Expertise, Disability, and the Government, 1965–77(Twentieth Century British History)
Stephen Mustchin, Manchester Business School, University of Manchester:
Dismissal of strikers and industrial disputes: the 1985 – 1987 strike and mass sackings at Silentnight(Labor History)
Daisy Payling, University of Birmingham:
‘Socialist Republic of South Yorkshire’: Grassroots Activism and Left-Wing Solidarity in 1980s Sheffield(Twentieth Century British History)
Neil Rollings, University of Glasgow:
The twilight world of British business politics: the Spring Sunningdale conferences since the 1960s(Business History, vol.56, issue 6)
Jack Saunders, University College, London:
The Untraditional Worker: Class Re-Formation in Britain 1945–65(Twentieth Century British History)
Lynn Schler, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev:
Seamen and the Nigerianization of Shipping in the Postcolonial Era(International Labor and Working-Class History, vol.86, Fall 2014)
Laura SchwartzLink opens in a new windowLink opens in a new window, University of Warwick:
‘What we think is needed is a union of domestics such as the miners have’: The Domestic Workers’ Union of Great Britain and Ireland 1908–14(Twentieth Century British History, vol.25, issue 2)
Michael Shattock, Institute of Education, University of London, former Registrar of the University of Warwick:
Can we still speak of there being an academic profession?(History of Education, vol.43, issue 6)
Matthew Taylor, De Montfort University, Leicester:
The Transatlantic Migration of Sporting Labour, 1920–39(Labour History Review, vol. 79, no. 2)
Trade unionism in British sport, 1920–1964(Labor History)
Andrew Thorpe, Exeter University:
Locking out the Communists: The Labour party and the Communist party, 1939–46(Twentieth Century British History, vol.25, issue 2)
Jim Tomlinson, University of Glasgow:
The Political Economy of Globalization: The Genesis of Dundee's Two 'United Fronts' in the 1930s(The Historical Journal, vol.57, no.1)
Keith Vernon, University of Central Lancashire:
‘We alone are passive’: the Committee of Vice-chancellors and Principals and the organisation of British universities, c.1918–1939(History of Education, vol.43, issue 2)
Horen Voskeritsian, University of the West of England:
The genesis of a scientific community: the British Universities Industrial Relations Association and the field of industrial relations in Britain, c.1950–1983(Labor History)
Robbie Guerriero Wilson, University of Stirling:
The Loss of Balance Between the Art and Science of Management: Observations on the British Experience of Education for Management in the 20th Century(Journal of Management Education)
Ina Zweiniger-Bargielowska, University of Illinois at Chicago:
Keep Fit and Play the Game: George VI, Outdoor Recreation and Social Cohesion in Interwar Britain(Cultural and Social History, vol.11, no.1)
Film:
Night Will Fall(Spring Films)
Books:
Christian Bailey, Open University and University of Oxford:
Between Yesterday and Tomorrow: German Visions of Europe, 1926-1950(Berghahn Books)
Stuart Ball,University of Leicester:
Portrait of a Party: The Conservative Party in Britain 1918-1945(Oxford University Press)
Stefanie Börner, Free University of Berlin:
Belonging, Solidarity and Expansion in Social Policy(Palgrave Macmillan)
Jodi Burkett, University of Portsmouth:
Constructing Post-Imperial Britain: Britishness, 'Race' and the Radical Left(Palgrave Macmillan)
Benjamin Coombs, University of Kent:
British Tank Production and the War Economy, 1934-1945(Bloomsbury Publishing)
Jane Dalrymple, University of the West of England, and Jane Boylan, University of Keele:
Effective Advocacy in Social Work(SAGE Publications Limited)
Ben Edwards:
With God on Our Side: British Christian Responses to the Spanish Civil War(Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
John Field, University of Stirling:
Working Men's Bodies: Work Camps in Britain, 1880-1940(Manchester University Press)
Keith Gildart, University of Wolverhampton:
Images of England Through Popular Music: Class, Youth and Rock 'n' Roll, 1955-1976(Palgrave Macmillan)
Francis Graham-Dixon, Humboldt University:
The Allied Occupation of Germany: The Refugee Crisis, Denazification and the Path to Reconstruction(I.B.Tauris)
Emma Griffin, University of East Anglia:
Liberty's Dawn: A People's History of the Industrial Revolution(Yale University Press)
Esmee Hanna:
Student Power! The Radical Days of the English Universities(Cambridge Scholars Publishing)
David Kynaston, Kingston University:
Modernity Britain: Opening the Box, 1957-1959(Bloomsbury Publishing)
Hilary Marland, University of Warwick:
Health and Girlhood in Britain, 1874-1920(Palgrave Macmillan)
Wade Matthews, York University, Canada:
The New Left, National Identity, and the Break-up of Britain(BRILL, Historical Materialism Book Series (Book 51))
Linda McDowell, St John’s College, University of Oxford:
Working Lives: Gender, Migration and Employment in Britain, 1945-2007(Wiley-Blackwell)
Kevin Morgan, University of Manchester:
Bolshevism, syndicalism and the general strike: The lost internationalist world of A.A. Purcell(Lawrence & Wishart Ltd)
Holger Nehring, University of Stirling:
Politics of Security: British and West German Protest Movements and the Early Cold War, 1945-1970(Oxford University Press)
Dennie Oude Nijhuis, Leiden University:
Labor Divided in the Postwar European Welfare State: The Netherlands and the United Kingdom(Cambridge University Press)
Linda Palfreeman, University of Cardenal Herrera, Elche:
Spain, Aristocrats, Adventurers & Ambulances: British Medical Units in the Spanish Civil War(Sussex Academic Press)
Mark Peel:
Shirley Williams: The Biography(Biteback Publishing)
Francesco Petrini, Università degli Studi di Padova:
Demanding Democracy in the Workplace: The European Trade Union Confederation and the Struggle to Regulate Multinationals- chapter inSocietal Actors in European Integration: Polity-Building and Policy-Making 1958–1992, eds. Wolfram Kaiser and Jan-Henrik Meyer (Palgrave Macmillan)
Annie Ravenhill-Johnson, Open University:
The Art and Ideology of the Trade Union Emblem, 1850–1925(Anthem Press)
Jessica Reinisch, Birkbeck College, University of London:
The Perils of Peace: The Public Health Crisis in Occupied Germany(Oxford University Press)
Michael Shattock, Institute of Education, University of London, former Registrar of the University of Warwick:
Public Expenditure and Tuition(Institute of Education Press)
John Shepherd, University of Huddersfield:
Crisis? What Crisis?: The Callaghan Government and the British ‘Winter of Discontent'(Manchester University Press)
Jessica Squires:
Building Sanctuary: The Movement to Support Vietnam War Resisters in Canada, 1965-73(University of British Columbia Press)
Daniel Stephen, University of Colorado Boulder:
The Empire of Progress: West Africans, Indians, and Britons at the British Empire Exhibition, 1924-25(Palgrave Macmillan)
John Stewart, University of Technology of Compiegne:
Child Guidance in Britain, 1918-1955: The Dangerous Age of Childhood(Routledge)
Mathew Thomson, University of Warwick:
Lost Freedom: The Landscape of the Child and the British Post-War Settlement(Oxford University Press)
Jonathan Toms, Institute for the History and Work of Therapeutic Environments (formerly Wellcome Funded Research Fellow at the University of Warwick Centre for the History of Medicine):
Mental Hygiene and Psychiatry in Modern Britain(Palgrave Macmillan)
Christine Wall, University of Westminster:
An Architecture of Parts: Architects, Building Workers and Industrialisation in Britain 1940-1970(Routledge)
Robert Anthony Waters, Jr., Ohio Northern University:
More subtle than we knew: The AFL in the British Caribbean- chapter inAmerican Labor's Global Ambassadors: The International History of the AFL-CIO During the Cold War, eds. Geert Van Goethem and Robert Anthony Waters Jr (AIAA)
Tom Woodin, Gary McCulloch and Steven Cowan, Institute of Education, University of London:
Secondary Education and the Raising of the School-Leaving Age: Coming of Age?(Palgrave Macmillan)
Articles:
Donald Bloxham, University of Edinburgh:
From the International Military Tribunal to the Subsequent Nuremberg Proceedings: The American Confrontation with Nazi Criminality Revisited(History, vol.98, issue 332)
Henrietta Ewart, University of Warwick:
Protecting the honour of the daughters of Eire: welfare policy for Irish female migrants to England, 1940–70(Irish Studies Review, vol.21, issue 1)
Mark Freeman, Institute of Education, University of London:
‘Splendid Display; Pompous Spectacle’: historical pageants in twentieth-century Britain(Social History, vol.38, Issue 4)
Talvinder Gill, University of Warwick:
The Indian Workers’ Association Coventry 1938–1990: Political and Social Action(South Asian History and Culture, vol.4, issue 4)
Lee Grieveson, University College London:
What is the Value of a Technological History of Cinema?(Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media 6)
David W. Gutzke, Missouri State University:
Tennent's Lager, National Identity and Football in Scotland, 1960s–90s(Sport in History, vol.32, issue 4)
Jameel Hampton:
Discovering Disability: The General Classes of Disabled People and the Classic Welfare State, 1948–1964(The Historian, vol.75, issue 1)
Robert A. Hart and J. Elizabeth Roberts, University of Stirling:
Industrial Composition, Methods of Compensation and Real Earnings in the Great Depression(National Institute Economic Review, vol.226)
Robert Howes, King's College London:
Changing attitudes towards economic development and democracy in Brazil: Roberto Simonsen, Ernest Hambloch and the Brazilian Commercial Mission to the UK in 1919(Journal of Transatlantic Studies, vol.11, issue 4)
Richard Jobson, University of Bristol:
‘Waving the Banners of a Bygone Age’, Nostalgia and Labour's Clause IV Controversy, 1959–60(Contemporary British History, vol.27, issue 2)
Simon Joyce, Hertfordshire Business School:
The Engineering Employers' Federation and the Crisis of 1989: A Case Study in the Decline of Multi-Employer Bargaining(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no.34)
Graham Macklin, University of Huddersfield:
‘Onward Blackshirts!’ Music and the British Union of Fascists(Patterns of Prejudice, vol.47, issue 4/5)
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University:
Party Politics and the Default Move from Coordination to Liberalism(Business History Review, vol.87, issue 3)
Wade Matthews, York University, Canada:
Remaking E.P. Thompson(Labour / Le Travail, issue 72)
Alan McKinlay, Newcastle University Business School:
Banking, bureaucracy and the career: the curious case of Mr Notman(Business History, vol.55, issue 3)
Janet Miller, University of the West of England:
Turf Wars: Stable Lads' Strikes and Union Recognition in the Twentieth Century(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no.34)
Rory M. Miller, University of Liverpool Management School:
Financing British manufacturing multinationals in Latin America, 1930–65(Business History, vol.55, issue 5)
Alex Mold, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
Repositioning the patient: Patient organizations, consumerism, and autonomy in Britain during the 1960s and 1970s(Bulletin of the History of Medicine, vol.87, no.2)
Kevin Morgan, University of Manchester:
Class Cohesion and Trade-Union Internationalism: Fred Bramley, the British TUC, and the Anglo-Russian Advisory Council(International Review of Social History, vol 58, part 3)
Stephen Murray, Swansea University:
Transatlantic Migration and the Amalgamated Society of Engineers in Fall River, Massachusetts, 1873-79(Labour History Review, vol.78, no.2)
Greg Patmore, University of Sydney:
Unionism and non-union employee representation: The interwar experience in Canada, Germany, the US and the UK(The Journal of Industrial Relations, vol.55, no.4)
David Redvaldsen, University College London:
The Eugenics Society's Outreach to the Labour Movement in Britain, 1907-1945(Labour History Review, vol 78, no.3)
Tim Rogan, Peterhouse, University of Cambridge:
Karl Polanyi at the margins of English socialism, 1934-1947(Modern Intellectual History, vol.10, issue 2)
Neil Rollings, University of Glasgow:
Cracks in the Post-War Keynesian Settlement? The Role of Organised Business in Britain in the Rise of Neoliberalism Before Margaret Thatcher(Twentieth Century British History, vol.24, issue 4)
Christian Schlaepfer, University of Cambridge:
Industrial subversion in early Cold War Britain(Inteligencia y Seguridad, no.13)
Andrew Seltzer, Royal Holloway, University of London:
The impact of female employment on male salaries and careers: evidence from the English banking industry, 1890–1941(The Economic History Review, vol.66, no.4)
Ryan Shaffer, Institute for Global Studies at the State University of New York:
The soundtrack of neo-fascism: youth and music in the National Front(Patterns of Prejudice, vol.47, issue 4/5)
Richard Temple, Senate House Library, London:
‘A difficult and peculiar section’: Provincial Bus Company Workers, 1934–47, (Labour History Review, vol.78, no.2)
Mark Wickham-Jones, University of Bristol:
The New Left's Economic Model: The Challenge to Labour Party Orthodoxy(Renewal, vol.21, no.1)
Television:
Locomotion: Dan Snow's History of Railways(BBC)
Peaky Blinders(BBC)
Books:
Sally Alexander and Barbara Taylor (eds.):
History and Psyche: Culture, Psychoanalysis, and the Past(Palgrave Macmillan)
Anthony Arnove and Colin Firth (eds.):
The People Speak: Voices that changed Britain(Canongate)
Martin Belam:
Keeping the Torch Burning: Terror, Protest and the Games(Guardian Books)
Anne Borsay, University of Wales, Swansea:
Disabled Children: Contested Caring, 1850-1979(Routledge)
Trevor Boyns and Richard Edwards, Cardiff University:
A History of Management Accounting: The British Experience(Routledge)
Tom Buchanan, University of Oxford:
East Wind: China and the British Left, 1925-1976(Oxford University Press)
Martin Conway, University of Oxford:
The Sorrows of Belgium: Liberation and Political Reconstruction, 1944-1947(Oxford University Press)
Anthony Cox, University of Dundee:
Empire, Industry and Class: The Imperial Nexus of Jute, 1840-1940(Routledge)
David Boyd Haycock:
I Am Spain: The Spanish Civil War and the Men and Women Who Went to Fight Fascism(Old Street Publishing)
Caroline Hoefferle, Wingate University:
British Student Activism in the Long Sixties(Routledge)
Steve Koerner:
The Strange Death of the British Motorcycle Industry(Cambridge University Press) - Winner of the 2012 British Archives Council Wadsworth Prize for British Business History
Vincent Lloyd, Syracuse University:
'Gillian Rose: Making Kierkegaard Difficult Again'(chapter in Volume 11, Tome III:Kierkegaard's Influence on Philosophy - Anglophone Philosophy(Kierkegaard Research: Sources Reception and Resources), ed. Jon Stewart, published by Ashgate)
Cathie Jo Martin, Boston University, and Duane Swank, Marquette University, Wisconsin:
The Political Construction of Business Interests: Coordination, Growth, and Equality(Cambridge University Press)
Spencer Mawby, University of Nottingham:
Ordering Independence: The End of Empire in the Anglophone Caribbean, 1947-69(Palgrave Macmillan)
R.W.H. Miller:
One Firm Anchor: The Church and the Merchant Seafarer(Lutterworth Press)
Christopher Moran, University of Warwick:
Classified: Secrecy and the State in Modern Britain(Cambridge University Press) - Winner of the 2014 St Ermin’s Hotel Intelligence Book of the Year Award
Glen O'Hara, Oxford Brookes University:
Governing Post-War Britain: The Paradoxes of Progress, 1951-1973(Palgrave Macmillan)
Chris Rogers, University of York:
The IMF and European Economies: Crisis and Conditionality(Palgrave Macmillan)
Michael Shattock, Institute of Education, University of London, former Registrar of the University of Warwick:
Making Policy In British Higher Education 1945-2011(Open University Press)
Penny Summerfield, University of Manchester:
Women Workers in the Second World War: Production and Patriarchy in Conflict(Routledge)
Lydia Syson:
A World Between Us(illustrations for enhanced ebook version, Hotkey Books)
Hakeem Ibikunle Tijani, Adeleke University:
Union Education in Nigeria: Labor, Empire, and Decolonization since 1945(Palgrave Macmillan)
Neville Twitchell:
The Politics of the Rope: The Campaign to Abolish Capital Punishment in Britain, 1955-1969(Arena Books Ltd)
Articles:
Gopalan Balachandran, Graduate Institute Geneva:
Les marins indiens et leurs univers, 1870-1949(Le Mouvement Social, no.241)
G. Burrows, University of Melbourne, and R.H. Chenhall, Monash University:
Target costing: first and second comings(Accounting History Review, vol.22, issue 2)
Mark James Crowley, Wuhan University:
Women Post Office Workers in Britain: The long struggle for gender equality and the positive impact of World War II(Essays in Economic & Business History, vol.30)
Catherine Ellis, Ryerson University, Toronto:
Letting it Slip: The Labour Party and the ‘Mystical Halo’ of Nationalization, 1951–1964(Contemporary British History, vol.26, issue 1)
David Erdos, University of Oxford:
Constructing the Labyrinth: The impact of data protection on the development of ‘ethical’ regulation in social science(Information, Communication & Society, vol.15, issue 1)
Christophe Farquet, Université de Lausanne:
The rise of the Swiss tax haven in the interwar period: An international comparison(European Historical Economics Society: EHES Working Papers in Economic History no.27)
John Field, University of Stirling:
Service learning in Britain between the wars: university students and unemployed camps(History of Education, vol.41, issue 2)
John R. Gold, Oxford Brookes University:
A SPUR to action?: The Society for the Promotion of Urban Renewal, ‘anti-scatter’ and the crisis of city reconstruction, 1957–1963(Planning Perspectives, vol.27, issue 2)
David Howell, University of York:
The Contribution of Direct Action to Gradualism: The Railway Strike of 1911(Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, no.33)
Cathy Hunt, Coventry University:
Sex Versus Class in Two British Trade Unions in the Early Twentieth Century(Journal of Women's History, vol.24, no.1)
Cath LambertLink opens in a new windowLink opens in a new window, University of Warwick:
Redistributing the sensory: the critical pedagogy of Jacques Rancière(Critical Studies in Education, vol.53, issue 2)
Gary McCulloch, Institute of Education, University of London:
Introduction: Disciplinarity, Interdisciplinarity and Educational Studies – Past, Present and Future(British Journal of Educational Studies, vol.60, issue 4)
Linda McDowell, University of Oxford, Sundari Anitha, University of Lincoln, and Ruth Pearson, University of Leeds:
Striking similarities: representing South Asian women's industrial action in Britain(Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography, vol.19, issue 2)
John McIlroy, Middlesex University:
Strikes and class consciousness in the early work of Richard Hyman(Capital & Class)
Arthur McIvor, University of Strathclyde:
Germs at Work: Establishing Tuberculosis as an Occupational Disease in Britain, c.1900–1951(Social History of Medicine, vol.27, issue 1)
Alex Mold, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine:
Patients´ Rights and the National Health Service in Britain, 1960s–1980s(American Journal of Public Health, vol.102, no.11)
Christopher Moores, University of Birmingham:
From Civil Liberties to Human Rights? British Civil Liberties Activism and Universal Human Rights(Contemporary European History, vol.21, issue 2)
Hugh Pemberton, University of Bristol:
The failure of ‘nationalization by attraction’: Britain's cross-class alliance against earnings-related pensions in the 1950s(The Economic History Review, vol.65, no.4)
Michel Pigenet, Université Paris 1:
Le VIH-sida, nouveau terrain d'intervention syndicale dans les transports internationaux(Le Mouvement Social, no.241)
Barbara Schmucki, University of York:
Against “the Eviction of the Pedestrian”: The Pedestrians' Association and Walking Practices in Urban Britain after World War II(Radical History Review, issue 114)
“If I Walked on my Own at Night I Stuck to Well Lit Areas.” Gendered spaces and urban transport in 20th century Britain(Research in Transportation Economics, vol.34, issue 1)
Michael Shattock, Institute of Education, University of London, former Registrar of the University of Warwick:
Parallel Worlds: The California Master Plan and the Development of British Higher Education(Higher Education Dynamics, vol.38)
University governance: An issue for our time(Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education, vol.16, issue 2)
Geraint Thomas, University of Oxford:
Conservatives, the Constitution and the Quest for a ‘Representative’ House of Lords, 1911–35(Parliamentary History, vol.31, issue 3)
Lisa Tickner:
‘Export Britain’: Pop Art, Mass Culture and the Export Drive(Art History, vol.35, issue 2)
Selina Todd, St Hilda's College, Oxford, and Hilary Young, Museum of London:
Baby-boomers to 'Beanstalkers': Making the Modern Teenager in Post-War Britain(Cultural and Social History, vol.9, no.3)
Robbie Guerriero Wilson, University of Stirling:
The ‘layering’ of management in post-war Britain: The case of the Office Management Association(Business History, vol.54, issue 4)
Matthew Worley, University of Reading:
Shot By Both Sides: Punk, Politics and the End of ‘Consensus’(Contemporary British History, vol.26, issue 3)
Television:
Servants: The True Story of Life Below Stairs(BBC)