Publications which cite archives held at the MRC - 2020
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 in The 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 in Disability 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 Free Speech (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 in Policies 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)