Items where Subject is "DA Great Britain"

Library of Congress subjects (102130) D History General and Old World (5793) DA Great Britain (819) DAW Central Europe (28)
Number of items at this level: 797.
Anthropology
  • Bénéï, Véronique (2004). Book review: India abroad: diasporic cultures of postwar America and England, by Sandhya Shukla. Anthropological Quarterly, 77(2), 389-394.
  • Cannell, Fenella (2011). English ancestors: the moral possibilities of popular genealogy. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 17(3), 462-480. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2011.01702.x
  • Kuper, Adam (2005). Alternative histories of British social anthropology. Social Anthropology, 13(1), 47-64. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0964028204000862
  • Kuper, Adam (2009). Incest and influence: the private life of bourgeois England. Harvard University Press.
  • Scott, Michael W. (2012). The matter of Makira: colonialism, competition, and the production of gendered peoples in contemporary Solomon Islands and medieval Britain. History and Anthropology, 23(1), 115-148. https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2012.649276
  • Care Policy and Evaluation Centre
  • Beecham, Jennifer, Snell, Tom, Perkins, Margaret, Knapp, Martin (2010). Health and social care costs for young adults with epilepsy in the UK. Health and Social Care in the Community, 18(5), 465-473. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2524.2010.00919.x
  • Kendall, Jeremy (2005). The third sector and the policy process in the UK: ingredients in a hyper-active horizontal policy environment. (TSEP working paper 5). Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
  • Kendall, Jeremy (2000). The voluntary sector and social care for older people. In Hudson, Bob (Ed.), The Changing Role of Social Care (pp. 65-84). Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
  • Kendall, Jeremy (2003). The voluntary sector: comparative perspectives in the UK. Routledge.
  • Wilberforce, Mark, Glendinning, Caroline, Challis, David, Fernández, José-Luis, Jacobs, Sally, Jones, Karen, Knapp, Martin, Manthorpe, Jill, Moran, Nicola & Netten, Ann et al (2011). Implementing consumer choice in long-term care: the impact of individual budgets on social care providers in England. Social Policy and Administration, 45(5), 593-612. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9515.2011.00788.x
  • Willman, Paul, Bryson, Alex, Gomez, Rafael (2007). The long goodbye: new establishments and the fall of union voice in Britain. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 18(7), 1318-1334. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585190701393863
  • Centre for Analysis of Risk & Regulation
  • Bevan, Gwyn (2010). Performance measurement of “knights” and “knaves”: differences in approaches and impacts in British countries after devolution. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice, 12(1-2), 33-56. https://doi.org/10.1080/13876980903076187
  • Kiernan, Kathleen, Mueller, Ganka (1999). Who divorces? In McRae, Susan (Ed.), Changing Britain: Families and Households in the 1990s (pp. 377-403). Oxford University Press.
  • Thatcher, Mark (1999). The politics of telecommunications. National institutions, convergence, and change. Oxford University Press.
  • Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
  • Dickens, Richard, McKnight, Abigail (2008). Assimilation of migrants into the British labour market. (CASEpapers 133). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Dickens, Richard, McKnight, Abigail (2008). Changes in earnings inequality and mobility in Great Britain 1978/9-2005/6. (CASEpapers 132). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Duclos, Jean-Yves (1991). Progressivity, redistribution and equity, with application to 1985 Britain. (Welfare State Programme Discussion Papers WSP 069). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Gordon, Chris (1988). The myth of family care? The elderly in the early 1930s. (Welfare State Programme Discussion Papers WSP 029). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Rushton, Neil S., Sigle-Rushton, Wendy (2001). Monastic poor relief in sixteenth-century England. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 32(2), 193-216. https://doi.org/10.1162/002219501750442378
  • Waldfogel, Jane, Washbrook, Elizabeth (2011). Income-related gaps in school readiness in the United States and the United Kingdom. In Smeeding, Timothy M., Erikson, Robert S., Jäntti, Markus (Eds.), Persistence, Privilege, and Parenting: the Comparative Study of Intergenerational Mobility (pp. 175-208). Russell Sage Foundation.
  • Centre for Economic Performance
  • Addison, John T., Bryson, Alex, Teixeira, Paulino, Pahnke, André, Bellmann, Lutz (2009). The extent of collective bargaining and workplace representation: transitions between states and their determinants. A comparative analysis of Germany and Great Britain. (IZA discussion paper 4502). The Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).
  • Anderberg, Dan, Chevalier, Arnaud, Wadsworth, Jonathan (2009). Anatomy of a health scare: education, income and the MMR controversy in the UK. (CEP Discussion Paper 929). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Bennett, Robert J., Montebruno, Piero, Van Lieshout, Carry, Smith, Harry (2022). Business entry and exit: career changes of proprietors in England and Wales (1851-81) using record-linkage. Social Science History, 46(2), 255 - 289. https://doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2021.48 picture_as_pdf
  • Bennett, Robert J., Smith, Harry, Montebruno, Piero, van Lieshout, Carry (2022). Changes in Victorian entrepreneurship in England and Wales 1851-1911: methodology and business population estimates. Business History, 64(7), 1211 - 1243. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2021.1894134 picture_as_pdf
  • Blanchflower, D G, Bryson, Alex, Forth, John (2007). Workplace industrial relations in Britain, 1980-2004. Industrial Relations Journal, 38(4), 285 - 302. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2338.2007.00449.x
  • Bryson, Alex, Forth, John (2011). Trade unions. In Gregg, Paul, Wadsworth, Jonathan (Eds.), The Labour Market in Winter: the State of Working Britain (pp. 255-271). Oxford University Press.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (1997). Some dimensions of the 'quality of life' during the British industrial revolution. (CEPDP 339). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Dickens, Richard (1997). Caught in a trap? Wage mobility in Great Britain: 1975-94. (CEPDP 365). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Dickens, Richard, McKnight, Abigail (2008). Assimilation of migrants into the British labour market. (Centre for Economic Performance occasional papers CEPOP22). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Dickens, Richard, McKnight, Abigail (2008). Changes in earnings inequality and mobility in Great Britain 1978/9-2005/6. (Centre for Economic Performance occasional papers CEPOP21). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Fernie, Sue, Metcalf, David (1996). Low pay and minimum wages: the British evidence. (Centre for Economic Performance special papers CEPSP02). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Georgiadis, Andreas, Manning, Alan (2009). One nation under a groove? Identity and multiculturalism in Britain. (CEP Discussion Paper 944). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Gomez, Rafael, Bryson, Alex, Willman, Paul (2010). Voice in the wilderness?: the shift from union to non-union voice in Britain. In Wilkinson, Adrian, Gollan, Paul J., Marchington, Mick, Lewin, David (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Participation in Organizations (pp. 383-406). Oxford University Press.
  • Green, Andy, Steedman, Hilary (1997). Into the 21st century: an assessment of British skill profiles and prospects. (Centre for Economic Performance special papers CEPSP06). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Gregg, Paul, Wadsworth, Jonathan (2010). The UK labour market and the 2008 - 2009 recession. (Centre for Economic Performance occasional papers CEPOP25). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Heblich, Stephan, Redding, Stephen, Voth, Hans-Joachim (26 October 2023) Slavery and Britain's industrial revolution. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Heblich, Stephan, Redding, Stephen, Sturm, Daniel (2020). The making of the modern metropolis: evidence from London. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 135(4), 2059 - 2133. https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjaa014 picture_as_pdf
  • Machin, Stephen, McNally, Sandra (2012). The evaluation of English education policies. National Institute Economic Review, 219(1), R15-R25. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011221900103
  • Marsden, David (2010). The growth of extended 'entry tournaments' and the decline of institutionalised occupational labour markets in Britain. (CEP Discussion Paper 989). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Montebruno, Piero, Bennett, Robert J., Van Lieshout, Carry, Smith, Harry, Satchell, Max (2019). Shifts in agrarian entrepreneurship in mid-Victorian England and Wales. Agricultural History Review, 67(1), 71-108. picture_as_pdf
  • Nickell, Stephen (1999). Unemployment in Britain. In Gregg, Paul, Wadsworth, Jonathan (Eds.), The State of Working Britain (pp. 7-28). Manchester University Press.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (English) heritage and cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices and the Diamond Jubilee.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Slum clearance.
  • Richter, Ansgar (1997). Restructuring or Restrukturierung?: corporate restructuring in Britain and Germany. (Centre for Economic Performance special papers CEPSP07). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Smith, Harry, Bennett, Robert J., Van Lieshout, Carry, Montebruno, Piero (2021). Entrepreneurship in Scotland, 1851–1911. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 41(1), 38-64. https://doi.org/10.3366/jshs.2021.0313 picture_as_pdf
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2009). Did the national minimum wage affect UK prices? (CEP Discussion Paper 947). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Willman, Paul, Bryson, Alex (2009). Accounting for collective action: resource acquisition and mobilization in British unions. In Lewin, David, Kaufman, Bruce E. (Eds.), Advances in Industrial and Labor Relations (pp. 23-50). Emerald Group Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-6186(2009)0000016005
  • Centre for International Studies
  • Kent, John (2005). United States reactions to empire, colonialism, and cold war in black Africa, 1949-1957. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33(2), 195-220. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086530500123804
  • Kent, John (2008). The foreign office and defence of the empire. In Kennedy, Greg (Ed.), Imperial Defence: the Old World Order 1856-1956 (pp. 50-70). Routledge.
  • Economic History
  • Floud, Roderick, Johnson, Paul (Eds.) (2004). The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. Volume I: industrialisation 1700-1860. Cambridge University Press.
  • Johnson, Paul, Floud, Roderick (Eds.) (2004). The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain: volume III: structural change and growth 1939-2000. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CHOL9780521820387
  • Rabier, Christelle (Ed.) (2007). Fields of expertise: a comparative history of expert procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to present. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Gadd, Ian A. (Eds.) (2006). Guilds and associations in Europe, 900-1900. University of London. Centre for Metropolitan History.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Haycock, David Boyd (Eds.) (2005). Quackery and commerce in seventeenth-century London: the proprietary medicine business of Anthony Daffy. Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL.
  • Accominotti, Olivier, Flandreau, Marc (2008). Bilateral treaties and the most-favored-nation clause: the myth of trade liberalization in the nineteenth century. World Politics, 60(2), 147-188. https://doi.org/10.1353/wp.0.0010
  • Ackrill, Margaret (1994). British imperialism in microcosm: the annexation of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands. (Economic History working papers 18/94). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Altorfer, Stefan (2004). The canton of Berne as an investor on the London capital market in the 18th century. (Economic History Working Papers 85/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Baines, Dudley, Howlett, Peter, Johnson, Paul (1992). Human capital and payment systems in Britain, 1833-1914. (Economic History working papers 9/92). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Baines, Dudley, Johnson, Paul (1998). In search of the 'traditional' working class: social mobility and occupational continuity in inter-war London. (Economic History working papers 45/98). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Baines, Dudley, Johnson, Paul (1997). The labour force participation and economic well-being of older men in London, 1929-31. (Economic History working papers 37/97). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Berry, Dominic J. (2018). Book review: design, technology and communication in the British Empire, 1830–1914. British Journal for the History of Science, 51(03), 527-529. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007087418000651
  • Betteridge, Samuel R. (2021). Rethinking the Bengal connection: opium monopoly and fiscal capacity in British India, 1862-1908 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004377
  • Blain, Bodil Bjerkvik (2006). Melting markets: the rise and decline of the Anglo-Norwegian ice trade, 1850-1920. (Working Papers of the Global Economic History Network (GEHN) 20/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Burhop, Carsten (2010). Real wages and labor productivity in Britain and Germany, 1871–1938: a unified approach to the international comparison of living standards. Journal of Economic History, 70(02), 400-427. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050710000331
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Burhop, Carsten (2008). Resolving the Anglo-German industrial productivity puzzle, 1895–1935: a response to Professor Ritschl. Journal of Economic History, 68(3), 930-934. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050708000685
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Campbell, Bruce M.S., van Leeuwen, Bas (2012). When did Britain industrialise?: the sectoral distribution of the labour force and labour productivity in Britain, 1381–1851. Explorations in Economic History, 50(1), 16-27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2012.08.004
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Crafts, Nicholas (2000). Competition and innovation in 1950’s Britain. (Economic History Working Papers 57/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Broadberry, Stephen, Gupta, Bishnupriya (2009). Lancashire, India, and shifting competitive advantage in cotton textiles, 1700-1850: the neglected role of factor prices. Economic History Review, 62(2), 279-305. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2008.00438.x
  • Broten, Nicholas (2010). From sickness to death: the financial viability of the English friendly societies and coming of the Old Age Pensions Act, 1875-1908. (Economic History Working Papers 135/10). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Chadha, Jagjit, Newby, Elisa (2012-05-03) 'Midas, transmuting all, into paper': the Bank of England and the Banque de France during the Napoleonic Wars [Paper]. Modern and Comparative Seminar, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Chilosi, David, Lecce, Giampaolo, Wallis, Patrick (2025). Smithian growth in Britain before the Industrial Revolution, 1500-1800. (Economic History Working Papers 382). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Christodoulaki, Olga, Penzer, Jeremy (2004). News from London: Greek government bonds on the London Stock Exchange, 1914-1929. (Economic History Working Papers 86/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Claridge, Jordan, Gibbs, Spike (2020). Waifs and strays: property rights in late medieval England. (Economic History Working Papers 313). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Claridge, Jordan, Langdon, John (2011). Storage in medieval England: the evidence from purveyance accounts, 1295–1349. Economic History Review, 64(4), 1242-1265. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00564.x
  • Clark, Tom (2001). The limits of social democracy? Tax and spend under Labour, 1974-1979. (Economic History Working Papers 64/01). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Clark, Gregory (2023). The inheritance of social status: England, 1600 to 2022. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 120(27). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2300926120 picture_as_pdf
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2002). Britain's relative economic performance, 1870-1999. Institute of Economic Affairs.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2004). Market potential in British regions, 1871-1931. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 04/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2004). Regional GDP in Britain, 1871-1911: some estimates. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 03/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2004). Social savings as a measure of the contribution of a new technology to economic growth. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 06/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (1997). Some dimensions of the 'quality of life' during the British industrial revolution. (CEPDP 339). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (2003). Steam as a general purpose technology: a growth accounting perspective. (Economic History Working Papers 75/03). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas (1995). The 'quality of life': lessons for and from the British Industrial Revolution. (Economic History working papers 29/95). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Knick Harley, C. (2002). Precocious British industrialization: a general equilibrium perspective. (Economic History Working Papers 67/02). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Leunig, Tim, Mulatu, Abay (2007). Were British railway companies well-managed in the early twentieth century? (Working papers in large-scale technological change 10/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Leunig, Tim, Mulatu, Abay (2010). Were British railway companies well-managed in the early twentieth century? (Economic History Working Papers 137/10). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Mills, Terence C., Mulatu, Abay (2005). Total factor productivity growth on Britain's railways, 1852-1912: a reappraisal of the evidence. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 07/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Crafts, Nicholas, Mulatu, Abay (2004). How did the location of industry respond to falling transport costs in Britain before World War 1? (Working papers in large-scale technological change 05/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Craig, Elizabeth (2015-05-21) Social capital in Norfolk: building bridges, 1778-1821 [Poster]. LSE Research Festival 2015, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Cummins, Neil, Clark, Gregory (2022). Assortive mating and the industrial revolution: England, 1754-2021. (Economic History Working Papers 337). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Cummins, Neil (2009). Why did fertility decline?: an analysis of the individual level economics correlates of the nineteenth century fertility transition in England and France [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Custodis, Johann (2010-05-26) Employing the enemy: German and Italian prisoner of war labour was an important asset for the British economy, 1941-47 [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Epstein, Philip (1997). Were British "business cycles" cyclical? Evidence from historical statistics, 1700-1913. (Economic History working papers 35/97). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2004). Labour mobility, journeyman organisations and markets in skilled labour Europe, 14th-18th centuries. In Hilaire-Perez, Liliaine, Carçon, Anne-Francoise (Eds.), Pratiques Historiques De L’innovation, Historicité De L’économie des Savoirs (12e-19e Siècles) . Cths Edition.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (1992). Regional fairs, institutional innovation and economic growth in late medieval Britain. (Economic History working papers 11/92). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2006). Rodney Hilton, Marxism and the transition from feudalism to capitalism. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 15/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Epstein, Stephan R. (2007). Rodney Hilton, Marxism and the transition from feudalism to capitalism. Past and Present, 195(Suppl.), 248-269. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtm034
  • Gazeley, Ian, Newell, Andrew, Reynolds, Kevin, Rufrancos, Hector (2022). How hungry were the poor in late 1930s Britain? Economic History Review, 75(1), 80 - 110. https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.13079 picture_as_pdf
  • Gekas, Sakis (2005). Business culture and entrepreneurship in the Ionian Islands under British rule, 1815-1864. (Economic History Working Papers 89/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Gibbs, Alex Spike (2019). Lords, tenants and attitudes to manorial officeholding, c.1300-c.1600. Agricultural History Review, 67(2), 155 - 174. picture_as_pdf
  • Grafe, Regina (2003). The globalisation of codfish and wool: Spanish-English-North American triangular trade in the early modern period. (Economic History Working Papers 71/03). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hannah, Leslie (2011). J. P. Morgan in London and New York before 1914. Business History Review, 85(01), 113-150. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007680511000055
  • Haycock, David Boyd (2006). 'A thing ridiculous'? Chemical medicines and the prolongation of human life in seventeenth-century England. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 10/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Horrell, Sara, Oxley, Deborah (2016). Gender bias in nineteenth-century England: evidence from factory children. Economics and Human Biology, 22, 47 - 64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ehb.2016.03.006
  • Horrell, Sara Helen, Humphries, Jane, Weisdorf, Jacob (2020). Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280-1850. Past and Present, 250(1), 87–134. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtaa005 picture_as_pdf
  • Howlett, Peter (2001). Careers for the unskilled in the Great Eastern Railway Company, 1870-1913. (Economic History Working Papers 63/01). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Howlett, Peter (1992). New light through old windows: a new perspective on the British economy in the Second World War. (Economic History working papers 2/92). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Humphreys, Robert (1993). Scientific charity in Victorian London. Claims and achievements of the Charity Organisation Society, 1869-1890. (Economic History working papers 14/93). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Humphries, Jane (2023). Respectable standards of living: the alternative lens of maintenance costs, Britain 1270-1860. (Economic History Working Papers 353). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Humphries, Jane, Leunig, Tim (2007). Was Dick Whittington taller than those he left behind?: anthropometric measures, migration and the quality of life in early nineteenth century London. (Economic History Working Papers 101/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hunt, E. H., Pam, S. J. (1993). Essex men vindicated: output, incomes and investment in agriculture, 1850-73. (Economic History working papers 15/93). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hunt, Edward, Pam, S. J. (2011). Agricultural depression in England, 1873-96: skills transfer and the 'Redeeming Scots'. Agriculture History Review, 59(1), 81-100.
  • Hunter, Janet (2003). Bankers, investors and risk: British capital and Japan during the years of the Anglo-Japanese alliance. In O’Brien, Phillips (Ed.), The Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 1902-22 (pp. 176-198). RoutledgeCurzon (Firm).
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). Britain and the Japanese economy during the first world war. In Towle, Philip, Kosuge, Nobuko Margaret (Eds.), Britain and Japan in the Twentieth Century : One Hundred Years of Trade and Prejudice (pp. 15-32). I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Hunter, Janet (1991). British training for Japanese engineers: the case of kikuchi kyozo. In Cortazzi, Hugh, Daniels, Gordon (Eds.), Britain and Japan 1859-1991 : Themes and Personalities (pp. 137-146). Routledge.
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). The industrial revolution in Britian. In Rider, Christine (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the Age of the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1920 . Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.).
  • Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (2002). Anglo-Japanese economic relations in historical perspective, 1600-2000: trade and industry, finance, technology and industrial challenge. In Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (Eds.), The History of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1600-2000. Volume 4, Economic and Business Relations (pp. 1-109). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (2002). The history of Anglo-Japanese relations, 1600-2000. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Ishizu, Mina (2021). Metropolitan financial agents and the emergence of inter-regional financial linkages in England and Japan, 1760-1860. (Economic History Working Papers 327). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Johnson, Paul (2000). Civilising mammon: laws, morals and the city in nineteenth-century England. In Slack, Paul, Harrison, Brian, Burke, Peter (Eds.), Civil Histories (pp. 301-320). Oxford University Press.
  • Johnson, Paul (1992). Class law in Victorian Britain. (Economic History working papers 7/92). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Johnson, Paul (1996). Creditors, debtors and the law in Victorian and Edwardian England. (Economic History working papers 31/96). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Johnson, Paul (2006). Market disciplines. In Mandler, Peter (Ed.), Liberty and Authority in Victorian England (pp. 203-223). Oxford University Press.
  • Johnson, Paul (2005). Market disciplines in Victorian Britain. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 06/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Johnson, Paul (1992). Social risk and social welfare in Britain, 1870-1939. (Economic History working papers 3/92). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kennedy, William, Delargy, Robert (2000). Explaining Victorian entrepreneurship: a cultural problem? A market problem? No problem? (Economic History Working Papers 61/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kenny, Seán, Lennard, Jason, O'Rourke, Kevin Hjortshøj (2020). An annual index of Irish industrial production, 1800-1921. (Economic History Working Papers 312). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Knick Harley, C, Crafts, Nicholas (1998). Productivity of growth during the First Industrial Revolution: inferences from the pattern of British external trade. (Economic History working papers 42/98). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Koschnick, Julius Johannes (2023). On the shoulders of science – early science as a driver of innovation during the early industrial revolution [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004620
  • Kramper, Peter (2000). From economic convergence to convergence in affluence? Income growth, household expenditure and the rise of mass consumption in Britain and West Germany, 1950-1974. (Economic History Working Papers 56/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim (2001). Britannia ruled the waves. (Economic History Working Papers 66/01). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim (2002). Can profitable arbitrage opportunities in the raw cotton market explain Britain’s continued preference for mule spinning? (Economic History Working Papers 69/02). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim (2011). Growth figures show that Britain is essentially going backwards. Bringing forward the £10,000 tax allowance is the best option to encourage growth.
  • Leunig, Tim (2000). New answers to old questions: explaining the slow adoption of ring spinning in Lancashire, 1880-1913. (Economic History Working Papers 60/00). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim (2005). Time is money: a re-assessment of the passenger social savings from Victorian British railways. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 09/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Leunig, Tim, Minns, Chris, Wallis, Patrick (2011). Networks in the premodern economy: the market for London apprenticeships, 1600-1749. Journal of Economic History, 71(2), 413-443. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050711001586
  • Leunig, Tim (2003). A British industrial success: productivity in the Lancashire and New England cotton spinning industries a century ago. Economic History Review, 56(1), 90-117. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0289.00243
  • Leunig, Tim (2001). New answers to old questions : explaining the slow adoption of ring spinning in Lancashire, 1880-1913. Journal of Economic History, 61(2), 439 -466. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050701028078
  • Leunig, Tim, van Lottum, Jelle, Poulsen, Bo (2018). Surprisingly gentle confinement: British treatment of Danish and Norwegian prisoners of war during the napoleonic wars. Scandinavian Economic History Review, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1080/03585522.2018.1516235 picture_as_pdf
  • Lewis, Colin M. (1995). British business in Argentina. (Economic History working papers 26/95). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Li, Ling-Fan (2009). After the Great Debasement, 1544-51: did Gresham’s Law apply? (Economic History Working Papers 126/09). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Luzardo-Luna, Ivan (2021). Essays on labour frictions in interwar Britain [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004283
  • Luzardo-Luna, Ivan (2020). Labour frictions in interwar Britain: industrial reshuffling and the origin of mass unemployment. European Review of Economic History, 24(2), 243 - 263. https://doi.org/10.1093/ereh/hez001 picture_as_pdf
  • Mercer, Helen (1998). The abolition of resale price maintenance in Britain in 1964: a turning point for British manufacturers? (Economic History working papers 39/98). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Minns, Chris, Wallis, Patrick (2009). Rules and reality: quantifying the practice of apprenticeship in early modern Europe. (Economic History Working Papers 118/09). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Minns, Chris, Wallis, Patrick (2012). Rules and reality: quantifying the practice of apprenticeship in premodern England. Economic History Review, 65(2), 556-579. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2010.00591.x
  • Minns, Chris, Wallis, Patrick (2011). Why did (pre‐industrial) firms train?: premiums and apprenticeship contracts in 18th century England. (Economic History working papers 155/11). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mitchell, David (1994). "Blind Alley" employment and the role of adolescent labour force experience in skill development in late 19th and early 20th century England. (Economic History working papers 17/94). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mitchell, David (1994). Learning by doing among Victorian farmworkers: a case study in the biological and cognitive foundations of skill acquisition. (Economic History working papers 16/94). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mitchell, William H.F. (2024). R. Barry Levis. Render unto Caesar: ecclesiastical politics in the reign of Queen Anne. Journal of British Studies, https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2024.15
  • Morgan, Mary S. (2001). The formation of “modern” economics: engineering and ideology. (Economic History Working Papers 62/01). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mulatu, Abay, Crafts, Nicholas (2005). Efficiency among private railway companies in a weakly regulated system: the case of Britain's railways in 1893-1912. (Working papers in large-scale technological change 08/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Nicholas, Tom (1998). Clogs to clogs in three generations? Explaining entrepreneurial performance in Britain since 1850. (Economic History working papers 43/98). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Nicholas, Tom (1999). The myth of meritocracy: an inquiry into the social origins of Britain’s business leaders since 1850. (Economic History Working Papers 53/99). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Noble, Aurelius (2024). Social capital and elite persistence in late Victorian and Edwardian England [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004717
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2005). Fiscal and financial preconditions for the rise of British naval hegemony, 1485-1815. (Economic History Working Papers 91/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2001). Fiscal exceptionalism: Great Britain and its European rivals: from civil war to triumph at Trafalgar and Waterloo. (Economic History Working Papers 65/01). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (1998). Inseperable connexions: trade economy, fiscal state and the expansion of empire, 1688-1815. In Marshall, P.J. (Ed.), The Oxford History of the British Empire. Volume Ii, the Eighteenth Century . Oxford University Press.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2006). Mercantilist institutions for the pursuit of power with profit. The management of Britain’s national debt, 1756-1815. (Economic History Working Papers 95/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2011). The contributions of warfare with Revolutionary and Napoleonic France to the consolidation and progress of the British industrial revolution. (Economic History Working Papers 150/11). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2008). The history, nature and economic significance of an exceptional fiscal state for the growth of the British economy, 1453-1815. (Economic History Working Papers 109/08). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2007). The triumph and denouement of the British fiscal state: taxation for the wars against Revolutionary and Napoleonic France, 1793-1815. (Economic History Working Papers 99/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick, Duran, Xavier (2010). Total factor productivity for the Royal Navy from victory at Texal (1653) to triumph at Trafalgar (1805). (Economic History Working Papers 134/10). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • O'Brien, Patrick (2022). Was the British industrial revolution a conjuncture in global economic history? Journal of Global History, 17(1), 128 - 150. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1740022821000127 picture_as_pdf
  • Partridge, Matthew (2011). Book review: British foreign policy: the new Labour years.
  • Peyton, Nick (2025). God and Mammon: the Dissolution of the Monasteries and its consequences [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004968
  • Pirohakul, Teerapa, Wallis, Patrick (2014). Medical revolutions? The growth of medicine in England, 1660-1800. (Economic History Working Paper Series 185/2014). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2008). Définir une profession: expertise chirurgicale, conflits professionnels et pouvoir à Paris et à Londres, 1760–90 [In special issue: pouvoir, santé et société]. Revue Générale de Droit Médical, Oct, 237-263.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2002). Les traductions françaises et britanniques de chirurgie (1760-1830): supports de transferts? Hypothèses, 1, 163-175.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2011). Posséder les savoirs: les catalogues de vente des bibliothèques des chirurgiens français et britanniques (1760-1830). In Millot, Vincent, Minard, Philippe, Porret, Michel (Eds.), La Grande Chevauchée: Faire De L'histoire Avec Daniel Roche . Droz.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2006). Publier le geste chirurgical: la lithotomie en France et en Grande-Bretagne (1720–1820). In Ambroise-Rendu, Anne-Claude, d'Almeida, Fabrice, Edelman, Nicole (Eds.), des Gestes En Histoire: Formes et Significations des Gestualités Médicale, Guerrière et Politique (pp. 29-41). Seli Arslan.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2007). Defining a profession: surgery, professional conflicts and legal powers in Paris and London, 1760–1790. In Rabier, Christelle (Ed.), Fields of Expertise: a Comparative History of Expert Procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to Present (pp. 85-114). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2007). Introduction: expertise in historical perspectives. In Rabier, Christelle (Ed.), Fields of Expertise: a Comparative History of Expert Procedures in Paris and London, 1600 to Present (pp. 1-15). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2010). Les techniques chirurgicales autour de 1800 entre France et Grande-Bretagne: les enjeux des échanges. Documents Pour L’histoire des Techniques, 19(2), 65-71.
  • Rabier, Christelle (2011). L’histoire de la médecine au prisme du marché: perspectives britanniques. Recherches Britanniques, 1(1), 17-36.
  • Richards, Peter M. (1993). Political primacy in economic laws: a comparison of British and American anti-dumping legislation, 1921. (Economic History working papers 13/93). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Riello, Giorgio, O'Brien, Patrick (2004). Reconstructing the Industrial Revolution: analyses, perceptions and conceptions of Britain’s precocious transition to Europe’s first industrial society. (Economic History Working Papers 84/04). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ritschl, Albrecht (2008). The Anglo-German productivity puzzle, 1895-1935: a restatement and a possible resolution. (Economic History Working Papers 108/08). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ritschl, Albrecht, Straumann, Tobias (2010). Business cycles and economic policy, 1914-1945. In Broadberry, Stephen, O'Rourke, Kevin H. (Eds.), Cambridge Economic History of Modern Europe (pp. 156-180). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511794841.009
  • Ritschl, Albrecht, Straumann, Tobias (2009). Business cycles and economic policy, 1914-1945: a survey. (Economic History Working Papers 115/09). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ritschl, Albrecht (2008). The Anglo-German industrial productivity puzzle, 1895-1935: a restatement and a possible resolution. Journal of Economic History, 68(2), 535-565. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050708000399
  • Roy, Tirthankar (2019). State capacity and the economic history of colonial India. Australian Economic History Review, 59(1), 80-102. https://doi.org/10.1111/aehr.12166 picture_as_pdf
  • Schwarzberg, Raphaelle (2010). Becoming a London goldsmith in the seventeenth century: social capital and mobility of apprentices and masters of the guild. (Economic History Working Papers 141/10). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Swensen, Steven P. (2006). Mapping poverty in Agar Town: economic conditions prior to the development of St. Pancras Station in 1866. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 09/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Udale, Charles (2023). Evaluating early modern lockdowns: household quarantine in Bristol, 1565–1604. Economic History Review, 76(1), 118 - 144. https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.13176 picture_as_pdf
  • Udale, Charles Warrington (2023). The plague and the state in early modern England 1538-1667 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004642
  • Valeriani, Simona (2010). Learning about architecture and building in 17th century England: the case of Sir Roger Pratt. Berichte der Tagungen für Ausgrabungswissenschaft und Bauforschung, 45, 127-136.
  • Valeriani, Simona (2006). The roofs of Wren and Jones: a seventeenth-century migration of technical knowledge from Italy to England. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 14/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Velkar, Aashish (2006). Institutional facts and standardisation: the case of measurements in the London coal trade. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 11/06). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Velkar, Aashish (2008). Markets, standards and transactions: measurements in nineteenth-century British economy [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Wallis, Patrick (28 April 2025) Apprenticeship and economic growth in early modern England. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Wallis, Patrick (2007). Apprenticeship and training in premodern England. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 22/07). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2008). Apprenticeship and training in premodern England. Journal of Economic History, 68(03), 832-861. https://doi.org/10.1017/S002205070800065X
  • Wallis, Patrick (2001). Charity, politics and the establishment of York County Hospital: a "party job"? Northern History: a Review of the History of the North of England and the Borders, 38(2), 243-260.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2012). Exotic drugs and English medicine: England's drug trade, c.1550-c.1800. Social History of Medicine, 25(1), 20 - 46. https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkr055
  • Wallis, Patrick (2011). Labour, law and training in early modern London: apprenticeship and the city’s institutions. (Economic History working papers 154/11). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2010). Londoners outside the walls. London Record Society.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2005). A dreadful heritage: interpreting epidemic disease at Eyam, 1666-2000. (Working papers on the nature of evidence: how well do 'facts' travel? 02/05). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Webb, Cliff (2011). The education and training of gentry sons in early modern England. Social History, 36(1), 36-53. https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2010.542905
  • Wallis, Patrick, Webb, Cliff (2009). The education and training of gentry sons in early-modern England. (Economic History Working Papers 128/09). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Webb, Cliff, Minns, Chris (2009). Leaving home and entering service: the age of apprenticeship in early modern London. (Economic History Working Papers 125/09). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wallis, Patrick, Webb, Cliff, Minns, Chris (2010). Leaving home and entering service: the age of apprenticeship in early modern London. Continuity and Change, 25(3), 377-404. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0268416010000299
  • Wallis, Patrick, Wright, Christopher (2013). Evidence, artisan experience and authority in early modern England. In Smith, Pamela H., Mayers, Amy, Cook, Harold J. (Eds.), Ways of Making and Knowing: the Material Culture of Empirical Knowledge . University of Michigan. Press.
  • Wallis, Patrick (2019). Apprenticeship in England. In Prak, Maarten, Wallis, Patrick (Eds.), Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe (pp. 247 - 281). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108690188.010 picture_as_pdf
  • Wallis, Patrick (2019). Between apprenticeship and skill: acquiring knowledge outside the academy in Early Modern England. Science in Context, 32(2), 155-170. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0269889719000164
  • Wallis, Patrick (2020). Guilds and mutual aid in England. In Hellwege, Phillip (Ed.), Professional Guilds and the History of Insurance: A Comparative Analysis . Duncker und Humblot GmbH. picture_as_pdf
  • Economics
  • Barr, Nicholas (2004). Alan Prest. In Rutherford, Donald (Ed.), Biographical Dictionary of British Economists (pp. 970-972). Continuum (Firm).
  • Crowley, D. W. (1952). The origins of the revolt of the British Labour movement from Liberalism 1875-1906 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Heblich, Stephan, Redding, Stephen, Sturm, Daniel (2020). The making of the modern metropolis: evidence from London. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 135(4), 2059 - 2133. https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjaa014 picture_as_pdf
  • Stockdale, Jan, Whitehead, Christine M E (2003). Assessing cost-effectiveness. In Bullock, Karen, Tilley, Nick (Eds.), Crime Reduction and Problem-Oriented Policing (pp. 217-251). Willan Publishing.
  • European Institute
  • Barr, Nicholas (2004). Alan Prest. In Rutherford, Donald (Ed.), Biographical Dictionary of British Economists (pp. 970-972). Continuum (Firm).
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2009). Britain and the dynamics of Europeanisation. In Flinders, Matthew, Gamble, Andrew, Hay, Colin, Kenny, Michael (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of British Politics . Oxford University Press.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (1999-06-02 - 1999-06-05) The British Labour Party from Kinnock to Blair: Europeanism and Europeanization [Paper]. Sixth Biennial International Conference of the European Community Studies Association, Pittsburgh, United States, USA.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (1997). Europe on course for a single currency: the challenge for the Blair Government. Credit Management, July 1,
  • Featherstone, Kevin (1982). Recent changes in the Labour Party's constitution. In Robins, Lynton (Ed.), Topics in British Politics (pp. 49-62). Politics Association (Great Britain).
  • Featherstone, Kevin (1986). Socialist parties and European integration: variations on a common theme. In Paterson, William E., Thomas, Alastair H. (Eds.), The Future of Social Democracy: Problems and Prospects of Social Democratic Parties in Western Europe (pp. 242-260). Oxford University Press.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (1981). Socialists and European integration: the attitudes of British Labour members of parliament. European Journal of Political Research, 9(4), 407-419. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-6765.1981.tb00616.x
  • Featherstone, Kevin, Kern, D., Davies, S., Staples, R. A. V. (1997). A single currency - good for Europe? Good for Britain? RSA Journal, 145, p. 5476.
  • Glendinning, Simon (2018). Brexit and the German question. In Eaglestone, Robert (Ed.), Brexit and literature: critical and cultural responses . Routledge. picture_as_pdf
  • Hopkin, Jonathan (2025). Brexit and the crisis of British democracy. In Kettell, Steven, Kerr, Peter, Tepe, Daniela (Eds.), What went wrong with Britain? An audit of Tory failure (pp. 266 - 287). Manchester University Press.
  • Nafpliotis, Alexandros (2010). Britain and Greece: 40 years ago.
  • Financial Markets Group
  • Goodhart, Charles (2018). Book review: till time's last sand: a history of the Bank of England, 1694-2013 by David Kynaston. History of Political Economy, 50(4), 800-802. https://doi.org/10.1215/00182702-7202596 picture_as_pdf
  • Gender Studies
  • Evans, Mary (2011). The crude moralism that characterises looters and rioters as ‘scum’ is evidence that space for political debate about the causes of things is becoming dangerously limited.
  • Evans, Mary, Morgan, David (1993). The battle for Britain: citizenship and ideology in the Second World War. Routledge.
  • Scharff, Christina (2009). Young women's dis-identification with feminism: negotiating heteronormativity, neoliberalism and difference [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Wanniarachchi, Senel (2024). A history and theory of colonial loot: an exploration into “Sri Lankan” artefacts in British museums [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004869 picture_as_pdf
  • Geography and Environment
  • Cantwell, John, Iammarino, Simona (2000). Multinational corporations and the location of technological innovation in the UK regions. Regional Studies, 34(4), 317-332. https://doi.org/10.1080/00343400050078105
  • Cheshire, Paul (2014). Turning houses into gold: don’t blame the foreigners, it’s we Brits who did it. Centrepiece, 19(1), 14-18.
  • Gordon, Ian R. (2002). Industrial and regional policy: a London perspective. In Adams, Jon, Robinson, Peter (Eds.), Devolution in Practice (pp. 86-92). Institute for Public Policy Research (London, England).
  • Holman, Nancy (2010). The changing nature of the London Plan. In Scanlon, Kath, Kochan, Ben (Eds.), London: Coping With Austerity (pp. 29-40). London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mitchell, William H.F. (2024). R. Barry Levis. Render unto Caesar: ecclesiastical politics in the reign of Queen Anne. Journal of British Studies, https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2024.15
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (English) heritage and cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices and the Diamond Jubilee.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Slum clearance.
  • Pratt, Andy C. (2000). Employment: the difficulties of classification, the logic of grouping industrial activities comprising the sector, and some summaries of the size and distribution of employment in the creative industries sector in Great Britain 1981-96'. In Roodhouse, Simon (Ed.), The New Cultural Map: a Research Agenda for the 21st Century (pp. 9-14). Bretton Hall College of Higher Education.
  • Government
  • London School of Economics and Political Science (2010). British policy and politics at LSE.
  • Breuilly, John, Niedhart, Gottfried, Taylor, Antony (Eds.) (1995). The era of the reform league: English labour and radical politics 1857-1872. Documents selected by Gustav Meyer. Palatium Verlag im J & J. Verlag.
  • Asari, Eva-Maria, Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Mock, Steven (2008). British national identity and the dilemmas of multiculturalism. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 14(1), 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/13537110701872444
  • Bannerman, G. E. (2010). The "Nabob of the North": Sir Lawrence Dundas as government contractor. Historical Research, 83(219), 102-123. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2281.2007.00447.x
  • Bannerman, Gordon (2017). The impact of war: new business networks and small-scale contractors in Britain, 1739–1770. Business History, 60(1), 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2017.1312687
  • Breuilly, John (1998). Ein stück Englands? a contrast between the free-trade movements in Hamburg and Manchester. In Marrison, Andrew (Ed.), Free Trade and Its Reception 1815-1960: Freedom and Trade (pp. 105-126). Routledge.
  • Breuilly, John (2002). Historians and the nation. In Burke, Peter (Ed.), History and Historians in the Twentieth Century (pp. 55-87). Oxford University Press.
  • Breuilly, John (1985). Liberalism or social democracy: a comparison of British and German labour politics. European History Quarterly, 15(1), 3-42.
  • Breuilly, John (1996). Modern German history and British historians. German Studies Library Group Newsletter, 21, 11-29.
  • Breuilly, John (2005). Modernisation as social evolution: the German case. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 15, 117-147. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0080440105000289
  • Breuilly, John (1997). Variations in liberalism: Britain and Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. Diplomacy and Statecraft, 8(3), 91-123. https://doi.org/10.1080/09592299708406057
  • Breuilly, John (1999). The contexts of nineteenth-century English and Prussian conservatism: a comment on Edgar Feuchtwanger. In Brenner, Michael, Liedtke, Rainer, Rechter, David, Mosse, Werner E. (Eds.), Two Nations: British and German Jews in Comparative Perspective (pp. 241-245). Mohr Siebeck (Firm).
  • Breuilly, John (2008). The historical conditions for multiculturalism. In Eade, John, Barrett, Martyn, Flood, Chris, Race, Richard (Eds.), Advancing Multiculturalism Post 7/7 (pp. 7-28). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  • Breuilly, John (1984). The labour aristocracy in Britain and Germany: a comparison. Bulletin of the Society for the Study of Labour History, 48, 58-71.
  • Chappell, Jonathan (2016). The limits of the Shanghai bridgehead: understanding British intervention in the Taiping Rebellion 1860–62. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 44(4), 533-550. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2016.1210251
  • Dowding, Keith (2000). Model or metaphor? A critical review of the policy network approach. In Dunleavy, Patrick, Kelly, Paul J., Moran, Michael (Eds.), British Political Science: Fifty Years of Political Studies (pp. 196-213). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Dowding, Keith (2002). The civil service. In Hollowell, Jonathan (Ed.), Britain Since 1945 (pp. 179-193). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2011). The vulnerability of the British state – deeper lessons from the urban riots.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick, Margetts, Helen (1999). Mixed electoral systems in Britain and the Jenkins commission on electoral reform. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 1(1), 12-38. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-856X.00002
  • Eggers, Andrew C., Spirling, Arthur (2014). Ministerial responsiveness in Westminster systems: institutional choices and House of Commons debate, 1832-1915. American Journal of Political Science, 58(4), 873 - 887. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajps.12090
  • Glennerster, Howard (2001). Social policy. In Seldon, Anthony (Ed.), The Blair Effect: the Blair Government 1997-2001 (pp. 383-404). Little, Brown and Company.
  • Hughes, James (2012). Bloody Sunday is almost universally recognised as ‘unjustified and unjustifiable’. But lessons must be drawn for peace in Northern Ireland, and for counterinsurgency more generally.
  • Hughes, James (2013). State violence in the origins of nationalism: British counterinsurgency and the rebirth of Irish nationalism, 1969-1972. In Hall, John A., Malesevic, Sinisa (Eds.), Nationalism and War (pp. 97-123). Cambridge University Press.
  • Hutchinson, John (2013). The Irish revival, elite competition and the First World War. In O'Neill, Ciaran (Ed.), Irish Elites in the Nineteenth Century . Four Courts Press.
  • Hutchinson, John, O'Day, Alan (1999). The Gaelic revival in London, 1900-22: limits of ethnic identity. In Swift, Roger, Gilley, Sheridan (Eds.), The Irish in Victorian Britain: the Local Dimension (pp. 254-276). Four Courts Press.
  • Jones, George W., Donoughue, Bernard (2001). Herbert Morrison: portrait of a politician. Phoenix Press.
  • Kissane, Bill (2004). The legislative response to political extremism in the Irish Free State 1922-39. Irish Historical Studies, 34(134), 156-174.
  • Kissane, Bill (2011). The violence on London’s streets is less political and less structured than has been the case in Northern Ireland. It is the result of decades of social and economic deprivation and inequality.
  • Kissane, Bill (2021). The geographical spread of state executions during the Irish Civil War, 1922-1923. Social Science History, 45(1), 165 - 186. https://doi.org/10.1017/ssh.2020.43 picture_as_pdf
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2003). The Albanians in Great Britain: diasporic identity and experience in the educational perspective since 1990. Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans, 5(1), 53-69. https://doi.org/10.1080/1461319032000062651
  • Kukathas, Chandran (2015). Why immigration controls resemble apartheid in their adverse consequences for freedom.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2009). Information acquisition, ideology and turnout: theory and evidence from Britain. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 21(2), 237-276. https://doi.org/10.1177/0951629808100765
  • Mitchell, Paul (2003). Fianna Fil still dominant in the coalition era: The Irish general election of May 2002. West European Politics, 26(2), 174-183. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402380512331341171
  • Mitchell, Paul (2007). Party competition and voting behaviour since agreement. In Carmichael, Paul, Knox, Colin, Osborne, Robert (Eds.), Devolution and Constitutional Change in Northern Ireland (pp. 110-124). Manchester University Press.
  • Mitchell, Paul, Evans, Geoffrey (2009). Ethnic party competition and the dynamics of power-sharing in Northern Ireland. In Taylor, Rupert (Ed.), Consociational Theory: Mcgarry and O'leary and the Northern Ireland Conflict (pp. 146-164). Routledge.
  • Mitchell, Paul, O'Leary, Brendan, Evans, Geoffrey (2002). The 2001 elections in Northern Ireland: moderating 'extremists' and the squeezing of the moderates. Representation, 39(1), 23-36. https://doi.org/10.1080/00344890208523211
  • Mitchell, Paul, O'Leary, Brendan, Evans, Geoffrey (2005). Changing party fortunes: party competition and public opinion at the Northern Ireland Assembly elections of 2003. (ARK Research Update no. 36). ARK Northern Ireland.
  • O'Leary, Brendan, Hazell, Robert (1999). A Rolling programme of devolution: slippery slope or safeguard of the union? In Hazell, Robert (Ed.), Constitutional Futures (pp. 21-46). Oxford University Press.
  • Rickard, Stephanie (2007). Book review: Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, "from the Corn Laws to free trade: interests, ideas, and institutions in historical perspective". Journal of British Studies, 46(4), 970-972. https://doi.org/10.1086/522739
  • Schonhardt-Bailey, Cheryl (1991). Lessons in lobbying for free trade from 19th-Century Britain: to concentrate or not. American Political Science Review, 85(1), 37-58. https://doi.org/10.2307/1962877
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  • Schonhardt-Bailey, Cheryl, Prueher, Elizabeth Flanagan (1998). Richard Cobden. In Brack, Duncan (Ed.), Dictionary of Liberal Biography (pp. 82-84). Politico's Publishing.
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  • Mayhew, Alex (2024). English patriotism and the implicit nation: homelands and soldiers’ national identity during the Great War. English Historical Review, 138(594-595), 1277 - 1306. https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cead180 picture_as_pdf
  • Mayhew, Alexander (2018). Making sense of the western front: English infantrymen’s morale and perception of crisis during the Great War [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • McDougall, Hamish (2021). Buttering up: Britain, New Zealand and negotiations for European Community enlargement, 1970–71. International History Review, 43(2), 333 - 347. https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2020.1759673
  • Milani, Tommaso (2016). From laissez-faire to supranational planning: the economic debate within Federal Union (1938–1945). European Review of History, 23(4), 664-685. https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2015.1132193
  • Mitchell, William H.F. (2024). R. Barry Levis. Render unto Caesar: ecclesiastical politics in the reign of Queen Anne. Journal of British Studies, https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2024.15
  • Mitchell, William H.F. (2021). The primitive church revived the apostolic age in the propaganda of William III. Church History and Religious Culture, 101(1), 61-79. https://doi.org/10.1163/18712428-bja10017
  • Mitchell, William Henry Feeney (2022). The Whig idea of Europe, 1685-1705 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004436
  • Murphy, Mahon (2014). Prisoners of war and civilian internees captured by British and Dominion forces from the German colonies during the First World War [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Nish, Ian, Kibata, Yoichi (2000). The history of Anglo-Japanese relations: the political-diplomatic dimension, 1600-2000 (2 Vols). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Onslow, Sue (2003). Battlelines for Suez: the Conservatives & the Abadan crisis, 1950-1951. Contemporary British History, 17(2), 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460308565441
  • Onslow, Sue (2001). Book review: 'Alan Lennox-Boyd: a biography' by Philip Murphy. Contemporary British History, 15(2), 129-131. https://doi.org/10.1080/713999407
  • Onslow, Sue (2005). Britain and the Belgrade Coup of 27 March 1941 revisited. Electronic Journal of International History, 1-57.
  • Onslow, Sue (2008). Julian Amery and the Suez Crisis. In Smith, Simon (Ed.), Reassessing Suez 1956: New Perspectives on the Crisis and Its Aftermath . Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Onslow, Sue (2005). The Suez Group. In Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . Oxford University Press.
  • Onslow, Sue (2006). Unreconstructed Nationalists and a minor gunboat operation: Julian Amery, Neil McLean and the Suez Crisis. Contemporary British History, 20(1), 73-99. https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460500444999
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  • Pechatnov, Vladimir, Rajak, Svetozar (2016). British-Soviet relations in the Cold War, 1943-1953 documentary evidence project.
  • Photiadou, Artemis (2025). The ABCs of Nazism: the political screening and classification of German prisoners of war in Britain in the aftermath of the Second World War. English Historical Review, https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceaf151
  • Photiadou, Artemis (2021). Extremely valuable work: British intelligence and the interrogation of refugees in London, 1941-45. Intelligence and National Security, 36(1), 17 - 33. https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2020.1806474 picture_as_pdf
  • Photiadou, Artemis (2022). Un-British no more: torture and interrogation by Britain in Germany, 1945-54. Journal of Contemporary History, 57(4), 1029 - 1050. https://doi.org/10.1177/00220094221087854 picture_as_pdf
  • Photiadou, Artemis (2022). The detention of non-enemy civilians escaping to Britain during the Second World War. Historical Journal, 65(2), 482 - 504. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X2100008X picture_as_pdf
  • Photiadou, Artemis Joanna (2019). British interrogation culture from war to peace, 1939-1948 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Po, Ronald C. (2023). Consuming China in early modern England and beyond: a survey and reexamination. Asian Review of World Histories, 11(2), 180 - 209. https://doi.org/10.1163/22879811-bja10018 picture_as_pdf
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  • Prazmowska, Anita J. (1994). Poland between East and West - the politics of a government-in-exile. In Gorodetsky, Gabriel (Ed.), Soviet Foreign Policy 1917-1991: a Retrospective (pp. 86-96). Frank Cass & Co..
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  • Preston, Paul (2024). Perfidious Albion: Britain and the Spanish Civil War. The Clapton Press.
  • Pérez de Arcos, Marina (2021). Education, intelligence and cultural diplomacy at the British Council in Madrid, 1940–1941 part 1: founding a school in troubled times. Bulletin of Spanish Studies, 98(4), 527 - 555. https://doi.org/10.1080/14753820.2021.1896232
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  • Rodriguez-Salgado, Maria-Jose (2002). Good brothers and perpetual allies: Charles V and Henry VIII. In Kohler, A., Haider, B., Ottner, C. (Eds.), Karl V. 1500-1558. Neue Perspektiven Seiner Herrschaft in Europa und Übersee (pp. 611-653). Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
  • Rodriguez-Salgado, Maria-Jose (2015). Koenigsberger, Helmut Georg, 1918-2014. Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the British Academy, XIV, 301-333.
  • Ruane, Kevin, Jones, Matthew (2019). Anthony Eden, Anglo-American relations and the 1954 Indochina Crisis. Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Sayle, Ben (2025). ‘Constitutional alienation’ and the Unionist Party during The Ulster Crisis, 1911‐1914. Parliamentary History, 44(3), 400-420. https://doi.org/10.1111/1750-0206.70005 picture_as_pdf
  • Sayle, Ben (2023). Reconsidering the “Edwardian Radical Right”, 1903-1918 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004579
  • Scanlan, Padraic X. (2017). Freedom’s debtors: British antislavery in Sierra Leone in the age of revolution. Yale University Press. https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300217445.001.0001
  • Scanlan, Padraic X. (2016). Blood, money and endless paper: slavery and capital in British imperial history. History Compass, 14(5), 218-230. https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12310
  • Scanlan, Padraic X. (2020). Slaves and peasants in the era of emancipation. Journal of British Studies, 59(3), 495 - 520. https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2020.39 picture_as_pdf
  • Scanlan, Padraic X. (2016). The colonial rebirth of British anti-slavery: the liberated African villages of Sierra Leone, 1815-1824. American Historical Review, 121(4), 1085-1113. https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/121.4.1085
  • Schulze, Kirsten E. (1998). Nordirland: Hindernisse zur Konfliktlösung. In Waldman, Peter (Ed.), Bürgerkriege: Folgen und RegulierungsmöGlichkeiten (pp. 170-188). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft.
  • Schulze, Kirsten E., Smith, M.L.R (2000). Decommissioning and paramilitary strategy in Northern Ireland: a problem compared. Journal of Strategic Studies, 23(4), 77-106. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402390008437813
  • Sivasundaram, Sujit (2011). Islanded: natural history in the British colonisation of Ceylon. In Livingstone, David, Withers, Charles (Eds.), Geographies of Nineteenth-Century Science . University of Chicago Press.
  • Sivasundaram, Sujit (2013). The kingdom of Kandy in Sri Lanka: challenging narratives of British colonialism.
  • Sivasundaram, Sujit (2004). The periodical as barometer: spiritual measurement and the 'Evangelical Magazine'. In Cantor, Geoffrey, Dawson, Gowan, Henson, Louise, Noakes, Richard, Shuttleworth, Sally, Topham, Jonathan R. (Eds.), Culture and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Media (pp. 43-56). Ashgate Dartmouth.
  • Sked, Alan (1987). Britain's decline: problems and perspectives. Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Sked, Alan (2000). Great Britain and the continental revolutions of 1848. In Birke, Adolf M., Brechtken, Magnus, Searle, Alaric (Eds.), An Anglo-German Dialogue: the Munich Lectures on the History of International Relations (pp. 43-55). K.G. Saur Verlag.
  • Sked, Alan (2015). Why Britain really joined the EEC (and why it had nothing to do with helping our economy).
  • Sked, Alan (1997). An intelligent person's guide to post-war Britian. Duckworth (Firm).
  • Sked, Alan (1978). The liberal tradition and the Lib-Lab Pact. West European Politics, 1(2), 193-207. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402387808424200
  • Sked, Alan (2002). The political parties. In Hollowell, Jonathan (Ed.), Britain Since 1945 (pp. 40-58). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Sked, Alan, Cook, Chris (1979). Post-war Britain: a political history. Harvester Press.
  • Skjonsberg, Max (2016). Lord Bolingbroke's theory of party and opposition. Historical Journal, 59(4), 947-973. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X15000485
  • Stevenson, David (1993). The end of history?: the British university experience, 1981-1992. Contemporary Record, 7(1), 66-85. https://doi.org/10.1080/13619469308581237
  • Stevenson, David (2020). Britain's biggest wartime stoppage: the origins of the engineering strike of May 1917. History, 105(365), 268 - 290. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-229X.12970 description
  • Stewart, Ian B. (2015). Of crofters, Celts and claymores: the Celtic Magazine and the Highland cultural nationalist movement, 1875-88. Historical Research, 89(243), 88-113. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.12101
  • Stock, Paul (2019). Europe and the British geographical imagination, 1760-1830. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807117.001.0001
  • Stock, Paul (2011). "Almost a separate race": racial thought and the idea of Europe in British encyclopaedias and histories, 1771-1830. Modern Intellectual History, 8(1), 3-29. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1479244311000035
  • Stock, Paul (2019). Introduction: Europe and the British geographical imagination, 1760-1830. In Europe and the British Geographical Imagination, 1760-1830 (pp. 1 - 16). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198807117.003.0012 picture_as_pdf
  • Stock, Paul (2018). Lost treasures of Strawberry Hill: masterpieces from Horace Walpole's collection. Criticks Reviews, picture_as_pdf
  • Stock, Paul (2015). Review essay: Georgian Britain: modernity and the middle classes. Eighteenth-Century Life, 39(3), 114-117. https://doi.org/10.1215/00982601-3143863
  • Stock, Paul (2016). Samuel Pepys: plague, fire, revolution. Criticks Reviews, picture_as_pdf
  • Umoren, Imaobong (2025). Empire without end: a new history of Britain and the Caribbean. Fern Press.
  • Umoren, Imaobong (12 June 2025) A new history of Britain and the Caribbean - interview with Imaobong Umoren. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Umoren, Imaobong (2025). Introduction. In Empire Without End: A New History of Britain and the Caribbean (pp. 1 - 16). Fern Press. picture_as_pdf
  • Yap, Felicia M. (2011). Voices and silences of memory: civilian internees of the Japanese in British Asia during the Second World War. Journal of British Studies, 50(4), 917-940. https://doi.org/10.1086/661602
  • International Relations
  • Cox, Michael, Guelke, Adrian, Stephen, Fiona (Eds.) (2006). Northern Ireland: a farewell to arms?: beyond the Good Friday Agreement. Manchester University Press.
  • Bayly, Martin J. (2019). Mountstuart Elphinstone, colonial knowledge and 'frontier governmentality' in northwest India, 1849-1878. In Hanifi, Shah Mahmoud (Ed.), Mountstuart Elphinstone in South Asia: Pioneer of British Colonial Rule (pp. 249-393). Hurst Publishers (London, England).
  • Bayly, Martin J. (2016). Taming the imperial imagination: colonial knowledge and Anglo-Afghan relations, 1808-1878. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316339176
  • Hill, Christopher, Oliver, Tim (2007). Conclusion. In Ziegner, Graham (Ed.), British Diplomacy: British Foreign Secretaries Reflect . Methuen & Co..
  • Hughes, Christopher R. (2012). ICTs and remembering the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the slave trade in Britain: an occasion for celebration or remorse? Journal of Historical Sociology, 25(2), 223-243. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6443.2012.01425.x
  • Kent, John (2005). United States reactions to empire, colonialism, and cold war in black Africa, 1949-1957. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 33(2), 195-220. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086530500123804
  • Kent, John (2008). The foreign office and defence of the empire. In Kennedy, Greg (Ed.), Imperial Defence: the Old World Order 1856-1956 (pp. 50-70). Routledge.
  • Levkovych, Oksana (2022). Liberals and protectionism Britain's international trade policy between the wars (1902-1939) [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004475
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2002). Constancy and flirtation: Germany, Britain and the EEC, 1957-1972. In Noakes, Jeremy, Wende, Peter, Wright, Jonathan (Eds.), Britain and Germany in Europe 1949-1990 (pp. 95-112). Oxford University Press.
  • Morrison, James (2021). England's cross of gold: Keynes, Churchill, and the governance of economic beliefs. Cornell University Press.
  • Stasavage, David (2003). Public debt and the birth of the democratic state: France and Great Britain, 1688-1789. Cambridge University Press.
  • Stevenson, David (2009). Book review: Marion Girard - a strange and formidable weapon: British responses to World War I poison gas. American Historical Review, 114(5), 1534-1535. https://doi.org/10.1086/ahr.114.5.1534
  • Strong, James (2017). Two-level games beyond the United States: international indexing in Britain during the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Global Society, 31(2), 293-313. https://doi.org/10.1080/13600826.2016.1266994
  • Trubowitz, Peter, Harris, Peter (2015). When states appease: British appeasement in the 1930s. Review of International Studies, 41(02), 289-311. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210514000278
  • Wallace, William (2007). Introduction: British diplomacy: British foreign secretaries reflect. In Ziegner, Graham (Ed.), British Diplomacy: British Foreign Secretaries Reflect (pp. 1-18). Methuen & Co..
  • Wilson, Peter (2015). Leonard Woolf, the League of Nations and peace between the wars. Political Quarterly, 86(4), 532-539. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923X.12192
  • Xenakis, Sappho (2008). Domestic elite perceptions of British corruption. (Crime and culture discussion paper series 19). University of Konstanz.
  • Xenakis, Sappho (2007). The dog(s) that didn’t bark: exploring perceptions of corruption in the UK. (Discussion Paper Series). University of Konstanz.
  • Xenakis, Sappho (2008). The view from above: interviews with corruption experts in the UK. (Crime and culture discussion paper series 18). University of Konstanz.
  • LSE
  • Abram, Annie (1909). The effects produced by economic changes upon social life in England in the fifteenth century [Masters thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Ahrens, Thomas (1999). Contrasting involvements: a study of management accounting practices in Britain and Germany. Harwood Academic Publishers.
  • Aldred, Joe (2016). Pentecostalism in Britain today: making up for failures of the past.
  • Allott, Philip (28 January 2020) Ten acts of gross British misgovernment since 1945. LSE Brexit.
  • Andreouli, Eleni, Stockdale, Jan E. (2009). Earned citizenship: assumptions and implications. Tottel's Journal of Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Law, 23(2), 165-180.
  • Arat, Alp (2017). We need to talk about mindfulness: the changing face of religion and the secular in the public sphere.
  • Assi, Nima Khorrami (2011). Keeping 16,000 police on the streets of London is an unsustainable strategy. Government should give serious consideration to turning ‘good gangs’ into voluntary neighborhood officers under police supervision.
  • Baines, Dudley (2004). Population, migration and regional development, 1870-1939. In Floud, Roderick, McCloskey, Deirdre N. (Eds.), The Economic History of Britain Since 1700 (pp. 25-55). Cambridge University Press.
  • Baker, Nicholas (16 February 2020) Book review: contentious rituals: parading the nation in Northern Ireland. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Baker, Nicholas (29 January 2020) Book review: contentious rituals: parading the nation in Northern Ireland by Jonathan S. Blake. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Bale, Tim (2013). Margaret Thatcher has a fair claim to be called the most influential politician since the Second World War, but her legacy is still hotly disputed today because of her mistakes and weak points.
  • Bannerman, Gordon (2014). Book review: The war prerogative: history, reform, and constitutional design by Rosara Joseph.
  • Barber, Karin (2024). Print networks and linguistic interaction in the early Yoruba press. In Finkelstein, D, Johnson, D, Davis, C (Eds.), The Edinburgh Companion to British Colonial Periodicals (pp. 330 - 342). Edinburgh University Press. https://doi.org/10.3366/jj.15478419.26
  • Bartlett, James Neville (1958). Some aspects of the economy of York in the later Middle Ages, 1300-1550 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Basu, Shrabani, Campion, Sonali (2017). “The Indian soldiers were desperately homesick, they longed to go home and who can blame them?” – Shrabani Basu.
  • Bevan, Gwyn, Airoldi, Mara, Morton, Alec, Oliveira, Mónica, Smith, Jennifer (2007). Estimating health and productivity gains in England from selected interventions. QQUIP (Quest for Quality and Improved Performance), The Health Foundation.
  • Board, Christopher (2025). Maps for empire: the first 2000 numbered War Office maps, 1881-1905. By A. Crispin Jewitt. Revised and updated (2nd) edition. London: Charles Close Society, 2024. ISBN: 978-1-870598-36-1. Imago Mundi, 77(1), 101 - 101. https://doi.org/10.1080/03085694.2025.2508704
  • Bojar, Abel (2017). In defence of polls: A few high-profile misses should not overshadow the many times pollsters called it right.
  • Bosco, Andrea (2017). June 1940: Britain’s forgotten attempt to build a EuropeanUnion.
  • Boyce, Robert (2014). Tentatives de modernisation libérale et conservatrice en Grande Bretagne 1925 – 1935. In Aglan, Alya, Margairaz, Michel, Verheyde, Philippe (Eds.), De la croissance à la crise (1925-1935) : le moment Tannery . Droz.
  • Brewer, John D., Hayes, Bernadette C. (2015). There is a need to develop both a victim-led and victim-centred approach to dealing with the legacy of Northern Ireland’s violent past.
  • Brighton, Paul (2012). Seasons in the sun: the battle for Britain, 1974-1979.
  • Bristow, Jennie (2017). From Brexit to the pensions crisis, how did the Baby Boomers get the blame for everything?
  • Buller, Jim, James, Toby (2012). Measures of Prime Ministerial performance indicate Tony Blair was a great leader but voters do not seem to be assessing him as kindly.
  • Burgess, Richard (2017). African Pentecostal churches in Britain’s urban spaces.
  • Burton, Sarah (26 April 2020) Book review: Political English: Language and the Decay of Politics by Thomas Docherty. USApp-American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Burton, Sarah (21 April 2020) Book review: political English: language and the decay of politics by Thomas Docherty. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Burton, Sarah (26 April 2020) Book review: political English: language and the decay of politics by Thomas Docherty. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Byrne, Chris, Randall, Nick, Theakston, Kevin (2017). A disjunctive Prime Minister: assessing David Cameron’s legacy.
  • Byrne, Chris, Randall, Nick, Theakston, Kevin (2017). A disjunctive Prime Minister: assessing David Cameron’slegacy.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1994). Book review: class formation and urban industrial society: Bradford, 1750-1850 by Theodore Koditschek. American Historical Review, 99(2), 559-560.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1984). Book review: conflict and compromise: class formation in English society, 1830-1914. by Dennis Smith. Social Forces, 63(2), 597-598.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1990). Book review: crowds and history: mass phenomena in English towns, 1790-1835 by Mark Harrison. Social History, 15(3), 393-396.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1983). Book review: custom, work, and market capitalism: the forest of Dean Colliers, 1788-1888 by Chris Fisher. American Historical Review, 88(2), p. 394.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1985). Book review: languages of class: studies in English working class history, 1832-1982 by Gareth Stedman Jones. American Historical Review, 90(3), 678-679.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1984). Book review: regional transformation and industrial revolution: a georgraphy of the Yorkshire woollen industry by Derek Gregory. American Historical Review, 89(4), p. 1074.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1985). Book review: the birth of a consumer society: the commercialization of eighteenth-century England. by Neil McKendrick; John Brewer; J. H. Plumb. Social Forces, 63(4), p. 1096.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1982). The question of class struggle: social foundations of popular radicalism during the industrial revolution. University of Chicago Press.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1993). Book review: before the Luddites: custom, community and machinery in the English woollen industry, 1776-1809 by Adrian Randall. Business History Review, 66(4), 812-814.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1985). Book review: riots and community politics in England and Wales, 1790-1810 by John Bohstedt. Journal of Modern History, 57(3), 546-548.
  • Calhoun, Craig (1982). Book review: the army and the crowd in mid-Georgian England. by Tony Hayter. American Journal of Sociology, 88(1), 236-237.
  • Cameron, Ewen (2012). Book review: coin, kirk, class and kin: emigration, social change and identity in Southern Scotland.
  • Cameron, Ewen (2012). Book review: the Scottish diaspora: understanding the forces which stimulate emigration.
  • Carter McKee, Kirsten (2016). Book review: The hero building: an architecture of Scottish national identity by Johnny Rodger.
  • Casson, Catherine, Casson, Mark, Lee, John, Phillips, Katie (2017). Compassionate capitalism: Lessons from medieval Cambridge.
  • Catterall, Pippa (18 June 2020) On statues and history: the dialogue between past and present in public space. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Chalmers, Colin, Barker, Walter (2000). Inequalities in health service provision: how research findings are ignored. In Gordon, David (Ed.), Tackling Inequalities: Where Are We Now and What Can Be Done? (pp. 25-58). Policy Press.
  • Chalmers, James (2016). Schrödinger’s pardon: the difficulties of the Turing Bill.
  • Choudhury, Barnie (2011). Rather than simply reading the rioters the Riot Act, we must ensure that lessons are learned from this week’s violence. A credible enquiry is essential.
  • Clark, Gregory, Cummins, Neil (2015). Malthus to modernity: wealth, status, and fertility in England, 1500–1879. Journal of Population Economics, 28(1). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00148-014-0509-9
  • Clements, Ben (2017). Catholic voters in Britain: what are their political preferences?
  • Clery, Elizabeth, Stockdale, Janet (2009). Is Britain a respectful society? In Park, Alison, John, Curtice, Thomson, Katarina, Phillips, Miranda, Clery, Elizabeth (Eds.), British Social Attitudes: the 25th Report (pp. 203-226). Sage Publications Ltd..
  • Collignon, Stefan (2018). Brexit has the semblance of a new English Civil War.
  • Corbett, Anne, Gordon, Claire (2015). The university challenge: what type of Brexit would work for Higher Education?
  • Coulter, Steve (2011). Book review: strikes and stagflation see a return to 1970s Britain... but no space hoppers this time around.
  • Courtemanche, Regis Armand (1967). Vice Admiral Sir Alexander Milne, K.C.B., and the North American and West Indian station, 1860-1864 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Cramme, Olaf (2011). Deeper fiscal integration within the eurozone would significantly alter the concept of a two-speed Europe. George Osborne’s support signals an important U-turn in British policy on the EU.
  • Crozier-De Rosa, Sharon (24 January 2021) Book review | Markievicz: prison letters and rebel writings. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Cudby, Danielle (2017). Brexit and local government: the implications and the opportunities.
  • Davies, Howard (2007). Another fine mess from the Blairite blue period. Financial Times, 25 Jul, p. 11.
  • Davies, Howard (2010). The pound is weighed down. Guardian, 2 Mar,
  • Dericks, Gerard, Koster, Hans (2018). How the Blitz enhanced London's economy. picture_as_pdf
  • Diamond, Patrick (5 May 2020) Book review: Peter Shore: Labour’s forgotten patriot by Kevin Hickson, Jasper Miles and Harry Taylor. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Dietrich Jones, Natalie (12 January 2021) Book review: Deporting black Britons: portraits of deportation to Jamaica by Luke de Noronha. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Donnelly, Sue (2008). Coming out in the archives: the Hall-Carpenter Archives at the London School of Economics. History Workshop Journal, 66(1), 180-184. https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbn042
  • Donohoe, Maitiú (2024). Northern Ireland in turmoil: a quantitative analysis of the impact of the Troubles on the Irish Stock Market. (Economic History Student Working Papers 28). Department of Economic History, The London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Downes, David, Newburn, Tim (2022). The official history of criminal justice in England and Wales Volume IV: the politics of law and order. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003330981
  • Dunn, Katelan (26 January 2020) Book review: from spinster to career woman: middle-class women and work in Victorian England. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Dunn, Katelan (23 January 2020) Book review: from spinster to career woman: middle-class women and work in Victorian England by Arlene Young. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Dunne, Derek (2017). The materiality of research: this device is licensed’: the material and immaterial bureaucracy of research by Derek Dunne.
  • Eichler, William (2015). Book review: enemy on the Euphrates: the battle for Iraq, 1914-1921.
  • Farfán, Abraham, Lopez Uribe, Maria (14 July 2020) Provincia de Cadenas, Provincia de la Libertad. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Flew, Sarah (2014). Philanthropy and the funding of the Church of England, 1856–1914. Pickering & Chatto.
  • Flew, Sarah (2015). Unveiling the anonymous philanthropist: charity in the nineteenth century. Journal of Victorian Culture, 20(1), 20-33. https://doi.org/10.1080/13555502.2014.993686
  • Flew, Sarah (2018). The state as landowner: neglected evidence of state funding of Anglican Church extension in London in the latter nineteenth century. Journal of Church and State, 60(2), 299-317. https://doi.org/10.1093/jcs/csw125 picture_as_pdf
  • Franklin, Sophie (2014). Book review: sex, crime and literature in Victorian England by Ian Ward.
  • Geringer-Sameth, Ethan (2015). The anti-slavery series: perspectives on the past and present.
  • Gidney, Thomas (19 January 2020) The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company – Book Review. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Giray Aksoy, Cavet, Carpenter, Christopher S., Frank, Jefferson (2017). How your sexual orientation affects your salary.
  • Gjersø, Jonas Fossli (2011). Deciphering Livingstone’s 1871 Field Diary.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2011). The British National Party’s modernization strategy didn’t appeal to voters, and its activist and membership base is shrinking by the day. But public hostility toward immigration means the prospects for the far right remain strong.
  • Gould, Bryan (2010). Where to now for the UK?: some lessons from New Zealand.
  • Gray, John (2004). Blair's project in retrospect. International Affairs, 80(1), 39-48. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2346.2004.00364.x
  • Grenier, Paola, Wright, Karen (2003). Social capital in Britain: an update and critique of Hall’s analysis. (International Working Paper Series 14). Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
  • Hanretty, Chris (2015). Reconciling to other forecasts.
  • Heblich, Stephan, Redding, Stephen J., Voth, Hans-Joachim (2022). Slavery and the British Industrial Revolution. (CEP Discussion Papers CEPDP1884). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance. picture_as_pdf
  • Hill, Alastair (2011). Book review: the new politics: liberal conservatism or same old Tories?
  • Holt, Andrew (2012). Book Review: a special relationship? British foreign policy in the era of American hegemony.
  • Horsler, Paul (2016-09-08 - 2016-09-10) National service or conscription? Bolton debates [Paper]. British International History Group 28th annual conference, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Hunt, Stephen (2016). A history of Pentecostalism in Britain.
  • Hunt, Tristram (2016). “India has an extraordinary collection of cities which form a key part of the story of British colonialism” – Tristram Hunt MP.
  • Hutchison, Gary (30 July 2020) The electioneering methods of the Victorian Conservative Party and how they shaped Scotland’s political culture. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Iacono, Roberto (2018). Book review: the great leveler: violence and the history of inequality from the stone age to the twenty-first century by Walter Scheidel.
  • Irving Jackson, Pamela, Doerschler, Peter (2017). Multiculturalism is unpopular with the majority – even though it makes for happier societies.
  • James, Dan (2014). The disappeared: how to read the writing on the city?
  • Jarvis, Lee (2017). What can the UK learn from President Trump’s travel ban?
  • Jeffrey, David (2017). It was Thatcher wot lost it – or was it? Conservative electoral decline in Liverpool since 1945.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book review: anthropologists in the stock exchange: a financial history of Victorian science by Marc Flandreau.
  • Jones, Heather (4 October 2021) For King and Country: how the First World War popularised the British monarchy. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Interview with Eric Kaufmann: cultural values and the rise of right-wing populism in the West.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2013). To understand the present troubles in Belfast, we need to go back to the dying days of the old ‘Orange State’.
  • Keating, Vincent Charles, Thrandardottir, Erla (2017). Challenging the accountability agenda: what increases an NGO’s trustworthiness?
  • Kelsey, Tom (2016). LSE Lit Fest 2016 book review: dreamstreets: a journey through Britain’s village utopias by Jacqueline Yallop.
  • Kenny, Michael (2017). After Brexit: the English question surfaces?
  • Kirkland, Christopher, Wood, Matthew (2016). By focusing on voter turnout, the government fails to understand the democratic process.
  • Knight, Robert Graham (1986). British policy towards occupied Austria 1945-1950 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004810
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: British pirates and society 1680-1730 by Margarette Lincoln.
  • Kullaa, Rina (2016). The trouble with unequal partnerships? How UK governments’ views on representation in the EU have changed over time.
  • LSE, Team (2017). Calling all British Politics and Policy at LSE contributors – we need your help!
  • Lang, Rachel (2015). The Whitemans of Grenada: illegitimacy and the “ownership” of family members.
  • Langan Teele, Dawn (2015). Militancy shines on the big screen, but democratic tactics actually won British women the vote.
  • Larragy, Adam (2013). Book review: John Hume and the revision of Irish nationalism.
  • Lasala, Juan Antonio Lalaguna (1967). England, Spain and the family compact, 1763-1783 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Latchoumaya, Manuel (15 January 2020) Book review: imperial intimacies: a tale of two islands by Hazel V. Carby. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Leahy, Thomas (2018). Four factors affecting how the Republic of Ireland deals with the legacy of the Troubles. picture_as_pdf
  • Ledgerwood, Emmeline (22 July 2020) STEMM in Parliament: what oral history tells us about MPs and science. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Leston-Bandeira, Cristina (2017). What is the point of petitions in British politics?
  • Lidington, David (2012). Anglo-Dutch cooperation continues to be important,especially in unlocking the full potential of the EU’s singlemarket.
  • Liu, Antong (15 April 2021) Book review: The persistence of party: ideas of harmonious discord in eighteenth-century Britain by Max Skjönsberg. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Lodge, Guy (2012). Book review: Clement Attlee: “the enigma of British 20thcenturyhistory”.
  • Mackreath, Helen (1 December 2019) Book review: here to stay, here to fight: a 'race today' anthology edited by Paul Field, Robin Bunce, Leila Hassan and Margaret Peacock. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Manby, Bronwen (2017). Book review: Nigeria: a new history of a turbulent centuryby Richard Bourne.
  • Marples, Alice (2013). Book Review: Wicked intelligence: visual art and the science of experiment in Restoration London.
  • Matthews, Felicity (2017). A drift away from majoritarianism: constitutional reform and the Coalition Government of 2010-2015.
  • McConalogue, Jim (2017). Book review: the Cabinet Office: 1916-2016 by Anthony Seldon with Jonathan Meakin.
  • McLean, Dylan (2017). Shooting for freedom: what guns teach us about US political culture.
  • McLean, Iain (2011). The Salisbury convention that avoided complete Lords reforms for the last century is dead, but achieving any mandate for change that peers must accept remains very difficult.
  • McMillan, Margaret (2016). Five minutes with Margaret MacMillan: On historians, politicians, and their duty to history.
  • Metcalf, David (2009). Nothing new under the sun: the prescience of W. S. Sanders' 1906 Fabian Tract. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47(2), 289-305. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8543.2009.00727.x
  • Mollett, Amy (2011). David Cameron may finally have found community spirit amongst the riot clean up, but recent events spell the end for his Big Society fantasy.
  • Morse, Sir Amys (2017). When ‘more for less’ becomes ‘less for less’: the implications of central decision-making for the delivery of frontline services.
  • Mossek, Moshe (1975). Immigration policy in Palestine under Sir Herbert Samuel: British, Zionist and Arab attitudes [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mottram, Sir Richard (2017). There may be trouble ahead: the Civil Service in a post-truth world.
  • Mulhern, Joe (1 July 2020) Human collateral: British banking’s long-neglected connection with slavery in Brazil. LSE Latin America and Caribbean Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Mulhern, Joe (6 July 2020) Lastreado em seres humanos: a conexão negligenciada entre o setor bancário britânico e a escravidão no Brasil. LSE Latin America and Caribbean Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Mulhern, Joe (1 March 2021) O novo estádio do Everton FC é uma lembrança gritante do histórico envolvimento de Liverpool com a escravidão no Brasil. LSE Latin America and Caribbean Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Mullen, Antony (2018). Book review: the Tories and television, 1951-1964: broadcasting an elite. picture_as_pdf
  • Murphy, Mahon (2016). Book review: The Crimean War in imperial context, 1854-1856 by Andrew C. Rath.
  • Murphy, Mahon (2012). Book review: a portrait of Winston Churchill’s life in the “wilderness” before war.
  • Naish, Stephen (2016). Book review and author interview: island story: journeys around unfamiliar Britain by J.D. Taylor.
  • Naish, Stephen (2017). Book review: 1996 and the end of history by David Stubbs.
  • Nasta, Susheila, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Before independence there was a synergy between India and Britain that came from a shared language which persists today” – Susheila Nasta.
  • Nell, Miranda (2014). Book review: Life lessons from Byron by Matthew Bevis.
  • Oakley, Stuart Philip (1961). William III and the Northern Crowns during the Nine Years War, 1689-1697 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Oates, Lori Lee (29 July 2021) Book review: Imperial encore: the cultural project of the late British empire by Caroline Ritter. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Pabst, Adrian (2015). The Double death of Europe.
  • Pearce, Julia M., Stockdale, Jan E. (2008). UK ressonses to the asylum issue: a comparison of lay and expert views. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 19(2), 142-155. https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.982
  • Pearl, Jason (2018). Book review: balloon madness: flights of imagination in Britain, 1783-1786 by Clare Brant.
  • Pettifor, Ann (2017). To really ‘take back control’, democracies must reclaim power over the production of money.
  • Phillips, Anna (2013). The very fact that Thatcher can be lauded as the woman who broke the mould is indicative of the challenges which women still face in contemporary politics.
  • Picton, John (2016). Book review: the right to buy? Selling off public and social housing by Alan Murie.
  • Punch, Maurice (2016). Prosecuting a scapegoat for the state will not lead to justice for the shootings on Bloody Sunday.
  • Reed, Howard (2013). Involuntary idleness represents a massive waste of economic resources.
  • Reeves, Madeleine (2010). Why the UK should care about what is happening in Kyrgyzstan.
  • Reid, Gideon (28 November 2012) A look back to 19th Century thoughts on British free press & the law. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Richards, Dave, Smith, Martin (2014). The lessons of Tony Benn as a Cabinet Minister: Breaking the rules and paying the price.
  • Richards, Peter (1970). British policy towards China, with special reference to the Shantung question, 1918 - 1922 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Roberts, Jennifer Ann (1977). Economic aspects of the unemployment policy of the Government 1929-1931 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Sage, Daniel (2011). Book review: “there is no alternative”: why Margaret Thatcher matters.
  • Scalvini, Marco (2013). The secret war: British nationals stripped of their citizenship.
  • Sefton, Tom (2006). Give and take: public attitudes to redistribution. In Park, Alison (Ed.), British Social Attitudes 22nd Report (pp. 1-32). SAGE Publications.
  • Shah, Ramnik (14 June 2021) Book review: Empireland: how imperialism has shaped modern Britain by Sathnam Sanghera. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Shipp, Leo (2024). Charles Fleetwood, the 1744 Drury Lane Riots, and pricing practices in eighteenth-century British theatre. Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 47(4), 405-424. https://doi.org/10.1111/1754-0208.12956 picture_as_pdf
  • Siepmann, Luca M. (2025). “Freundship”? The deepening of British-German relations from pre- to post-Brexit. German Politics and Society, 43(3), 39 - 75. https://doi.org/10.3167/gps.2025.430303
  • Smith, Martin (2013). Margaret Thatcher’s rejection of consensus was symptomatic of an anti-democratic tendency in a political system dominated by the executive.
  • Smith, Harry, Bennett, Robert J., Van Lieshout, Carry, Montebruno, Piero (2021). Entrepreneurship in Scotland, 1851–1911. Journal of Scottish Historical Studies, 41(1), 38-64. https://doi.org/10.3366/jshs.2021.0313 picture_as_pdf
  • Spencer, Mark G. (11 March 2021) Book review: Occupied America: British military rule and the experience of revolution by Donald F. Johnson. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Spencer, Mark G. (14 March 2021) Book review: Occupied America: British military rule and the experience of revolution by Donald F. Johnson. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Spencer, Nick (2016). ‘They shall reap the whirlwind’: how Churchill harnessed Christianity in the service of war.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (2003). Bringing the Empire back in: patterns of growth in the British imperial state, 1890-1960 (with special reference to India and Africa) [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Three reasons why Brexit has failed to boost support for Scottish independence.
  • Tait, Iona (2025). Translations in a time of crisis: the role of translators of Nietzsche, Sorel, and Bergson in addressing Edwardian political fragmentation, 1907–1915. History of European Ideas, 51(7), 1532 - 1557. https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2025.2453703
  • Taylor, William B. (1974). The Foxite party and foreign politics, 1806 - 1816 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Terry, Francis R (2004). The impact of evidence on transport policy-making: the case of road construction. In Terry, Francis R (Ed.), Turning the Corner? a Review of Contemporary Transport Policy (pp. 48-59). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Thompson, Noel (2017). Creating an ideal citizenry: the perorations of twentieth-century Budget speeches.
  • Tieh-Tseng, Li (1956). The problems of Tibet in Sino-British relations [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Tomaney, John (18 March 2021) Book review: The Northern question: a history of a divided country by Tom Hazeldine. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: the great Labour unrest: rank-and-file movements and political change in Durham coalfield by Lewis Mates.
  • Towlson, Anna (2012). Guarding the rights of the trade’: compositors’ unions in the London printing industry 1785-1834. Publishing History, 69, 5-18.
  • Twigg, Julia (1981). The vegetarian movement in England, 1847-1981: a study in the structure of its ideology [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004725
  • Van Reenen, John (2013). The economic legacy of Mrs. Thatcher is a mixed bag.
  • Veliz, Claudio (1959). Arthur Young and the English landed interest 1784-1813 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Webster, Peter (2017). Book review: the new Elizabethan age. Culture, society and national identity after World War II edited by Irene Morra and Rob Gossedge.
  • Webster, Peter (2017). The New Elizabethan Age: Culture, Society and National Identity after World War II.
  • Wells, Anthony (2011). Polling indicates support for curfews, water cannons, plastic bullets, and bringing in the army to deal with rioters.
  • White, Nick (2012). Frances Josephy. In Mothers of Liberty: Women Who Built British Liberalism (pp. 47-48). Liberal Democrat History Group.
  • Whiting, Matthew (2016). New routes to old goals: the strategic transformation of Sinn Féin and the IRA.
  • Williams, Katherine (2016). Book review: a fiery and furious people: a history of violence in England by James Sharpe.
  • Witzel, Morgen, Booth, Alan, Pistol, Rachel (2018). Rowntree and the search for a British approach to management. picture_as_pdf
  • Woods, Philip (2017). The beginning of the end of Empire? Reassessing the reporting of the British retreat in Burma.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Who will succeed David Cameron? A brief history of takeover Prime Ministers.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (21 May 2015) Can Labour recover to win in 2020? History says one thing, and the polls another. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2015). David Cameron faces similar internal divisions as did Harold Wilson over Europe.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2013). How will the coalition end? Cameron and Clegg may look to the precedent set by the 1945 caretaker government.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). Iain Duncan Smith’s resignation was the most confusing since Gladstone left the (Conservative) government of 1845.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2014). Political dynasties have featured prominently in British political history, but are declining in value.
  • LSE Health
  • Allin, Sara, Masseria, Cristina, Mossialos, Elias (2011). Equity in health care use among older people in the UK: an analysis of panel data. Applied Economics, 43(18), 2229-2239. https://doi.org/10.1080/00036840903196621
  • Bevan, Gwyn (2010). Performance measurement of “knights” and “knaves”: differences in approaches and impacts in British countries after devolution. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice, 12(1-2), 33-56. https://doi.org/10.1080/13876980903076187
  • Charlesworth, Anita, Cooper, Zack (2011). Making competition work in the English NHS: the case for maintaining regulated prices. Journal of Health Services Research and Policy, 16(4), 193-194. https://doi.org/10.1258/jhsrp.2011.011038
  • Coast, Ernestina, Randall, Sara, Fanghanel, Alex, Lelievre, Eva, Ba-Gning, Sadio (2012-06-13 - 2012-06-16) Sofa surfers and shed dwellers: new living arrangements and household surveys in the UK and France [Paper]. European Population Conference, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden, SWE.
  • Farrer, Shelley, Boyle, Sean, Yi, Deokhee (2011). Payment by results. In Dixon, A., Mays, N. (Eds.), Understanding New Labour’s Market Reforms of the English Nhs (pp. 66-77). King’s Fund (London, England).
  • Gjonça, Arjan, Tomassini, Cecilia, Toson, Barbara, Smallwood, Steve (2005). Sex differences in mortality, a comparison of the United Kingdom and other developed countries. Health Statistics Quarterly, 26, 6-16.
  • National Audit Office, Alexander David (2009). Management of asylum applications by the UK border agency. National Audit Office.
  • Oliver, Adam (2009). England. In Rapoport, John, Jacobs, Philip, Jonsson, Egon (Eds.), Cost Containment and Efficiency in National Health Systems (pp. 41-62). Wiley-VCH Verlag.
  • Oliver, Adam (2008). Reflections on the development of health inequalities policy in the United Kingdom. (LSE Health working papers 11/2008). LSE Health, The London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Pollock, Allyson, Macfarlane, Alison, Kirkwood, Graham, Majeed, F Azeem, Greener, Ian, Morelli, Carlo, Boyle, Sean, Mellett, Howard, Godden, Sylvia & Price, David et al (2011). No evidence that patient choice in the NHS saves lives. The Lancet, 378(9809), 2057-2060. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61553-5
  • Simpkin, Victoria L., Mossialos, Elias (2017). Brexit and the NHS: challenges, uncertainties andopportunities. Health Policy, 121(5), 447-480. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2017.02.018
  • LSE Human Rights
  • Ewing, Keith, Gearty, Conor (1990). Freedom under Thatcher: civil liberties in modern Britain. Oxford University Press.
  • Ewing, Keith, Gearty, Conor (2000). The struggle for civil liberties: political freedom and the rule of law in Britain, 1914-1945. Oxford University Press.
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). The Casement treason trial in its legal context. Irish Jurist, 36, 31-42.
  • Gearty, Conor (2004). The Casement treason trial in its legal context. In Daly, Mary E. (Ed.), Roger Casement in Irish and World History (pp. 151-161). Royal Irish Academy.
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). What are judges for? London Review of Books, 23(2).
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). An escalation of reasonableness. London Review of Books, 23(17).
  • Klug, Francesca (2002). Human Rights Act: a common standard for all peoples? In Griffith, Phoebe, Leonard, Mark (Eds.), Reclaiming Britishness (pp. 20-35). Foreign Policy Centre (London, England).
  • O'Leary, Brendan, Hazell, Robert (1999). A Rolling programme of devolution: slippery slope or safeguard of the union? In Hazell, Robert (Ed.), Constitutional Futures (pp. 21-46). Oxford University Press.
  • LSE IDEAS
  • Young, John W., Pedaliu, Effie G. H., Kandiah, Michael D. (Eds.) (2013). Britain in global politics volume 2: from Churchill to Blair. Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137313584
  • Fisher, John, Pedaliu, Effie G. H., Smith, Richard (Eds.) (2016). The Foreign Office, commerce and British foreign policy in the twentieth century. Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-46581-8
  • Charmley, John (2016). Trade is not – and never has been – the reason for the European Union’s existence.
  • Cooper, Luke (2022). Imagined communities: from subjecthood to nationality in the British Atlantic. International Relations, 37(1), 72-95. https://doi.org/10.1177/00471178221098913 picture_as_pdf
  • Cox, Michael (2021). An alien ideology: Cold War perceptions of the Irish Republican Left: John Mulqueen, (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2019), 275 pp. + index. Cold War History, 21(3), 375 - 379. https://doi.org/10.1080/14682745.2021.1906839
  • Nafpliotis, Alexandros (2012). Britain and the Greek colonels: accommodating the junta in the Cold War. I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Britain's European question will not be answered by an in-out vote.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). UK would lose 8% of its economy by quitting the EU.
  • Shiels, David (2016). ‘What would Maggie do?’ Had she been given the chance, we probably wouldn’t be asking.
  • Trubowitz, Peter, Harris, Peter (2015). When states appease: British appeasement in the 1930s. Review of International Studies, 41(02), 289-311. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210514000278
  • LSE London
  • Scanlon, Kathleen (2010-09-01) The UK mortgage market before and after the credit crunch [Other]. Housing: the next 20 years, Cambridge, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Law School
  • Cranston, Ross (2007). Law through practice: London and Liverpool commodity markets c.1820-1975. (LSE law, society and economy working papers 14-2007). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Cranston, Ross (2021). Making commercial law through practice 1830–1970. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108182836
  • Duxbury, Neil (2005). English jurisprudence between Austin and Hart. Virginia Law Review, 91(1), 1-91.
  • Duxbury, Neil (2004). Frederick Pollock and the English juristic tradition. Oxford University Press.
  • Duxbury, Neil (2001). Jurists and judges: an essay on influence. Hart Publishing.
  • Duxbury, Neil (2009). Lord Wright and innovative traditionalism. (LSE law, society and economy working papers 11-2009). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Ewing, Keith, Gearty, Conor (1990). Freedom under Thatcher: civil liberties in modern Britain. Oxford University Press.
  • Ewing, Keith, Gearty, Conor (2000). The struggle for civil liberties: political freedom and the rule of law in Britain, 1914-1945. Oxford University Press.
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). The Casement treason trial in its legal context. Irish Jurist, 36, 31-42.
  • Gearty, Conor (2004). The Casement treason trial in its legal context. In Daly, Mary E. (Ed.), Roger Casement in Irish and World History (pp. 151-161). Royal Irish Academy.
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). What are judges for? London Review of Books, 23(2).
  • Gearty, Conor (2001). An escalation of reasonableness. London Review of Books, 23(17).
  • Griffith, J. A. G. (1969). Book review: a history of English criminal law and its administration from 1750, vol. 4: grappling for control. by L. Radzinowicz [London: Stevens and Sons. 1968. viii and 492 pp. £5 10s.]. British Journal of Criminology, 8(3), 287-288.
  • Griffith, J. A. G. (1993). Book review: in the highest degree odious: detention without trial in wartime Britain by A. W. Simpson. Journal of Law and Society, 20(4), 478-479.
  • Lacey, Nicola (2000). Partial defences to homicide: questions of power and principle in imperfect and less imperfect worlds... In Ashworth, Andrew, Mitchell, Barry (Eds.), Rethinking English Homicide Law (pp. 107-132). Oxford University Press.
  • Loughlin, Martin (2001). Rights, democracy, and law. In Campbell, Tom, Ewing, Keith, Tomkins, Adam (Eds.), Sceptical Essays on Human Rights (pp. 41-60). Oxford University Press.
  • Loughlin, Martin (2007). The constitutional thought of the levellers. Current Legal Problems, 60(1), 1-39. https://doi.org/10.1093/clp/60.1.1
  • Loughlin, Martin (2015). Burke on law, revolution and constitution / Burke su diritto, rivoluzione e costituzione. Giornale di Storia Costituzionale, N. 29(1), 49-60.
  • Martin, Richard (2013). The recent supergrass controversy have we learnt from the troubled past? Criminal Law Review, 273-289.
  • Misra, Tanmay (2023). The invention of corruption: India and the License Raj [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004591
  • Mulcahy, Linda (2014). I'm not watching I'm waiting: the construction of visual codes about womens' role as spectators in the trial in nineteenth century England. Legal Information Management, 14(01), 22-26. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1472669614000085
  • Mulcahy, Linda (2013). Imagining alternative visions of justice: an exploration of the controversy surrounding Stirling Lee's depictions of Justitia in nineteenth-century Liverpool. Law, Culture and the Humanities, 9(2), 311-329. https://doi.org/10.1177/1743872111398064
  • Murkens, Jo E., Jones, Peter, Keating, Michael (2002). Scottish independence: a practical guide. Edinburgh University Press.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal, Jones, Peter (2013). Alex Salmond and David Cameron’s incoherent referendum plans mean that they are unlikely to get what they want for either Scotland or the UK.
  • Reiner, Robert (1999). Order and discipline. In Gamble, Andrew (Ed.), Fundamentals in British Politics (pp. 163-181). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Topping, John, Albert, Allely, Martin, Richard (2025). Twenty-five years on the boundary between state and community: revisiting the ‘impossibility’ of restorative justice and security informalism. Policing and Society, 35(7), 967 - 982. https://doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2024.2446586 picture_as_pdf
  • Management
  • Bevan, Gwyn (2010). Performance measurement of “knights” and “knaves”: differences in approaches and impacts in British countries after devolution. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice, 12(1-2), 33-56. https://doi.org/10.1080/13876980903076187
  • Cornford, Tony (1998). A British EDI initiative in the health sector. In Andersen, Kim Viborg (Ed.), Edi and Data Networking in the Public Sector (pp. 109-130). Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  • Foreman-Peck, James, Hannah, Leslie (2012). Extreme divorce: the managerial revolution in UK companies before 1914. Economic History Review, 65(4), 1217-1238. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0289.2011.00637.x
  • Liebenau, Jonathan (1997). Management reform at British telecommunications in the context of liberalisation. Telecoms Market, 11, 33-39.
  • Mosse, Benjamin, Whitley, Edgar A. (2008). Critically classifying: UK e-government website benchmarking and the recasting of the citizen as customer. Information Systems Journal, 19(2), 149-173. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2575.2008.00299.x
  • National Audit Office, Alexander David (2009). Management of asylum applications by the UK border agency. National Audit Office.
  • Pouloudi, Athanasia, Whitley, Edgar A. (1997). Stakeholder identification in inter-organizational systems: gaining insights for drug use management systems. European Journal of Information Systems, 6(1), 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1057/palgrave.ejis.3000252
  • Reekers, N., Smithson, S. (1994). EDI in Germany and the UK: strategic and operational use. European Journal of Information Systems, 3(3), 169-178. https://doi.org/10.1057/ejis.1994.18
  • Willcocks, Leslie P., Graeser, Valerie (2001). Delivering IT and e-business value. Butterworths (Firm).
  • Williams, H. Paul (1995). The Cornish caveman mathematician. Mathematical Intelligencer, 17(1), 34, 64. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03024715
  • Williams, H. Paul (2016). The Red River. Godrevy Press.
  • Willman, Paul, Bryson, Alex, Gomez, Rafael (2007). The long goodbye: new establishments and the fall of union voice in Britain. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 18(7), 1318-1334. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585190701393863
  • Wright, George N., Phillips, Lawrence D., Whalley, Peter C., Choo, Gerry T., Ng, Kee-Ong, Tan, Irene, Wisudha, Aylene (1978). Cultural differences in probabilistic thinking. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 9(3), 285-299. https://doi.org/10.1177/002202217893002
  • Mannheim Centre for Criminology
  • Qasim, Mohammed, Webster, Colin (2023). British Pakistanis and desistance: poverty, prison and identity. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003132738
  • Media and Communications
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Journalism design: 100 years back to the future.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Margaret Thatcher: how she reshaped politics and political communications.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2011). Rubber bullets, moralisation and the ‘full force of the law’ will not quell the high degree of civil unrest in this country. The causes of these tensions must be tackled head on.
  • Georgiou, Myria, Joo, Jae-Won (2009). Representing difference in the British media. In Frachon, Claire (Ed.), Media and Cultural Diversity in Europe and North America (pp. 60-72). Karthala Editions.
  • Guo, Stephanie Jin-Yi (2025). Chinese Londoners in Third Space: the digital and material making of an urban diaspora [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004855 picture_as_pdf
  • Powell, Alison, Cooper, Alissa (2011). Net neutrality discourses: comparing advocacy and regulatory arguments in the United States and the United Kingdom. Information Society, 27(5), 311-325. https://doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2011.607034
  • Scammell, Margaret, Norris, Pippa, Curtice, John, Sanders, David T., Semetko, Holli (1999). On message: communicating the campaign. SAGE Publications.
  • Schlesinger, Philip (1975). The social organisation of news production: a case study of BBC radio and television news [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Silverstone, Roger, Georgiou, Myria (2005). Editorial introduction: media and minorities in multicultural Europe. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 31(3), 433-441. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691830500058943
  • Silverstone, Roger (1980). The television message as social object: a comparative study of the structure and content of television programmes in Britain [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Tambini, Damian, Craufurd-Smith, Rachael (2012). Measuring media plurality: lessons from the UK. Journal of Media Law, 4(1), 35-63. https://doi.org/10.5235/175776312802483862
  • Willems, Wendy (22 July 2020) #BlackLivesMatter in General Gordon Square: a history. Media@LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Willems, Wendy (2020). Rich history: race, space and the sanitisation of colonial heritage. Media@LSE Virtual Research Exhibition. video_file
  • Methodology
  • Bauer, Martin W., Howard, Susan, Hagenhoff, Vera, Gasperoni, Giancarlo, Rusanen, Maria (2006). The BSE and CJD crisis in the press. In Dora, Carlos (Ed.), Health, Hazard and Public Debate: Lessons for Risk Communication From the Bse/Cjd Saga (pp. 125-164 [chapter 6]). World Health Organization.
  • Mitchell, Paul (2003). Fianna Fil still dominant in the coalition era: The Irish general election of May 2002. West European Politics, 26(2), 174-183. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402380512331341171
  • Mitchell, Paul (2007). Party competition and voting behaviour since agreement. In Carmichael, Paul, Knox, Colin, Osborne, Robert (Eds.), Devolution and Constitutional Change in Northern Ireland (pp. 110-124). Manchester University Press.
  • Mitchell, Paul, Evans, Geoffrey (2009). Ethnic party competition and the dynamics of power-sharing in Northern Ireland. In Taylor, Rupert (Ed.), Consociational Theory: Mcgarry and O'leary and the Northern Ireland Conflict (pp. 146-164). Routledge.
  • Mitchell, Paul, O'Leary, Brendan, Evans, Geoffrey (2002). The 2001 elections in Northern Ireland: moderating 'extremists' and the squeezing of the moderates. Representation, 39(1), 23-36. https://doi.org/10.1080/00344890208523211
  • Mitchell, Paul, O'Leary, Brendan, Evans, Geoffrey (2005). Changing party fortunes: party competition and public opinion at the Northern Ireland Assembly elections of 2003. (ARK Research Update no. 36). ARK Northern Ireland.
  • Middle East Centre
  • Schulze, Kirsten E. (1998). Nordirland: Hindernisse zur Konfliktlösung. In Waldman, Peter (Ed.), Bürgerkriege: Folgen und RegulierungsmöGlichkeiten (pp. 170-188). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft.
  • Schulze, Kirsten E., Smith, M.L.R (2000). Decommissioning and paramilitary strategy in Northern Ireland: a problem compared. Journal of Strategic Studies, 23(4), 77-106. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402390008437813
  • Ulrichsen, Kristian (2010). The logistics and politics of the British campaigns in the Middle East, 1914-1922. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Ulrichsen, Kristian Coates (2007). The British occupation of Mesopotamia, 1914-1922. Journal of Strategic Studies, 30(2), 349-377. https://doi.org/10.1080/01402390701248780
  • Phelan United States Centre
  • Collins, John (2017). Breaking the monopoly system: American influence on the British decision to prohibit opium smoking and end its Asian monopolies, 1939-1945. International History Review, 39(5), 770-790. https://doi.org/10.1080/07075332.2017.1280519
  • Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method
  • Burri, Susanne (2020). Why moral theorizing needs real cases: the redirection of V-Weapons during the Second World War. Journal of Political Philosophy, 28(2), 247 - 269. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopp.12200 picture_as_pdf
  • Psychological and Behavioural Science
  • Bauer, Martin W., Howard, Susan, Hagenhoff, Vera, Gasperoni, Giancarlo, Rusanen, Maria (2006). The BSE and CJD crisis in the press. In Dora, Carlos (Ed.), Health, Hazard and Public Debate: Lessons for Risk Communication From the Bse/Cjd Saga (pp. 125-164 [chapter 6]). World Health Organization.
  • Public Policy Group
  • London School of Economics and Political Science (2010). British policy and politics at LSE.
  • Dowding, Keith (2000). Model or metaphor? A critical review of the policy network approach. In Dunleavy, Patrick, Kelly, Paul J., Moran, Michael (Eds.), British Political Science: Fifty Years of Political Studies (pp. 196-213). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Dowding, Keith (2002). The civil service. In Hollowell, Jonathan (Ed.), Britain Since 1945 (pp. 179-193). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2011). The vulnerability of the British state – deeper lessons from the urban riots.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick, Margetts, Helen (1999). Mixed electoral systems in Britain and the Jenkins commission on electoral reform. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 1(1), 12-38. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-856X.00002
  • Jones, George W., Donoughue, Bernard (2001). Herbert Morrison: portrait of a politician. Phoenix Press.
  • Moran, Danielle, Mollett, Amy, Gilson, Christopher (2011). What further options might work in boosting the police capacity to handle urban disorders and riot emergencies? The pros and cons of a bigger police reserve, curfews, and army deployments.
  • O'Leary, Brendan, Hazell, Robert (1999). A Rolling programme of devolution: slippery slope or safeguard of the union? In Hazell, Robert (Ed.), Constitutional Futures (pp. 21-46). Oxford University Press.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (2001). Book review: Willie Thompson, "global expansion: Britain and its Empire, 1870-1914". Socialist History, 19, 111-113.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (1995). Effortless rule and military realities: the British imperial state in 1891. In Lovenduski, J., Stanyer, J. (Eds.), Contemporary Political Studies 1995: Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Political Studies Association of the Uk . Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (2005-09-08 - 2005-09-10) Ruling continuities: government institutions, budgets and path dependence in British India and Africa [Paper]. European Consortium for Political Research General Conference, Corvinus University of Budapest, Budapest, Hungary, HUN.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (2004-09-02) Schizophrenic governance and fostering global inequalities in the British Empire: the UK domestic state versus the Indian and African colonies, 1890-1960 [Paper]. American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Chicago, United States, USA.
  • STICERD
  • Atkinson, Anthony B., Backus, Peter, Micklewright, John, Pharoah, Cathy, Schnepf, Sylke (2011). Charitable giving for overseas development: UK trends over a quarter century. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A: Statistics in Society, Online, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-985X.2011.01009.x
  • Cobbing, Andrew, Ohta, Akiko, Checkland, Olive, Breen, John (1998). The Iwakura mission in Britain, 1872. (IS 349). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Duclos, Jean-Yves (1991). Progressivity, redistribution and equity, with application to 1985 Britain. (Welfare State Programme Discussion Papers WSP 069). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Gordon, Chris (1988). The myth of family care? The elderly in the early 1930s. (Welfare State Programme Discussion Papers WSP 029). Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion.
  • Hunter, Janet (2003). Bankers, investors and risk: British capital and Japan during the years of the Anglo-Japanese alliance. In O’Brien, Phillips (Ed.), The Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 1902-22 (pp. 176-198). RoutledgeCurzon (Firm).
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). Britain and the Japanese economy during the first world war. In Towle, Philip, Kosuge, Nobuko Margaret (Eds.), Britain and Japan in the Twentieth Century : One Hundred Years of Trade and Prejudice (pp. 15-32). I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Hunter, Janet (1991). British training for Japanese engineers: the case of kikuchi kyozo. In Cortazzi, Hugh, Daniels, Gordon (Eds.), Britain and Japan 1859-1991 : Themes and Personalities (pp. 137-146). Routledge.
  • Hunter, Janet (2007). The industrial revolution in Britian. In Rider, Christine (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the Age of the Industrial Revolution, 1700-1920 . Greenwood Press (Westport, Conn.).
  • Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (2002). Anglo-Japanese economic relations in historical perspective, 1600-2000: trade and industry, finance, technology and industrial challenge. In Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (Eds.), The History of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1600-2000. Volume 4, Economic and Business Relations (pp. 1-109). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Hunter, Janet, Sugiyama, S (2002). The history of Anglo-Japanese relations, 1600-2000. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Jenkins, Stephen P. (2011). Has the instability of personal incomes been increasing? National Institute Economic Review, 218(1), R33-R43. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011121800104
  • Kiernan, Kathleen, Mueller, Ganka (1999). Who divorces? In McRae, Susan (Ed.), Changing Britain: Families and Households in the 1990s (pp. 377-403). Oxford University Press.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2009). Information acquisition, ideology and turnout: theory and evidence from Britain. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 21(2), 237-276. https://doi.org/10.1177/0951629808100765
  • Massarella, Derek, Farrington, Anthony (2000). William Adams and early English enterprise in Japan. (IS 394). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Nish, Ian, Kibata, Yoichi (2000). The history of Anglo-Japanese relations: the political-diplomatic dimension, 1600-2000 (2 Vols). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Stasavage, David (2003). Public debt and the birth of the democratic state: France and Great Britain, 1688-1789. Cambridge University Press.
  • Waldfogel, Jane, Washbrook, Elizabeth (2011). Income-related gaps in school readiness in the United States and the United Kingdom. In Smeeding, Timothy M., Erikson, Robert S., Jäntti, Markus (Eds.), Persistence, Privilege, and Parenting: the Comparative Study of Intergenerational Mobility (pp. 175-208). Russell Sage Foundation.
  • Social Policy
  • Allin, Sara, Masseria, Cristina, Mossialos, Elias (2011). Equity in health care use among older people in the UK: an analysis of panel data. Applied Economics, 43(18), 2229-2239. https://doi.org/10.1080/00036840903196621
  • Beecham, Jennifer, Snell, Tom, Perkins, Margaret, Knapp, Martin (2010). Health and social care costs for young adults with epilepsy in the UK. Health and Social Care in the Community, 18(5), 465-473. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2524.2010.00919.x
  • Bowling, Ben, Phillips, Coretta (2003). Policing ethnic minority communities. In Newburn, Tim (Ed.), Handbook of Policing (pp. 528-555). Willan Publishing.
  • Bowling, Ben, Phillips, Coretta (2003). Racist victimization in England and Wales. In Hawkins, Darnell F. (Ed.), Violent Crime: Assessing Race and Ethnic Differences (pp. 154-170). Cambridge University Press.
  • Coast, Ernestina, Randall, Sara, Fanghanel, Alex, Lelievre, Eva, Ba-Gning, Sadio (2012-06-13 - 2012-06-16) Sofa surfers and shed dwellers: new living arrangements and household surveys in the UK and France [Paper]. European Population Conference, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden, SWE.
  • Dean, Hartley (1999). Citizenship. In Powell, Martin (Ed.), New Labour? New Welfare State? (pp. 213-233). Policy Press.
  • Downes, David, Newburn, Tim (2022). The official history of criminal justice in England and Wales Volume IV: the politics of law and order. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003330981
  • Fleckenstein, Timo (2011). Cross-national perspectives on firm-level family policies: Britain, Germany and the US compared. In Clasen, Jochen (Ed.), Converging Worlds of Welfare? British and German Social Policy in the 21st Century . Oxford University Press.
  • Fleckenstein, Timo (2010). Party politics and childcare: comparing the expansion of service provision in England and Germany. Social Policy and Administration, 44(7), 789-807. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9515.2010.00744.x
  • Fleckenstein, Timo, Saunders, A. M., Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin (2011). The dual transformation of social protection and human capital: comparing Britain and Germany. Comparative Political Studies, 44(12), 1-29. https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414011407473
  • Fleckenstein, Timo, Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin (2011). Business, skills and the welfare state: the political economy of employment-oriented family policies in Britain and Germany. Journal of European Social Policy, 21(2), 136-149. https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928710380483
  • Gilroy, Paul (2004). After empire: melancholia or convivial culture? Routledge.
  • Gjonça, Arjan, Tomassini, Cecilia, Toson, Barbara, Smallwood, Steve (2005). Sex differences in mortality, a comparison of the United Kingdom and other developed countries. Health Statistics Quarterly, 26, 6-16.
  • Hampshire, James, Lewis, Jane (2004). "The ravages of permissiveness": sex education and the permissive society. Twentieth Century British History, 15(3), 290-312. https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/15.3.290
  • Hockley, Tony (10 September 2024) The uncertain future of health and social care under Starmer. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Jenkins, Stephen P. (2011). Has the instability of personal incomes been increasing? National Institute Economic Review, 218(1), R33-R43. https://doi.org/10.1177/002795011121800104
  • Kendall, Jeremy (2005). The third sector and the policy process in the UK: ingredients in a hyper-active horizontal policy environment. (TSEP working paper 5). Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
  • Kiernan, Kathleen, Mueller, Ganka (1999). Who divorces? In McRae, Susan (Ed.), Changing Britain: Families and Households in the 1990s (pp. 377-403). Oxford University Press.
  • Langford, Christopher (2002). The age pattern of mortality in the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic: an attempted explanation based on data for England and Wales. Medical History, 46(1), 1-20.
  • Lewis, David (2008). Crossing the boundaries between 'third sector' and state: life-work histories from the Philippines, Bangladesh and the UK. Third World Quarterly, 29(1), 125-141. https://doi.org/10.1080/01436590701726582
  • Lewis, Jane (2003). Feminist perspectives. In Alcock, Pete, Erskine, Angus, May, Margaret (Eds.), The Student's Companion to Social Policy (pp. 107-112). Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Lodemel, Ivar (1989). The quest for institutional welfare and the problem of the residuum: the case of income maintenance and personal social care policies in Norway and Britain 1946 to 1966 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Macnicol, John (2008-06-20 - 2008-06-21) The history and politics of the citizen's pension in Britain [Paper]. 12th BIEN Congress 2008: Inequality and development in a globalised economy - the basic income option, Dublin, Ireland, IRL.
  • Newburn, Tim (2003). Introduction: understanding policing. In Newburn, Tim (Ed.), Handbook of Policing (pp. 1-10). Willan Publishing.
  • Newburn, Tim (2024). The official history of criminal justice in England and Wales Volume V: policing post-war Britain: plus ça change. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003529965
  • Newburn, Tim, Matassa, Mario (2003). Policing and terrorism. In Newburn, Tim (Ed.), Handbook of Policing (pp. 467-500). Willan Publishing.
  • Newburn, Tim, Matassa, Mario (2003). Problem-oriented evaluation? Evaluating problem-oriented policing initiatives. In Bullock, Karen, Tilley, Nick (Eds.), Crime Reduction and Problem-Oriented Policing Initiatives (pp. 183-216). Willan Publishing.
  • Newburn, Tim, Shiner, Michael, Young, Tara (2005). Dealing with disaffection: young people, mentoring and social inclusion. Willan Publishing.
  • Oliver, Adam (2009). England. In Rapoport, John, Jacobs, Philip, Jonsson, Egon (Eds.), Cost Containment and Efficiency in National Health Systems (pp. 41-62). Wiley-VCH Verlag.
  • Oliver, Adam (2008). Reflections on the development of health inequalities policy in the United Kingdom. (LSE Health working papers 11/2008). LSE Health, The London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Rumgay, Judith (1999). Violent women: building knowledge-based intervention strategies. In Kemshall, Hazel, Pritchard, Jacki (Eds.), Good Practice in Working With Violence (pp. 106-127). Jessica Kingsley Publishers.
  • Rushton, Neil S., Sigle-Rushton, Wendy (2001). Monastic poor relief in sixteenth-century England. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 32(2), 193-216. https://doi.org/10.1162/002219501750442378
  • Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin, Fleckenstein, Timo (2006). Learning from Britain? Deutsch- und englischsprachige Sozialpolitiklehrbücher im Vergleich. Zeitschrift Für Sozialreform, 52(1), 125-134.
  • Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin, Fleckenstein, Timo (2009). The political economy of occupational family policies: comparing workplaces in Britain and Germany. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 47(4), 741-764. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8543.2009.00741.x
  • Simpkin, Victoria L., Mossialos, Elias (2017). Brexit and the NHS: challenges, uncertainties andopportunities. Health Policy, 121(5), 447-480. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2017.02.018
  • Taylor, Rogan, Ward, Andrew, Newburn, Tim (1995). The day of the Hillsborough disaster: a narrative account. Liverpool University Press.
  • Welch, Michael (2016). Political imprisonment and the sanctity of death: performing heritage in ‘Troubled’ Ireland. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 22(9), 664-678. https://doi.org/10.1080/13527258.2016.1184702
  • Whitten, Doreen Muriel (2001). Protection, prevention, reformation a history of the Philanthropic Society, 1788-1848 [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Wilberforce, Mark, Glendinning, Caroline, Challis, David, Fernández, José-Luis, Jacobs, Sally, Jones, Karen, Knapp, Martin, Manthorpe, Jill, Moran, Nicola & Netten, Ann et al (2011). Implementing consumer choice in long-term care: the impact of individual budgets on social care providers in England. Social Policy and Administration, 45(5), 593-612. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9515.2011.00788.x
  • Sociology
  • Bahceci, Sergen (2016). Parliament Square and cultural balance of power in Britain.
  • Cohen, Stanley (2002). Moral panics as cultural politics: introduction to the third edition. In Cohen, Stanley (Ed.), Folk Devils and Moral Panics: Creation of Mods and Rockers (pp. vii-xxxix). Routledge.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). Cathy come home: why it is still relevant 50 years on and why the world needs people like Ken Loach.
  • Evans, Mary, Morgan, David (1993). The battle for Britain: citizenship and ideology in the Second World War. Routledge.
  • Hayward, Keith, Hobbs, Richard (2007). Beyond the binge in 'booze Britain': market-led liminalization and the spectacle of binge drinking. British Journal of Sociology, 58(3), 437-456. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00159.x
  • Husbands, Christopher T. (1999). Fascist revival: rise and fall of the National Front. Searchlight, 293, 20-23.
  • Husbands, Christopher T. (2013). German-/Austrian-origin professors of German in British universities during the First World War: the lessons of four case studies. The Author.
  • Husbands, Christopher T. (2012). Karl Wichmann (1868-1948): a research note. German Life and Letters, 65(3), 333-343. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0483.2012.01575.x
  • McQuarrie, Michael, Calhoun, Craig (2007). Public discourse and political experience: T.J. Wooler and transformations of the public sphere in early 19th century Britain. In Benchimol, Alex, Maley, Willy (Eds.), Spheres of Influence: Intellectual and Cultural Publics From Shakespeare to Habermas (pp. 197-239). Verlag Peter Lang.
  • Patel, Ian (16 April 2021) Author interview: Q and A with Dr Ian Sanjay Patel on we’re here because you were there: immigration and the end of empire. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Patel, Ian (20 May 2021) How imperial hopes for the Commonwealth led to British citizenship being redefined along racial lines. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Young, T. (1980). The eugenics movement and the eugenic idea in Britain 1900-1914: a historical study [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • South Asia Centre
  • Ullah, Ansar Ahmed (2018). Remembering the Bengali contribution during the First World War. picture_as_pdf
  • Urban and Spatial Programme
  • Cheshire, Paul (2014). Turning houses into gold: don’t blame the foreigners, it’s we Brits who did it. Centrepiece, 19(1), 14-18.
  • Leunig, Tim (2011). Growth figures show that Britain is essentially going backwards. Bringing forward the £10,000 tax allowance is the best option to encourage growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (English) heritage and cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices and the Diamond Jubilee.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Slum clearance.
  • What Works Centre
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (English) heritage and cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices and the Diamond Jubilee.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Slum clearance.