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2. How Fiscal Policy Affects Prices: Britain's First Experience with Paper Money.
- Author
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Antipa, Pamfili M.
- Subjects
- *
FISCAL policy , *PUBLIC debts , *HISTORY - Abstract
For almost 25 years between 1797 and 1821, the gold standard in Britain was suspended in order to finance the Napoleonic Wars, creating a paper pound or a fiat currency. Suspension was accompanied by substantial inflation and the accumulation of public debt. By identifying shifts in the spot exchange rate of paper pounds for gold, I document how contemporaries' expectations of how debt would be stabilized in the future shaped the pound's internal value. Thus, it is argued that during the “paper pound” period, fiscal prospects provided a third mechanism, beyond monetary and real factors, affecting the price level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Reversal of the Passfield White Paper, 1930–1: A Reassessment.
- Author
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Beckerman-Boys, Carly
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *LOBBYING , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *JEWISH history ,BRITISH politics & government, 1910-1936 ,BRITISH foreign relations ,BALFOUR Declaration, 1917 ,PALESTINIAN Jews ,LABOUR Party (Great Britain) ,20TH century ,REIGN of George V, Great Britain, 1910-1936 - Abstract
British mandated Palestine has attracted scholarly attention for its role in the development of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. Some aspects of the time period, however, remain somewhat overlooked, and one prominent example is the reversal of the Passfield White Paper in 1931. Following extremely violent anti-Jewish riots in Palestine in 1929, the British Government in Westminster utilized two commissions of enquiry – the Shaw Commission and the Hope-Simpson Commission – to justify a change in policy. Rather than adhere to Britain’s original Zionist commitments, articulated in the Balfour Declaration and official mandate, the government decided to limit Jewish immigration and land purchase in Palestine, articulated in the Passfield White Paper, before reversing the policy months later. Subsequent explanations of this decision have been sparse and focused almost solely on the efficacy of Zionist lobbying. Why the British Government was susceptible to pressure and how this process took place has remained largely unexplored. In order to provide a more thorough analysis of why the Passfield White Paper was reversed, this article reassesses several assumptions within the literature and places the decision within the context of a Labour Government’s need to maintain internal unity, as well as cross-party support, on foreign and particularly India policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Internal Party Bulletin or Paper of the Working Class Movement?
- Author
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Young, Lewis
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNISM , *MASS media & politics , *WORKING class , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of political parties , *HISTORY - Abstract
On 1 January 1930 the Communist Party of Great Britain's (CPGB) new daily newspaper, theDaily Worker, was published for the first time. It was heralded by the CPGB as a maturing of the British Communist movement, and an opportunity for the Party to spread its message to a much wider audience than previous weekly newspapers would allow. With leading Party members in control of the paper, theDaily Workerwas very much a Party newspaper; however, the CPGB wanted it to be much more than an internal bulletin. This paper examines the attempts by the CPGB to create a newspaper that spoke both for and with the voice of the working-classes, whilst also spreading the Party's message. It will ultimately conclude that the CPGB's depiction of it as a paper ‘by the working-classes, for the working-classes’ reflected the Party's efforts at locating its own place within the working-class movement. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Preserving on Paper: Seventeenth-Century Englishwomen’s Receipt Books.
- Author
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Kaufman, Lucy
- Subjects
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WOMEN , *RECIPE writing (Cooking) , *NONFICTION , *SEVENTEENTH century , *HISTORY - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Nursing typhus victims in the Second World War, 1942-1944: a discussion paper.
- Author
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Brooks, Jane
- Subjects
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HISTORY of epidemics , *HISTORY of war , *MILITARY nursing , *NURSING practice , *TYPHUS fever , *PREVENTION , *WAR , *ARCHIVES , *DIET therapy , *DISINFECTION & disinfectants , *HISTORICAL research , *WORKING hours , *INSECTICIDES , *LICE , *MEDICAL quality control , *NURSING , *HISTORY of nursing , *REFUGEES , *STARVATION , *VACCINES , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *HOSPITAL nursing staff , *HISTORY , *INFECTIOUS disease transmission , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Aims This article explores the care British nurses provided to victims of typhus during the Second World War. Background Typhus is associated with poverty and overcrowding. During wars in the pre-antibiotic era, civilians were particularly susceptible to epidemics, which military governments feared would spread to their troops. Design This discussion paper draws on archival data from three typhus epidemics in the Second World War to examine the expert work of British nurses in caring for victims during these potential public health disasters. Data Sources The published sources for the paper include material from nursing and medical journals published between 1940-1947. Archival sources come from the National Archives in Kew, the Wellcome Library and the Army Medical Services Museum, between 1943-1945. Of particular interest is the correspondence with Dame Katharine Jones from nurses on active service overseas. Implications for Nursing Whilst epidemics of typhus are now rare, nurses in the present day may be required to care for the public in environments of extreme poverty and overcrowding, where life-threatening infectious diseases are prevalent. This article has demonstrated that it is possible for expert and compassionate nursing to alleviate suffering and prevent death, even when medical technologies are unavailable. Conclusion Expert and compassionate care, adequate nutrition and hydration and attention to hygiene needs are crucial when there are limited pharmacological treatments and medical technologies available to treat infectious diseases. The appreciation of this could have implications for nurses working in current global conflicts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. PAPER MONEY, THE NATION, AND THE SUSPENSION OF CASH PAYMENTS IN 1797.
- Author
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SHIN, HIROKI
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of money , *FINANCIAL crises , *NATIONALISM & economics , *HISTORY , *EIGHTEENTH century ,BRITISH banking industry ,ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain - Abstract
This article considers British society's response to the suspension of cash payments in February 1797. Although this event marked the beginning of the so-called Bank Restriction Period, during which the Bank of England's notes were inconvertible, there have been no detailed studies on the social and political situation surrounding the suspension. This article provides an in-depth examination of the events leading up to and immediately following the suspension. It questions existing accounts of the suspension as a smooth transition into the nationwide use of paper money and describes the complex process that came into play to avert a nationwide financial collapse. The decision to suspend the Bank's cash payments stemmed from deep-rooted financial instability, exacerbated by recurrent invasion scares that heightened after the French attempt on Bantry Bay, Ireland, in December 1796. Under such circumstances, national support for drastic financial measures could not be taken for granted. The article demonstrates that the declaration movement, which was a form of consolidated and visualized trust in the financial system, played a crucial role in the 1797 suspension crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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8. Notes on William Blake's Paper Makers, c. 1789–1795.
- Author
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Yates, Mark
- Subjects
- *
PAPERMAKERS , *PAPERMAKING , *PRINTING , *WATERMARKS , *HISTORY , *HISTORY of printing - Abstract
An essay is presented in which the author discusses the history of paper making in the 18th century in Great Britain, focusing on the papers used to print the works of poet and illustrator William Blake, such as the illuminated book "Songs of Innocence." Countermarks and watermarks are mentioned, as well as paper makers such as James Whatman Jr., Robert Edmeads, and Thomas Pine. Paper mills, books versus pamphlets, and makers such as Charles Ball are also mentioned.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. ‘Does the Daily Paper rule Britannia’: British Press Coverage of a Malawi Youth League Demonstration in Blantyre, Nyasaland, in January 1960.
- Author
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Coffey, Rosalind
- Subjects
- *
NATIONALISM , *JOURNALISM , *DECOLONIZATION , *NEWSPAPERS , *PROTEST movements , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century ,HISTORY of Malawi, 1953-1964 ,BRITISH colonies ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
The British press, public and parliament are not generally thought to have played a significant role in the process of Britain’s decolonisation in Africa. Neither do most studies of the broad British metropolitan experience foreground the importance of African nationalism. This article begins to challenge both of these views by providing an assessment of the significance of the British press’s rather sensational treatment of an incident of late-colonial violence in the context of an African demonstration in Blantyre, Nyasaland, in 1960. African activists exploited the British press presence in Blantyre as a means of advancing the nationalist cause and fighting the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland. British correspondents responded positively for a variety of ideological, political, personal, situational and institutional reasons. In addition, by 1960, the British press recognised the strength of African nationalism in the context of African violence and agitation across that continent in preceding months and years. Its critical articles, which interlocked with British parliamentary proceedings and specific sets of historical concerns, had important effects among two core readerships: sections of the white settler communities of the Federation, and the British Government. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A Questionable Project: Herbert McLeod and the Making of the Fourth series of the Royal Society Catalogue of Scientific Papers , 1901–25.
- Author
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Gay, Hannah
- Subjects
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SCIENCE bibliographies , *HISTORY of the bibliography , *PIECEWORK , *BIBLIOGRAPHERS , *BIBLIOGRAPHY , *OFFICES , *PUBLISHING , *HISTORY , *CATALOGS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Many people were involved in producing the seven volumes that make up the fourth series of the Royal Society catalogue of scientific papers. Included were about two hundred volunteers and about one hundred people working either on short-term contracts or carrying out piece work. At the Royal Society there was a small, largely female, secretariat working full-time. It included both clerical and bibliographic staff. Coordinating all the work was the chemist Herbert McLeod, appointed director of the catalogue in 1901. As is discussed, the position of director was created especially for him after his forced retirement from the Royal Indian Engineering College. The paper shows the complexity of the work involved in producing the catalogue, as well as something of the office culture at the Royal Society in the early twentieth century. The working conditions of the women employees, and prevailing attitudes toward the largely female clerical and bibliographic staff, are briefly discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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11. Art Treasures of the United Kingdom and the United States: The George Scharf Papers.
- Author
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Cottrell, Philip
- Subjects
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OLD Masters (Artists) , *EUROPEAN painting , *HISTORY of art collecting , *HISTORY , *NINETEENTH century - Abstract
The article focuses on the papers of the 19th-century British art connoisseur and curator George Scharf. The author notes that the papers, which are housed at the National Portrait Gallery in London, England, represent a remarkable repository of unpublished information regarding hundreds of old master paintings. Particular focus is paid to a series of papers relating to the art collections of the industrialist Abraham Darby IV and the art dealer John Watkins Brett. The paintings, which toured the U.S. in the 1830s, are related to early efforts to establish the first American national gallery. In addition, the author comments on the display of the paintings at the "Art Treasures of the United Kingdom" exhibition held in Manchester, England in 1857.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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12. The UK edition of The Little Red Schoolbook : a paper tiger reflects.
- Author
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Limond, David
- Subjects
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HISTORY of the book , *SEX education , *CENSORSHIP , *HARM reduction - Abstract
This paper concerns The Little Red Schoolbook, an English translation of the Danish book Den lille røde bog fur skoleelever. After the book's publication in the UK, opponents were successful in pressing for its publisher's prosecution. The ensuing trial led to its withdrawal and its bowdlerisation. It is argued that the work played some part in changing social and sexual mores and sex education practice in the UK, being, in effect, the Urtext of the ‘harm reduction approach’. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Chapter 6. An Impartial Account of what Pass'd most Remarkable in the Last Session of Parliament: Relating to the Case of Dr Henry Sacheverell: Done on such another Paper and Letter, and may therefore be Bound up with the Tryal of the Said Doctor (printed for Jacob Tonson at Grays-Inn-Gate, in Grays-Inn-Lane [false imprint for Abel Roper], 1710), MS annotations to Beinecke Rare Books & Manuscripts Library, Yale University, Brit Tracts 1710 Im7
- Subjects
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ENGLISH manuscripts , *TRIALS (Impeachment) , *TRIALS (Law) , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article presents a manuscript entitled "An Impartial Account of What Pass'd Most Remarkable in the Last Session of Parliament, Relating to the Case of Dr Henry Sacheverell: Done on Such Another Paper and Letter, and May Therefore be Bound Up With the Tryal of the Said Doctor," which claimed to be published by bookseller Jacob Tonson but was the work of newspaper editor Abel Roper and trade publisher John Morphew. It covers the 1710 impeachment trial of English clergyman Henry Sacheverell.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. FRAMED IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE: TOOLS FOR THE CONCEPTUAL HISTORY OF "APPLIED SCIENCE" -- A REVIEW PAPER.
- Author
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Bud, Robert
- Subjects
- *
INTELLECTUAL history , *SCIENCE historiography , *PHILOSOPHY of history , *HISTORIANS of science , *TECHNOLOGY , *SCIENCE in mass media , *SCIENCE journalism , *NINETEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
The article provides a historiographical overview of the history of applied science as presented within the public sphere in the nineteenth-century press of Great Britain. It focuses on two schools of history, the Cambridge School of Intellectual History following the work of science historian Quentin Skinner, and the German school of conceptual history termed "Begriffsgeschichte," exemplified by German historian Reinhart Koselleck. Topics include Scottish inventor James Watt, engineering professor W. J. R. Rankine, and science reporting.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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15. THE COLENSO PAPERS: DOCUMENTING "AN EXTENSIVE CHAIN OF INFLUENCE" FROM ZULULAND TO BRITAIN.
- Author
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Colenso, Gwilym
- Subjects
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HISTORICAL source material , *ZULU (African people) , *ANGLICAN bishops , *HISTORY , *POLITICAL participation , *RACE relations ,HISTORY of Zululand, South Africa ,HISTORY of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa - Abstract
The article discusses the papers of John William Colenso, the first Anglican Bishop of Natal, South Africa, and his family, which date from the 1850s through the 1930s, but most extensively cover the period 1874 to 1910. It comments on the family's efforts to defend the Zulu people of Natal and Zululand in South Africa, particularly noting Colenso's protests over the trial of Natal Zulu chief Langalibalele. His relations with colonial officials and with the Aborigines Protection Society (APS) are noted. The author also describes the location of archival materials in Great Britain and South Africa and comments on their use and value in historical research.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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16. ‘Bless the Gods for my pencils and paper’: Katie Gliddon's prison diary, Percy Bysshe Shelley and the suffragettes at Holloway.
- Author
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Schwan, Anne
- Subjects
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ENGLISH prisoners' writings , *WOMEN'S suffrage , *SOCIAL classes , *REFORMATORIES for women , *HISTORY - Abstract
This article discusses the life and imprisonment of the largely unknown middle-class artist and British suffrage activist Katie Gliddon and analyzes her extensive prison diary, secretly written and drawn in her copy of The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley at London's Holloway Prison in March and April 1912. By creating a platform for the voices of ‘ordinary’ prisoners and by opening up a space for a transgressive gaze between suffragettes, ‘ordinary’ prisoners and female officers, Gliddon's writings allow us to complicate our understanding of cross-class relations within the women's suffrage campaign and in women's prisons more generally speaking. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Classroom culture and cultures in the classroom: engagement with Holocaust education in diverse schools.
- Author
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Kempner, Jessica
- Subjects
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STUDENT attitudes , *STUDENT engagement , *ANTISEMITISM , *CLASSROOMS , *CULTURE , *REFUGEES - Abstract
This paper explores the engagement and attitudes of students in a UK school learning about the Holocaust, with a focus on refugee students. This paper explores students' behavioral, cognitive and emotional engagement with the subject, with a focus on the students' experiences. Findings revealed an enthusiasm and understanding from most students, but particularly refugee students. The culture in the classroom was also studied, showing that there were pockets of antisemitism in its contemporary form present in the classroom, impacting student learning. This paper explores the links between these findings, the implications and suggestions of what this means for current practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Sacheverell's Harlots: Non-Resistance on Paper and in Practice.
- Author
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NICHOLSON, EIRWEN E.C.
- Subjects
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ART , *SEX workers , *PRINT culture , *COMMERCIALIZATION , *COMMODIFICATION , *MATERIAL culture , *SYMBOLISM in art , *EIGHTEENTH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
This article's point of entry is Plate 3 of William Hogarth's print sequence The Harlot's Progress (1732), specifically Hogarth's deliberate, hostile choice of an unframed, titled, small portrait engraving of the Reverend Dr Henry Sacheverell as a 'pin-up' within the harlot's bedroom furniture. The article reappraises and recontextualises Hogarth's choice of Sacheverell, which makes sense in the context of Hogarth's life and work, but which, with Hogarthian irony, is further informed by the subsequent discovery (1747) of Sacheverell's internment alongside a notorious prostitute, given the association of Sacheverell's celebrity and notoriety with his alleged support from London's 'kind shees' and streetwalkers at the time of his trial. This, together with a strong, nascent material consumerist culture, sees Sacheverell anticipating the 'politics out of doors' associated with John Wilkes by 50 years and is a specifically gendered version that has gone largely unexplored. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Samuel Richardson and Philip Carteret Webb’s ‘Little Paper’ on the Jewish Naturalization Act.
- Author
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Latimer, Bonnie
- Subjects
- *
BRITISH authors , *AUTHORS' correspondence , *LEGAL status of Jews , *JEWS , *HISTORY ,REIGN of George II, Great Britain, 1727-1760 - Abstract
The article refers to a June 1753 letter written by English author Samuel Richardson to British poet Elizabeth Carter, as well as Carter's letter in response, which discuss the British Jewish naturalization Act of 1753. Richardson refers to a "little paper" which he included with his letter to Carter. The article argues that this was a pamphlet attributed to Philip Carteret Webb having the abbreviated title "The Bill, Permitting Jews to be Naturalized by Parliament, Having Been Misrepresented in the London Gazetteer, of Friday the 18th May."
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Persistence in Gendering: Work-Family Policy in Britain since Beveridge.
- Author
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CHANFREAU, JENNY
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL participation , *TAXATION , *PARENTAL leave , *CAREGIVERS , *UNEMPLOYMENT , *CHILD care , *FAMILY support , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *WORK-life balance , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *PARENTING , *EMPLOYMENT , *GOVERNMENT policy , *POLICY sciences , *LABOR market , *PUBLIC welfare , *PSYCHOLOGY of fathers , *GENDER inequality , *HISTORY - Abstract
Understanding the historical policy pathways that have led to the constellation of policies that both reflect and shape the current gender order can reveal reasons for the persistence of gender inequality in paid work and unpaid family care. Bringing together existing research and policy critique with Carol Bacchi's framework of policy as 'gendering practices', this paper focuses on the role of policy as a process that constructs and upholds an unequal gender order. The discussion traces how UK social policies have since the establishment of the post-war welfare state articulated and positioned gendered possibilities for combining paid work and childrearing, shaping gendered and classed work-family life courses. The analysis illustrates that British social policy has not been consistently committed to a more equal gender regime but instead maintained a heteronormative family ideal and thus, despite various policy changes, the gendering of 'the worker' and 'the parent' as conceptualised in UK policy has persisted over the last several decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The history of psychology in Britain and the founding of “the centre for the history of psychology”<FNR></FNR><FN>This is a slightly revised version of an informal paper presented at the meetings of the European Society for the History of Human Sciences, held at the University of Durham 28 August–1 September 1998. The informal framework has been substantially preserved. </FN>
- Author
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Richards, Graham
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY , *HUMAN behavior , *HISTORY of medicine , *PSYCHIATRY , *PSYCHOLOGY & literature , *PSYCHOLOGICAL research , *HISTORY - Abstract
Discusses the history of psychology in Great Britain in the nineteenth century. British-authored undergraduate writings on the topic of psychology; Comparison of the history of psychology with medicine and psychiatry; Problems in the accessibility and storage of the resource materials on psychology; Developments in the history of psychology by mid-1980s; Fundamental problem with the field of history of psychology in Britain; Factors which affect the process behind institutional change and development of the history of psychology in Great Britain.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Turn Your Papers Over.
- Author
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Watts, Andrew
- Subjects
- *
EXAMINATIONS , *HISTORY of education , *HISTORY ,19TH century British history - Abstract
As students digest their GCSE and A-Level results, they might be surprised to learn that the origins of the examination system date back 150 years to the 'Locals' set for the first time by Oxford University in June 1858, and by Cambridge University in December of the same year. Cambridge Assessment, as the University of Cambridge examinations syndicate is now called, still sets secondary examinations for students in the UK as well as more than 150 countries around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
23. The Stamp Act of 1765.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of taxation , *TARIFF on paper , *PAPER , *POSTAGE stamps , *HISTORICAL source material , *COLONIAL United States, ca. 1600-1775 , *STAMP duties , *GOVERNMENT policy , *HISTORY , *COLONIES ,CAUSES of the American Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 ,BRITISH law ,ADMINISTRATION of British colonies - Abstract
The article presents the text of the Stamp Act of 1765, enacted by the British Parliament to implement stamp duties and amend other trade duties in the American colonies and plantations. A stamp duty of varying amounts was placed on each piece of paper that was used for declarations, court petitions, claims, pleas, bail, libel or renunciation in ecclesiastical matters, certificate of any university degree, writs of covenant, error, or dower, and any record or copy made of Nisi Prius or Postea. The amounts ranged from a few pence and shillings to ten pounds. The stamp duty was applied to packs of playing cards, dice, pamphlets, and newspapers. The colonists would also be taxed for learning any profession or trade.
- Published
- 2017
24. Schools and emergency feeding in a national crisis in the United Kingdom: subterranean class strategies.
- Author
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Preston, John
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL administration , *EMERGENCY management , *EDUCATION policy , *CRISIS management , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
The role of 'class strategies' in policy formation is sometimes unseen as plans are unrealised in practice over long periods of historical time. 'Subterranean class strategies' are an extension of existing work on class to consider 'class work' on policy in the 'long unenacted'. Using the example of emergency feeding in a national crisis, the stark difference in school meal planning for post-World War 2 emergencies when compared to the COVID-19 crisis is discussed. Through an analysis of archival records, it is shown that 'subterranean class strategies' - the devaluation of school catering expertise by the army and the private sector, the lack of co-operation of independent schools, and localisation and privatisation - diminished the role of schools in emergency feeding. The paper concludes by considering how the concept of 'subterranean class strategies' could inform work on educational think tanks, privatisation and subsumption, and intersectional areas such as race. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Department of Civil Engineering, UWI St. Augustine: A Historical Note of 1972-2001.
- Author
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Shrivastava, Gyan
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL engineering , *CIVIL engineers , *ENGINEERING laboratories , *SOIL mechanics , *ENGINEERING management , *STRUCTURAL engineering , *CONSTRUCTION project management - Abstract
This paper is a continuation of a history of the Department of Civil Engineering at The University of the West Indies (UWI) at St. Augustine. It thus extends an account of its formative decade 1961-1971 previously published (in 2013) in The West Indian Journal of Engineering. The three subsequent decades covered herein encompass milestones, and transformations: (a) beginning of graduate level research, (b) commencement of anMSc programme in Construction Engineering and Management, (c) change of name from Civil to 'Civil and Environmental' for embracing the heightened awareness of environmental concerns, (d) relocation into a purpose-built building with a floor space of approximately 5,000 m2, (e) construction of new environmental engineering, engineering geology, highway engineering, soil mechanics and structural engineering laboratories, (f) expansion and modernisation of the fluid mechanics laboratory, and (g) introduction of the semester system with its credit-based curriculum and assessment. Besides, there was a fivefold increase in student enrolment, followed by a sharp decline, and an increase in academic staff strength from six to twenty. This period also witnessed a gradual loss of regional diversity of its undergraduate students from a high of approximately 50 % in 1972 to less than 10% in 2001. On the other hand, there was a notable, and opposite, change in gender (female/male) ratio among the students - from less than 10%/90% in 1972 to approximately 50%/50% in 2001. Finally, the accreditation of the department's degree programmes by the Engineering Council in the United Kingdom (UK), as well as the triennial visit of overseas external examiners, inherited from its inception, were maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The Simple Bare Necessities: Scales and Paradoxes of Thrift on a London Public Housing Estate.
- Author
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Alexander, Catherine
- Subjects
- *
PLANNED communities , *CITY dwellers , *THRIFT institutions , *ECONOMIC policy , *GOVERNMENT policy , *PUBLIC housing - Abstract
This article tracks how a trope of middle-class household thrift, grounded on the autarchic Aristotelian oikos, has long fueled derogatory discourses in Britain aimed at low-income urban residents who practice quite different forms of thrift. Since the 1970s this trope has migrated across scales, proving a potent metaphor for national economic policy and planetary care alike, and morally and economically justifying both neoliberal welfare retraction compounded by austerity policies and national responses to excessive resource extraction and waste production. Both austerity and formal recycling schemes shift responsibility onto consumer citizens, regardless of capacity. Further, this model of thrift eclipses the thriftiness of low-income urban households, which emerges at the nexus of kin and waged labor, sharing, welfare, debt, conserving material resources through remaking and repair and, crucially, the fundamental need for decency expressed through kin care. Through a historicized ethnography of a London social housing estate and its residents, this paper excavates what happens as these different forms and scales of household thrift coexist, change over time, and clash. Ultimately, neoliberal policy centered on an inimical idiom of thrift delegitimizes and disentitles low-income urban households and undermines their ability to enact livelihood practices of sustainability and projects of dignity across generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Long-standing themes and new developments in offsite construction: the case of UK housing.
- Author
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Zhang, Ruoheng, Zhou, Alexander S J, Tahmasebi, Saeed, and Whyte, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
HOUSING , *CONSTRUCTION , *RESEARCH & development , *BUSINESS models - Abstract
This paper reviews the evolution of offsite construction methods in UK housing over the past 15 years and puts this in an international context. Long-standing themes include targets for construction productivity, challenges of labour shortages and skills, desire to learn across sectors and a need to develop new business models. Newer developments include research and development funding through the UK government's 'transforming construction' initiative, higher pre-manufactured value and increased digitisation. The paper concludes with recommendations for practice, policy and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Mapping the First World War: The Empowering Development of Mapmaking during the First World War in the British Army.
- Author
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Siotto, Andrea
- Subjects
- *
MILITARY maps , *INFORMATION sharing , *MAP reading , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY , *CARTOGRAPHY - Abstract
The First World War (1914–1918) revolutionized warfare in many ways: in addition to new technologies the old and well-known one of maps acquired a crucial role in sharing information, and understanding and controlling the battlefield. This paper advances three main arguments: first, that maps became an integral part of every aspect of warfare; second, that maps became a mindset, a language to understand, rationalize, and share any kind of information; and third, that it is necessary to rethink the concept of the mapmaker and include within it the multitude of soldiers that at any level collected information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
29. A Blind Spot? The Royal Air Force (RAF) and Long-Range Fighters, 1936-1944.
- Author
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Stubbs, David
- Subjects
- *
ESCORT fighter planes , *FIGHTER planes , *SPITFIRE (Fighter plane) , *STRATEGIC bombers , *MILITARY airplanes , *HISTORY , *WORLD War II aerial operations , *TWENTIETH century ,GREAT Britain. Royal Air Force - Abstract
This paper examines why the RAF maintained its view that it would be neither appropriate nor prudent to protect its bombers with long-range fighter escort until the time, late in the day, when the U.S. Army Air Forces' trials to increase the Spitfire fighter's range proved otherwise. The paper argues that some senior RAF officers, who believed that long-range fighters were unnecessary, lacked the conceptual dexterity needed after the RAF's bombers' vulnerability to single-engined fighters became apparent, and that these failings were hidden by a culture of obedience to perceived wisdom that existed within the RAF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
30. 'Uneasy bedfellows' conceiving urban megastructures: precarious public–private partnerships in post-war British New Towns.
- Author
-
Gosseye, Janina
- Subjects
- *
CITIES & towns , *WELFARE state , *URBAN planning , *URBANIZATION , *CIVIC improvement , *WELFARE economics , *HISTORY - Abstract
From its inception, the European welfare state was a contract between the state, civic society, and the private sector. And yet, studies on the architecture and urbanism of the European welfare state frequently overlook the role played by the private sector, as the emphasis is commonly placed on governmental action. However, apart from governments also private actors played an important role in shaping the post-war welfare state. New towns in particular were sites of experiment. Here, public–private partnerships forged novel collective spaces, which challenged and redefined what constituted the civic realm. This paper focuses on one such novel type of collective space: the megastructural 'heart' of second-wave British New Towns. Combining mass consumption with administrative and civic functions, thereby blending the concepts of 'shopping centre' and 'city centre', these structures embodied the welfare state's belief that capitalism could neither live with nor without the existence of a pervasive welfare system (and vice versa). Through the analysis of three megastructures, this paper highlights the important role that private actors played in the formation of the post-war British welfare state; it explicates the lofty societal ambitions that these New Town schemes expressed; and it pinpoints the precariousness of public–private partnerships in the development of urban megastructures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Gender, class and school teacher education from the mid-nineteenth century to 1970: scenes from a town in the North of England.
- Author
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Fisher, Roy
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER education , *SOCIAL classes , *GENDER & society , *MECHANICS' institutes , *WORKING class , *WOMEN teachers , *YOUNG adults , *PROFESSIONAL education , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper considers gender and social class in relation to teacher education through an episodic study of the development of adult educational institutions in Huddersfield. It briefly discusses nineteenth-century mechanics' institutes in the town before moving to a consideration of school teacher training college students in the twentieth century, highlighting aspects of the gendered and cultural ethos of teacher training. Local efforts to establish teacher training, and the wartime presence in the town of an evacuated women's teacher training college, provide a prism for the examination of transitions in social attitudes towards teaching as a profession, as do the educational aspirations of local working-class grammar school girls and boys during the 1940s/1950s. The paper then focuses on the establishment in 1963 of a 'new kind' of non-residential teacher training college and, in particular, on its introduction in the late 1960s of part-time provision designed specifically for 'married women'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Read all about it: The Lancet's Paper of the Year, 2003.
- Author
-
Horton, Richard, Rosenberg, Noah A, Pritchard, Jonathan K, Weber, James L, Cann, Howard M, Kidd, Kenneth K, Zhivotovsky, Lev A, and Feldman, Marcus W
- Subjects
- *
NEWSLETTERS , *AUTHORSHIP , *AWARDS , *GENETICS , *HISTORY , *STANDARDS - Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Halcyon days: the heyday of the Photogrammetric Society?
- Author
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Wickens, E. H. and Dallas, R. W. A.
- Subjects
- *
PHOTOGRAMMETRY , *ACHIEVEMENT , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The Photogrammetric Society existed as an independent learned society for some 50 years, from the 1950s to 2001. This period coincided with the growth of photogrammetry in the UK to become a well‐recognised and widely adopted methodology. A detailed history of the Society during that period was published by Atkinson and Newton in 2002. This paper attempts to give a more personalised view of the role and achievements of the Society through the eyes of a number of Society members. It focuses on the period from the 1970s to the 1990s – the heyday of the Society? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Anti-Slave-Trade Law, 'Liberated Africans' and the State in the South Atlantic World, c.1839–1852.
- Author
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Richards, Jake Christopher
- Subjects
- *
LEGAL status of freedmen , *SLAVERY laws , *ANTISLAVERY movements , *HISTORY ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
From 1807 onwards, bilateral slave-trade treaties stipulated how naval squadrons would rescue slaves from slave ships, and how states should arrange the settlement and apprenticeship of these slaves, to transform them into 'liberated Africans'. Comparing interactions between the state and liberated Africans at sea along the South African and Brazilian coasts, and in the port towns of Cape Town and Salvador, reveals how the legal status of liberated Africans changed over time. Current scholarship has framed liberated Africans in terms of whether they were attributed rights or suffered re-enslavement, and thus focused on their solidarity through claiming rights, 'ethnic survivals' or creolization. Instead, this paper argues anti-slave-trade legislation ascribed to liberated Africans a set of unguaranteed entitlements – promises regarding status and treatment without obligating states to uphold that status or treatment. By focusing on the precise aspects of legislation that operated at each point in the process of anti-slave-trade activity – rescuing slaves from slave ships, transportation to a port, processing through a court, and apprenticeship – this paper unearths how the law came into force in the encounter between state officials and liberated Africans, as part of the complex transition from slavery to free labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The ‘Younghusband Report’ Recommendation of Two-Year Training Courses and the Development of Social Work.
- Author
-
Burt, Mike
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL work education , *POLICY sciences , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *SOCIAL workers , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *SOCIAL services , *HISTORY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
The Working Party on Social Workers in the Local Authority Health and Welfare Services was established in 1955 to enquire into the kind of work which social workers in the health and welfare departments of local authorities should be carrying out and, because very few were qualified, to make recommendations about their recruitment and training. This paper evaluates the influence of the Report’s recommendation for 2-year training courses on the development of social work in the United Kingdom. It places the recommendation in the historical context of the period by reviewing some of the key submissions to the Working Party, highlighting the interests and concerns of social work, medical and academic bodies; responses of those bodies to the final report are analysed. The paper argues that the discussion about social work in the final report and the introduction of training courses in 1961 for social workers in the local authority health and welfare services were significant in providing an initial basis for expanding the numbers of social workers and contributing to their wider development as a single occupational group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Quantifying life: Understanding the history of Quality-Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs).
- Author
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MacKillop, Eleanor and Sheard, Sally
- Subjects
- *
HEALTH policy , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *CELEBRITIES , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *POLICY sciences , *QUALITY-adjusted life years - Abstract
Quality-Adjusted Life-Years (QALYs) are central to healthcare decision-making in Britain and abroad, yet their history is poorly understood. In this paper, we argue that a more in-depth and political history of the QALY is needed to allow a critical evaluation of its current dominance. Exploiting rich data from archives and 44 semi-structured interviews conducted between 2015 and 2018, we employ Multiple Streams Analysis to construct a complex and dynamic picture of how the idea of QALYs emerged and was adopted within UK health policy. Through its historical and political approach, the paper illuminates the relative roles in the policy-making process of experts (especially economists) and politicians as ‘entrepreneurs’ in the development of new ideas; how these were influenced by negotiation within established and emerging institutional structures; and the role of serendipity and crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Housing and health – a shared history, a shared future.
- Author
-
van Doorn, Andrew and Dearnaley, Patricia
- Subjects
- *
HOUSING , *ASSETS (Accounting) , *LABOR productivity , *NATIONAL health services , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services , *SOCIAL support , *WELL-being , *HUMAN services programs , *SENIOR housing , *HISTORY , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose The 2017 Naylor Review has been the subject of some controversy, with some of the press, social media and other critics portraying its recommendations as a "fire sale" or privatisation of the NHS. The purpose of this paper is to examine preceding reports into efficiency and best value of the NHS, the evidence behind the review recommendations, and analyse data into housing affordability for the capital's NHS staff. It concludes by advocating for partnerships with housing associations to deliver social and financial value by utilising redundant NHS land to deliver the affordable housing that London and the rest of the UK so urgently needs.Design/methodology/approach The paper was developed using the content analysis of preceding independent reviews of NHS efficiency, published critiques of the Naylor Review and analysis of NHS produced data to consider the potential savings and opportunities for reinvestment in capital projects.Findings The paper identifies existing partnership models and examples of good practice and advocates the adoption of joint ventures and other forms of partnership to ensure that both best value is achieved from the sale of NHS assets, and publicly owned assets are reused for social purpose.Originality/value The paper uses existing data, analysis and context to map a route for achieving best value in managing the publicly owned asset base and reinvesting the proceeds of the sale of redundant properties into UK public services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. On Taking from Others: History and Sensibility in Archaeologists' Arguments for Treasure Trove Legislations.
- Author
-
Trivedi, Mudit
- Subjects
- *
TREASURE troves , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *ARGUMENT , *SOUTH Asians , *HISTORY , *ARCHIVAL resources - Abstract
The Indian Treasure Trove Act of 1878 is understood as a landmark legislative victory in the preservation of South Asian material pasts. This paper presents a detailed archival history recounting how archaeologists themselves were crucial to the promulgation of the Act and the authors of its specific provisions. It demonstrates how arguments for the reform of royal prerogative into an instrument for the discipline were born in mid-nineteenth-century British debates, where archaeologists' attempts for a similar statutory change in property laws had been frustrated. Centuries-long tensions in common law definitions and their governance of treasure are demonstrated to be crucial to how we may better understand the new 'policy' of the colonial law and its operation. To do so, the paper reviews select cases and presents an evaluation of the archaeological justice of the rule of this law. It asks why our critical historiography has remained insensible to the victims of this law — archaeology's counter-publics — who have been routinely incarcerated and punished in the name of the greater archaeological common good. Through these examinations, the paper reflects upon the enduring sensibilities and commitments that are involved in continuing to take treasures from others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. In pursuit of social democracy: Shena Simon and the reform of secondary education in England, 1938–1948.
- Author
-
Ku, Hsiao-Yuh
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATIONAL change , *DEMOCRACY & education , *BRITISH education system , *SECONDARY education , *TEENAGERS , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of education - Abstract
Shena Simon (1883–1972), a leading English socialist and educationist, actively called for the reform of secondary education in the 1930s and 1940s in order to bring the ideal of ‘equality of opportunity’ into the English educational system. This paper explores the continuity and changes in Simon’s proposed reforms in relation to her ideals of social democracy from the appearance of the Spens Report (1938) to the publication of her book,Three Schools or One?(1948). In addition, Simon’s transnational visits to the Soviet Union, the USA and Scotland, as well as the impact of her international and comparative perspectives on different educational systems on her policy agenda, are also examined. It concludes that as many policy issues shown in the current paper continue to be debated, Simon’s democratic ideals and discourses are still relevant in the present and suggest implications for the future of secondary education in England. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Keeping women off the jury in 1920s England and Wales.
- Author
-
Crosby, Kevin
- Subjects
- *
WOMEN judges , *CIVIL service , *SEX discrimination in employment , *LEGISLATIVE bills , *HISTORY - Abstract
The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 ended the prohibition on female jurors. This did not mean that English and Welsh juries became representative institutions overnight, however: the property qualifications ensured that juries were still drawn from the top few per cent of the local population; and the 1919 Act expressly permitted trial judges to order single-sex juries where the nature of the evidence required it. The continued existence of peremptory challenges allowed defendants in felony trials to exclude women from their juries whenever they preferred to be tried only by men. Finally, some judges permitted female jurors to excuse themselves from particular trials if they so desired. This paper explores the effects these factors had on the practical enjoyment of the female jury franchise after the passing of the 1919 Act. It finds that the picture is remarkably localised: rates of women serving on juries were very different for the five assize circuits for which adequate records exist (Midland, Oxford, South Eastern, South Wales and Western). By exploring these issues, this paper reveals how flexible the female jury franchise was in its early years, and shows how important local differences were in keeping women off the jury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Connecting historical studies of transport, mobility and migration.
- Author
-
Pooley, Colin G.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of transportation , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *TRANSPORTATION & society , *REFUGEES , *RAILROADS - Abstract
This paper argues that the sub-disciplines of transport history, migration history and mobilities studies too rarely interact directly with each other, and that there is much to be gained from the integration and cross-fertilisation of different approaches. Migration historians rarely directly consider the modes of transport used to travel, and although there has been increased interaction between transport historians and mobilities scholars in recent years the full potential of such interactions is yet to be exploited. The experience of travelling, and the convenience of the modes of transport used, can significantly influence later decisions about migration and mobility. This paper calls for a greater focus on such topics and explores some of the potential benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Something ventured: Dangers and risk mitigation for the ordinary British Atlantic merchant ship, 1600–1800.
- Author
-
Reid, Phillip F.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of shipbuilding , *MERCHANT ships , *MARITIME shipping , *NAVAL architecture , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *HISTORY - Abstract
Using diverse sources, including archaeological evidence, this paper scrutinises the technology of the ordinary British Atlantic merchant ship, assessing continuity and change during the formation and development of the Atlantic empire (1600–1800). The paper argues that observable continuities and changes in rig, in hull design, and in defensive armament were responses to risks posed to owners, builders, and crews. I state that ‘risk mitigation’ was the main policy of the actors involved in the business, thus suggesting an innovative research path to assess decisions to innovate and decisions not to. This can thus contribute to a better understanding of Atlantic and technological history, as well as to an understanding of risk mitigation as a driving force in business and technology, beyond the more commonly used concept of disruptive innovations. Naturally, changes did take place, and investigate why that is helps us understand the continuity more fully, and ship technology more fully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Content analysis of the professional journal of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists, III: 1966-2015-into the 21st century.
- Author
-
Armstrong, Linda, Stansfield, Jois, and Bloch, Steven
- Subjects
- *
CONTENT analysis , *HISTORY of periodicals , *SPEECH therapy , *SPEECH therapy methodology , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY of serial publications , *AUTHORS , *RESEARCH methodology , *SERIAL publications , *SPEECH therapists , *SURVEYS , *THEMATIC analysis - Abstract
Background Following content analyses of the first 30 years of the UK speech and language therapy professional body's journal, this study was conducted to survey the published work of the speech (and language) therapy profession over the last 50 years and trace key changes and themes. Aim To understand better the development of the UK speech and language therapy profession over the last 50 years. Methods & Procedures All volumes of the professional journal of the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists published between 1966 and 2015 ( British Journal of Communication Disorders, European Journal of Communication Disorders and International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders) were examined using content analysis. The content was compared with that of the same journal as it appeared from 1935 to 1965. Outcomes & Results The journal has shown a trend towards more multi-authored and international papers, and a formalization of research methodologies. The volume of papers has increased considerably. Topic areas have expanded, but retain many of the areas of study found in earlier issues of the journal. Conclusions & Implications The journal and its articles reflect the growing complexity of conditions being researched by speech and language therapists and their professional colleagues and give an indication of the developing evidence base for intervention and the diverse routes which speech and language therapy practice has taken over the last 50 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Testing the Gräfenberg Ring in Interwar Britain: Norman Haire, Helena Wright, and the Debate over Statistical Evidence, Side Effects, and Intra-uterine Contraception.
- Author
-
RUSTERHOLZ, CAROLINE
- Subjects
- *
INTRAUTERINE contraceptives , *BIRTH control , *MEDICAL technology , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper examines the introduction to Britain of the Gräfenberg ring, an early version of what later became known as an intrauterine device (IUD). The struggle during the interwar years to establish the value of the ring provides an opportunity for a case study of the evaluation and acceptance of a new medical device. With the professionalization of the birth control movement and the expansion of birth control clinics in interwar Britain, efforts to develop better scientific means for contraception grew rapidly. At the end of the nineteenth century, methods for controlling fertility ranged from coitus interruptus and abstinence, to diverse substances ingested or placed into the vagina, to barrier methods. The first decades of the twentieth century brought early work on chemical contraceptives as well as a number of new intrauterine devices, among them the Gräfenberg ring. Developing a cheap, reliable, and widely acceptable contraceptive became a pressing goal for activists in the voluntary birth control movement in Britain between the wars. Yet, tensions developed over the best form of contraception to prescribe. By situating the Gräfenberg ring within the context of the debates and competition among British medical and birth control professionals, this paper reveals broader issues of power relationships and expertise in the assessment of a new medical technology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. What is a nurse? The Francis report and the historic voice of nursing.
- Author
-
Bradshaw, Ann
- Subjects
- *
NURSING practice , *NURSING education , *NURSING education standards , *OUTCOME-based education , *CURRICULUM , *NURSES , *NURSING , *HISTORY of nursing , *NURSING ethics , *NURSING schools , *NURSING students , *CLINICAL competence , *PROFESSIONAL standards , *TEACHING methods , *HISTORY , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Following the Francis report into shockingly deficient standards of care at an English hospital, this paper examines UK nurse education and revisits the premises on which the professional narrative of nursing was built. The UK government's response to the report is to introduce the 'associate nurse' role, to be nationally trained to do fundamental care in place of the registered nurse, and a nursing apprenticeship scheme-on-the-job training for a nursing degree. UK nursing bodies do not address the report's recommendations in regard to registered nurse education; rather, they advocate a further perpetuation of the current system. This shows deep uncertainty about what the 'true' nurse is. To those familiar with the Nightingale model that characterised nursing in England and elsewhere for a century before the introduction of Project 2000 in 1986, there is an intriguing historical echo in the Francis report. One might wonder whether Francis is really recommending a return to a virtue-based, practice-driven, nationally standardised version of nursing education developed by Nightingale and evidenced in nursing syllabuses in England and Wales 1860-1977. This paper supports this position, and shows from a review of historical and contemporary evidence that this Nightingale model has current relevance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Consul and the Beatnik: The Establishment, Youth Culture and the Beginnings of the Hippy Trail (1966-8).
- Author
-
Gemie, Sharif and Ireland, Brian
- Subjects
- *
YOUTH culture , *BEAT generation , *MARIJUANA abuse , *CULTURAL movements , *DRUG abuse , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper analyses the attitudes expressed by consular and embassy officials to a new type of traveller they encountered in the mid-1960s. Their observations are contextualised within wider debates concerning 'youth' in the late 1950s and 1960s. Officials distinguished sharply between 'overlanders' (who could be tolerated or accommodated) and 'beatniks' whose behaviour was characterized as illegal and/or unacceptable. Smoking cannabis was identified as a key marker of beatnik behaviour. Officials' observations are contrasted with four accounts by new travellers from the period. The paper concludes with a proposal for an 'antinominian' approach to the study of youth cultures: researchers should be more sensitive to the constructed nature of the labels used to identify the various strands of youth identity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. 'THE SHADOW IN THE EAST': Representations of the Russo-Japanese war in newspaper cartoons.
- Author
-
Williams, Chris
- Subjects
- *
RUSSO-Japanese War, 1904-1905 , *WAR , *HISTORY of newspapers , *HISTORY , *TWENTIETH century , *WIT & humor ,CARICATURES & cartoons - Abstract
The Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 captured the imagination of reading publics around the world and in Britain spawned a breadth of products aimed at a domestic audience, including cigarette cards, illustrated magazines and newspaper cartoons. This essay investigates the commentary on and interpretation of the war offered by cartoons appearing in the British Sunday paper the News of the World and the Welsh daily paper the Western Mail. Editorial cartoonist J. M. Staniforth drew over 70 cartoons documenting the war for both papers, and the degree to which these visual images complemented or diverged from the editorial line expressed in leader columns is considered. The importance of distinguishing between cartoons and editorials and of taking into account the identity and career of the cartoonist is stressed. The visual codes for communicating conflict are also investigated, revealing in the process something of the intellectual horizons of both cartoonist and audience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Womanliness in the Slums: A Free Kindergarten in Early Twentieth-Century Edinburgh.
- Author
-
Darling, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
KINDERGARTEN , *EARLY childhood education , *KINDERGARTEN teachers , *WELFARE state , *SOCIAL reformers , *WOMEN , *EDUCATION , *HISTORY - Abstract
This paper considers the intersection of Spiritual Motherhood, early childhood education and child welfare in early twentieth-century Edinburgh. Its focus is St Saviour's Child Garden (SSCG), which opened in the Canongate, in November 1906, part of the Free Kindergarten movement that emerged in Europe and North America in the late nineteenth century. The paper focuses on the SSCG's founder Lileen Hardy, in order to trace the development of this new approach to child welfare and women's work in Britain. It discusses her training at the Sesame House for Home-Life Training in London, her move to Edinburgh, and the network of predominantly women reformers, whose interests ranged from urban reform to medical welfare, she found there. It shows how this network facilitated the founding of the SSCG and discusses the form it took and Hardy's implementation of a modified form of Froebelian praxis. In so doing its concern is to show how Free Kindergarten forms part of a wider history of social welfare and urban reform as well as to the history of early childhood education, and to move attention away from the men usually associated with innovations in Scottish social reform like Patrick Geddes, and onto a group of women who created a women and child-centred proto-Welfare State in pre-First World War Edinburgh. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The formation, development and contribution of the New Ideals in Education conferences, 1914–1937.
- Author
-
Howlett, John
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION conferences , *MONTESSORI method of education , *PROGRESSIVE education , *TWENTIETH century , *HISTORY ,HISTORY of philosophy of education - Abstract
This paper seeks to explore the development, impact and contribution made by the New Ideals in Education conferences, which were held between 1914 and 1937. In particular, it will examine how the group emerged from the English Montessori Society and forged an identity of its own based on the thoughts and ideas of its two major protagonists: Edmond Holmes and the Earl of Lytton. This was especially manifest in its commitment to a form of non-partisanship that sought to be inclusive as possible towards those agitating for liberty within the classroom. The paper will also examine the profound impact played by the First World War, whose events were a catalyst not merely for impelling the group to discuss and showcase practice but also how this could be applied in the reconstruction process. In so doing it will chart the evolution of the New Ideals movement, which fizzled out just prior to the Second World War. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. English Landed Society Revisited; the collected papers of F.M.L.Thompson.
- Subjects
- *
GENTRY , *NONFICTION , *HISTORY - Published
- 2017
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