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1. 'Teach the mutual interests of the Mother country and her dependencies': education and reshaping colonial governance in Trinidad.

2. School inspection and state-initiated professionalisation of elementary school teachers in Sweden, 1861–1910.

3. Society, science and institutionally-embodied higher education reform in nineteenth-century Ireland: the role of mobile, professional elites in fashioning reform.

4. The Irish Church Disestablishment Act (1869) and the general synod of the Church of Ireland (1871): the art and structure of educational reform.

5. The Education and Employment of Working-Class Girls, 1870-1914.

6. University College, Bristol: Pioneering Teacher Training for Women.

7. The Accomplished Woman and the Propriety of Intellect: A New Look at Women's Education in Britain and Australia, 1800-1850.

9. Woman's Work and Education in Lancashire, 1800-1870: A Response to Keith Flett.

10. A weak mind in a weak body? Categorising intellectually disabled children in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Switzerland.

11. William Graham Brooke (1835–1907): advocate of girls’ superior schooling in nineteenth-century Ireland.

12. Patterns of and influences on elementary school attendance in early Victorian industrial Monmouthshire 1839–1865.

13. Sensing the realities of English middle-class education: James Bryce and the Schools Inquiry Commission, 1865–1868.

14. The ‘truth’ about idiocy: revisiting files of children in the Dutch ‘School for Idiots’ in the nineteenth century.

15. A market analysis of the latter half of the nineteenth-century American higher education sector.

16. Sex or Class: The Education of Working-Class Women, 1800-1870.

17. Professors and examinations: ideas of the university in nineteenth-century Scotland.

18. Adult and child identities in Irish primary schools, c.1830-1909.

19. Barbara Bodichon’s travel writing: her epistolary articulation of Bildung.

20. The power of the purse: student funding and the labour market for Dutch Reformed and Catholic theology students, 1800–1880.

21. Enlightened paternalism: the prohibition of corporal punishment in Spanish public schools in the nineteenth century.

22. Resisting conformity: Anglican mission women and the schooling of girls in early nineteenth-century West Africa.

23. 'No study so agreeable to the youthful mind': geographical education in the Georgian grammar school.

24. Patents: a neglected source in the history of education.

25. William Horsley: music master at Miss Black's boarding-school for young ladies, 1828-1840.

26. 'The enemy within?': the clergyman and the English school boards, 1870-1902.

27. The romantic and radical nature of the 1870 Education Act.

28. Education for Poor Neapolitan Children: Julie Schwabe's Nineteenth‐century Secular Mission.

29. The uneven transition towards universal literacy in Spain, 1860–1930.

30. Teachers in écoles d'arts et métiers in nineteenth-century France.

31. Agents and subjects: schooling and conceptions of citizenship in early nineteenth-century Sweden.

32. Art and sonic mining in the archives: methods for investigating the wartime history of Birmingham School of Art.

33. ‘“Navvy” import alions [ sic ]’: the schooling of navvy children in the Midlands in the 1890s.

34. ‘All your dreadful scientific things’: women, science and education in the years around 1900.

35. Transnational education in the late nineteenth century: Brazil, France and Portugal connected by a school museum.

36. Abuse of foster children in nineteenth-century Australia: why did it happen then, and why does it matter now?

37. Scientists, teachers and the ‘scientific’ textbook: interprofessional relations and the modernisation of elementary science textbooks in nineteenth-century Sweden.

38. Irish education and the legacy of O’Connell.

39. Teaching Sisters and transnational networks: recruitment and education expansion in the long nineteenth century.

40. Multiplying the origins of mass schooling: an analysis of the preconditions common to schooling and the school building process in Sweden, 1840–1900.

41. ‘Listen to the voice of reason’: the New Orleans Tribune as advocate for public, integrated education.

42. Knowledge, character and professionalisation in nineteenth-century British science.

43. The entrance of women into the teaching profession in Spain (1855–1940).

44. Teaching manuals and the blackboard: accessing historical classroom practices.

45. My brothers were all ‘learnt out’ and my sons soon would be: Public debate over schooling in Quebec, 1814–1823.

46. 112 years of professional disability: an under-examined aspect of the 1846 Education Minutes.

47. 'A position of usefulness': gendering history of girls' education in colonial Hong Kong (1850s-1890s).

48. The real milch cow? The work of Anglican, Catholic and Wesleyan clergymen in elementary schools in the second half of the nineteenth century.

49. 'The children are used wretchedly': pupil responses to the Irish charter schools in the early nineteenth century.