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Dr Patricia Barton |
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‘Imperialism, Race and Therapeutics: The legacy of Medicalizing the “Colonial Body”’, Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics, 36, Autumn 2008, 506-516. |
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Dr Janet Greenlees |
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“The dangers attending these conditions are evident”: Public Health and the Working Environment of Lancashire Textile Communities, c. 1870-1939, Social History of Medicine, forthcoming 2013.http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/hks133? ‘‘For the convenience and comfort of the persons employed by them’: The Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1839-1930’, Medical History, 57, 1 (2013), 45-64, http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8825396&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S0025727312000804 J Greenlees and L Bryder, eds, Western Maternity and Medicine, 1880-1990 (Pickering & Chatto, Social History of Medicine Series, Oct. 2013). http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990 ‘The peculiar and complex female problem’: The Church of Scotland and healthcare for unwed mothers, 1915-1948, in Greenlees and Bryder, ed., Western Maternity and Medicine, forthcoming Oct. 2013. http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990 With L. Bryder, ‘Western Maternity and Medicine: an Introduction’, in Greenlees and Bryder, ed., Western Maternity and Medicine, forthcoming Oct. 2013, http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990 ‘Technological Change and Environmental Inequalities: The New England Textile Industry, 1880-1930’, in G. Massard-Guilbaud and R. Rodger, eds, Environmental and Social Justice in the City: Historical Perspectives (White Horse Press, 2011), 249-70. Female Labour Power: Women Workers’ Influence on Business Practices in the British and American Cotton Industries, c. 1790-1860 (Ashgate, 2007). ‘The Kiss of Death or a Flight of Fancy? Workers’ Health and the Press in the Campaign to Regulate Shuttle Kissing in the British Cotton Industry, c. 1900-1946’, with P. Dale and J. Melling, Social History, 32, 1 (2007), 54-75. ‘”Stop Kissing and Steaming!”’: Tuberculosis and the Occupational Health Movement, 1870-1918’, Urban History 32, 2 (2005), 223-46 ‘Women and Work in Interwar Lancashire’, Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, 14 (Spring, 2002), 119-136. ‘Equal Pay for Equal Work?: A New Look at Gender and Wages in the LancashireCotton Industry, 1790-1855', in Working Out Gender: Perspectives from Labour History, Margaret Walsh, ed. (Ashgates Publishing Co., Ltd., 1999), 167-90.
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Dr Ryan Johnson |
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Books: 'Public Health in the British Empire: Intermediaries, Subordinates and Public Health Practice, 1850-1960, (London:Routledge, 2011) edited with Amna Khalid. 'Beyond the State: The Colonial Medical Services in British Africa (Manchester: Manchester University Press, Under Contract) edited with Anna Greenwood.nn 'Tropical Medicine and Imperial Power: Science, Health and Hygiene in the Late British Empire.') London: I.B.Tauris, Under Contract). Peer Reviewed Articles: ‘Tabloid Brand Medicine Chests: Selling Health and Hygiene for the British Tropical Colonies’. Science as Culture, 17(3), 2008, 249-268. ‘European Cloth and “Tropical” Skin: Clothing Material and British Ideas of Health and Hygiene in Tropical Climates’. Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 83(3), 2009, 530-60. '‘Colonial Mission and Imperial Tropical Medicine: Livingstone College, London, 1893-1914’. Social History of Medicine, 23(3), 2010, 549-566. “An All White Institution”: Defending Private Practice and the Formation of the West African Medical Staff ’. Medical History, 54(2), 2010, 237-54. ‘The West African Medical Staff and the Administration of Imperial Tropical Medicine, 1902-14'. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 38(3), 2010, 419-439. Book Chapters: ‘Local Mantsemei, Interpreters, and the Successful Eradication of Plague: The 1908 Plague Epidemic in Colonial Accra’, in Ryan Johnson and Amna Khalid, eds., Public Health in the British Empire: Intermediaries, Subordinates, and Public Health Practice, 1850-1960. (New York: Routledge, 2011). 'Shipping Companies, Private Practice and the West African Medical Staff in the Gold Coast (Ghana) and Sierra Leone, 1902-1914,' in Anna Greenwood and Ryan Johnson, eds, Beyond the State: The Colonial Medical Services in British Africa (Manchester University Press, Forthcoming). Other Publications: 'The Cultural Economy of Public Health in British West Africa, 1865-1965'. Wellcome History. 44, 2010, 6-7. 'Commodity Culture: Tropical Health and Hygiene in the British Empire’. Endeavour, 32 (2), 2008, 70-74. Debates in the Historiography of Health and Healthcare in British Colonial Africa'. Global South, 6(3), July 2010. Essay and Book Reviews: Book review, Medicine in an Age of Commerce & Empire: Britain and its Tropical Colonies, 1660-1830 by Mark Harrion (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010). Medical History, 55(3), 2011. Book Review, Crossing Colonial Historiographies: Histories of Colonial and Indigenous Medicines in Transnational Perspective, eds., Anne Digby, Waltraud Ernst and Projit B. Mukharji, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2010. Social History of Medicine, 24(3), 2011. Book review, Biomedicine as a Contested Site: Some Revelations in Imperial Contexts by Poonam Bala, ed. (Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2009). Social History of Medicine, 23(1), 2010, 212-14. Book review, The Making of a Tropical Disease: A Short History of Malaria by Randall M. Packard (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press). Annals of Science, 67(1), 2010, 139-42. Essay Review, ‘Have We Found the Postcolonial History of Medicine? An Essay Review'. History of Intellectual Culture, 8(1), 1-6, 2010. |
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Prof. Peter Kirby |
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Kirby, P., Child Workers and Industrial Health, 1780-1850 (forthcoming, Manchester University Press, 2012). Kirby, P., ‘Victorian Social Investigation and the Children’s Employment Commission, 1840-42’, N. Goose and K. Honeyman ed., Children and Childhood in Industrial England: Diversity and Agency, 1650-1900 (forthcoming, 2012). Kirby, P., ‘Attendance and work effort in the Great Northern Coalfield, 1775-1864’, Economic History Review, LXV (2012). Kirby, P., ‘The Transition to Working Life in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century England and Wales’, in K. Lieten and E. van Nederveen Meerkerk (eds.), Child Labour’s Global Past: 1650-2000 (Peter Lang: Bern, 2011). Kirby, P., ‘Review of periodical literature for 1700-1850’, Economic History Review, LXIII, 1 (2010). Kirby, P., The Physical Stature of 16,402 Children in Northern English Factory Districts, 1837 [Database], UK Data Archive, University of Essex (2010). Kirby, P., Productivity and Household Economy in a Tyneside Mining Community, 1775-1861 [Database], UK Data Archive, University of Essex (2010) (including Baptisms, Marriages and Burials in the Parish of Ovingham, Northumberland, ca. 1774-1864). Kirby, P., ‘History of Child Labor in Coal Mining in Britain’ in H.D. Hindman (ed.), The World of Child Labor: An Historical and Regional Survey (New York, 2009). Kirby, P., ‘History of Child Labor in Britain’ in H.D. Hindman (ed.), The World of Child Labor: An Historical and Regional Survey (New York, 2009). Kirby, P., ‘Review of periodical literature for 1700-1850’, Economic History Review, LXII, 1 (2009). Kirby, P., ‘Miner absenteeism in the Great Northern Coalfield, 1775-1864’, Manchester Papers in Economic and Social History, 65 (2009). Kirby, P., Evidence to the Children's Employment Commission, 1842 [Database], UK Data Archive, University of Essex (2009). Kirby, P., ‘Review of periodical literature for 1700-1850’, Economic History Review, LXI, 1 (2008). Kirby, P., ‘Child labour, public decency and the iconography of the Children’s Employment Commission of 1842’, Manchester Papers in Economic and Social History, 62 (2007). Kirby, P., ‘Review of periodical literature for 1700-1850’, Economic History Review, LX, 1 (2007). Kirby, P., ‘How many children were “unemployed” in eighteenth and nineteenth-century England?’, Past and Present, 187 (2005). Kirby, P., 'A brief statistical sketch of the child labour market in mid-nineteenth century London', Continuity and Change, 20 (2005). Kirby, P., 'Child labour and state intervention in Britain, 1800-1870', Perspective, 6 (in Chinese translation) (Shanghai 2004). Kirby, P., Child Labour in Britain, 1750-1870 (Palgrave Macmillan 2003). Kirby, P., ‘Child “unemployment” in eighteenth and nineteenth-century England’, Manchester Papers in Economic and Social History, 53 (Manchester 2002). Kirby, P., 'The historic viability of child labour and the Mines Act of 1842', in M. Lavalette, ed., A Thing of the Past? Child Labour in Britain in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Liverpool University Press 1999). Kirby, P., 'The standard of living debate and the British industrial revolution', ReFRESH, 25 (Economic History Society, 1997). Kirby, P., 'Short stature among coalmining children: a rejoinder', Economic History Review, L, 3 (1997). Kirby, P., ‘Human heights and the standard of living’, Social Consequences of Industrialisation (TLTP Courseware Consortium CD-ROM, University of Glasgow / Renaissance Virtual Software Ltd., 1996). Kirby, P., 'Causes of short stature among coalmining children, 1823-1850', Economic History Review, XLVIII, 4 (1995).
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Prof. Jim Mills |
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Cannabis Nation: Control and consumption in Britain, c. 1928-2008, (Oxford University Press Oxford 2012). Reviewed in The Sunday Times (http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/culture/books/non_fiction/article1175005.ece) and the THES (http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=422439) Cannabis Britannica: a social and political history of cannabis and British government, 1800-1928 (Oxford University Press Oxford 2005). For a full review see http://www.ephemeraweb.org/journal/6-2/6-2acevedo.pdf Confronting the Body: The politics of physicality in colonial and post-colonial India, (Anthem South Asian Studies Series London 2004). Edited with Satadru Sen. Madness, Cannabis and Colonialism: the 'native only' lunatic asylums of British India , 1857 to 1900, (Palgrave Basingstoke 2000). 'Drugs, consumption and supply in Asia: The case of cocaine in colonial India, c. 1900 to c. 1930' in Journal of Asian Studies (Cambridge University Press), 66, 2, 2007, pp. 345-362. ‘Modern psychiatry in India: the British role in establishing an Asian system, 1858-1947’ in International Review of Psychiatry, 18, 4, 2006, pp. 333-43. ‘Mapother of the Maudsley and Psychiatry at the End of the Raj’ in Sloan Mahone and Megan Vaughan (eds), Psychiatry and Empire, (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), pp. 153-171, with Sanjeev Jain.
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Prof. Elaine McFarland |
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Prof. Arthur McIvor |
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'Germs at WorK: Eastablishing Tuberculosis as an Occupational Disease in Britain, c. 1900-1951', Social History of Medicine, vol. 25, no 4, 2012, pp. 812-829 (advance published June 2012). 'Body talk: Oral history methodology in the study of occupational health and disability in twentiieth century British coalmining' in Judith Rainhorn (ed.), Santé et travail à la mine, XIXe-XXe siècles, Lille: Presses Universitaries du Septentrion, forthcoming , September 2013 ‘Marginalising the body at work? Employers’ occupational health strategies and occupational medicine in Scotland c. 1930-1974’, Social History of Medicine, April 2008, 21, 1, 127-144. (with R. Johnston). ‘The Realities and Narratives of Paid Work: The Scottish Workplace,’ in L. Abrams and C. Brown (eds.), A History of Everyday Life in Twentieth Century Scotland, Edinburgh, 2010, 103-130. ‘The Textile Firm and the Management of Labour’, in Lex Heerma van Voss, E Hiemstra and E. van Nederveen (eds.), A Global History of Textile Workers, Ashgate, 2010, 597-619. Miners Lung a History of Dust Disease in British Coal Mining (Ashgate, 2007), with Ronnie Johnston Lethal Work: a History of the Asbestos Tragedy in Scotland (Tuckwell Press, 2000), With Ronnie Johnston A History of Work in Britain 1880-1950 (Palgrave) 2001. Organised Capital (Cambridge University Press), 1996. The University Experience 1945-1975 (Edinburgh University Press), 2004 (with Callum Brown and Neil Rafeek) Roots of Red Clydeside 1910-14? (J.Donald), 1996, co-editor Employers and Labour in Textiles, 1850-1939. (Routledge), 1998, co-editor
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Dr Chris Nottingham |
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Prof. John Stewart |
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'Cradle to Grave: Municipal Medicine in Interwar England and Wales', with A. Levene, M Powell and B Taylor, Oxford 2011. ‘The Provision and Control of Medical Relief: Urban Central Scotland in the Late Nineteenth Century’ in (ed) Mark Freeman et al, Medicine, Law, and Public Policy in Scotland, 1850-1980: Essays Presented to Anne Crowther, Dundee, Dundee University Press, 2011 ‘Child Guidance in Britain, 1927-1951: From Voluntarism to the Welfare State?’, in (ed) Colin Rochester, George Campbell Gosling, Alison Penn, and Meta Zimmeck, Understanding the Roots of Voluntary Action: Historical Perspectives on Current Social Policy, Brighton, Sussex Academic Press, 2011 ‘The Medical Mission of British Child Guidance, 1918-1950: Theory and Practice’, in (ed) Martin Dinges and Robert Jütte, The Transmission of Health Practices (1500-2000), Stuttgart, Steiner Verlag, 2011 ‘”The Dangerous Age of Childhood”: Child Guidance and the “Normal” Child in Great Britain, 1920-1950’, Paedagogica Historica, 47, 6, 2011 History: A Social Science Neglected by Other Social Sciences (and Why It Should Not Be), Contemporary Social Science, 7, 1, 2012 (with Virginia Berridge) ‘”The Dangerous Age of Childhood’: Child Guidance in Britain, ca.1918-1955’, www.historyandpolicy.org – posted online October 2012 |
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Dr Vicky Long |
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Books: The Rise and Fall of the Healthy Factory: The Politics of Industrial Health in Britain, 1914-60 (Palgrave, 2010); http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=485004 Destigmatising Mental Illness: Professional Politics, Stigma and Public Education in Britain, 1870-1970 (Manchester University Press, forthcoming). Chapters and Articles: ‘Rethinking Post-war Mental Health Care: Industrial Therapy and the Chronic Mental Patient in Britain’, Social History of Medicine, 2013; http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2013/03/10/shm.hkt005.full?keytype=ref&ijkey=wvDay5eUzlztzcK ‘The Trades Union Congress and the politics of industrial health in Britain, 1920-1960’, in Brian Dolan and Paul Blanc (eds), At Work in the World: Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on the History of Occupational and Environmental Health (Perspectives in Medical Humanities, University of California, 2012); http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/421335gr ‘Industrial homes, domestic factories: the convergence of public and private space in interwar Britain’, Journal of British Studies, 50:2 (April 2011), pp. 434-64; http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8737568 ‘“Often there is a good deal to be done, but socially rather than medically”: the psychiatric social worker as social therapist, 1945-1970’, Medical History, 55:2 (April 2011), pp. 223-39; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3066687/ [with Hilary Marland] ‘From danger and motherhood to health and beauty: health advice for the factory girl in early twentieth-century Britain’, Twentieth Century British History, 20:4 (2009), pp. 454-81; http://tcbh.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/4/454.full [with Hilary Marland and Robert Freedman] ‘Women at the dawn of British biochemistry: female contributors to the Biochemical Journal from 1906 to 1939’,The Biochemist, 31:4 (2009); http://www.biochemistry.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=fdIpddkRVA0%3D&tabid=490 ‘“A satisfactory job is the best psychotherapist”: employment and mental health, 1939-60’, in Joseph Melling and Pamela Dale (eds), Mental Illness and Learning Disability Since 1850: Finding a Place for Mental Disorder in the United Kingdom(Routledge, 2006); http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415514132/ Other: ‘Teaching Medical History’, Report produced for the History Subject Centre, Higher Education Academy (2010). ‘Women in Biochemistry, 1906-1939’: website authored to disseminate findings from a project funded by the Biochemical society. ‘Sources for the History of Health and Work’, Modern Records Centre Information Leaflet no. 14, University of Warwick, 2006. ‘Industrial Homes: Domesticating Factories in Interwar Britain.’ [podcast]
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Dr Matt Smith |
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“The dangers attending these conditions are evident”: Public Health and the Working Environment of Lancashire Textile Communities, c. 1870-1939, Social History of Medicine, forthcoming 2013. http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/hks133?
ijkey=aIAiFK8BtoZVzQS&keytype=ref
‘‘For the convenience and comfort of the persons employed by them’: The Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1839-1930’, Medical History, 57, 1 (2013), 45-64, http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8825396&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S0025727312000804
J Greenlees and L Bryder, eds, Western Maternity and Medicine, 1880-1990 (Pickering & Chatto, Social History of Medicine Series, Oct. 2013). http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990
‘The peculiar and complex female problem’: The Church of Scotland and healthcare for unwed mothers, 1915-1948, in Greenlees and Bryder, ed., Western Maternity and Medicine, forthcoming Oct. 2013. http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990
With L. Bryder, ‘Western Maternity and Medicine: an Introduction’, in Greenlees and Bryder, ed., Western Maternity and Medicine, forthcoming Oct. 2013, http://www.pickeringchatto.com/monographs/western_maternity_and_medicine_1880_1990
‘Technological Change and Environmental Inequalities: The New England Textile Industry, 1880-1930’, in G. Massard-Guilbaud and R. Rodger, eds, Environmental and Social Justice in the City: Historical Perspectives (White Horse Press, 2011), 249-70.
Female Labour Power: Women Workers’ Influence on Business Practices in the British and American Cotton Industries, c. 1790-1860 (Ashgate, 2007).
‘The Kiss of Death or a Flight of Fancy? Workers’ Health and the Press in the Campaign to Regulate Shuttle Kissing in the British Cotton Industry, c. 1900-1946’, with P. Dale and J. Melling, Social History, 32, 1 (2007), 54-75.
‘”Stop Kissing and Steaming!”’: Tuberculosis and the Occupational Health Movement, 1870-1918’, Urban History 32, 2 (2005), 223-46
‘Women and Work in Interwar Lancashire’, Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, 14 (Spring, 2002), 119-136.
‘Equal Pay for Equal Work?: A New Look at Gender and Wages in the LancashireCotton Industry, 1790-1855', in Working Out Gender: Perspectives from Labour History, Margaret Walsh, ed. (Ashgates Publishing Co., Ltd., 1999), 167-90.