[1]
Ahmed, R. and Mukherjee, S. 2012. South Asian resistances in Britain, 1858-1947. Continuum.
[2]
Alwyn Turner 2013. Introduction. A Classless Society: Britain in the 1990s. Aurum Press Ltd; 1st Edition edition.
[3]
Andrews, M. 2015. ‘Nationalising Hundreds and Thousands of Women’: a domestic response to a national problem. Women’s History Review. 24, 1 (Jan. 2015), 112–130. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2014.920670.
[4]
Anitha, Sundari; Pearson, Ruth; McDowell, Linda From Grunwick to Gate Gourmet: South Asian Women’s Industrial Activism and the Role of Trade Unions. Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique. French Journal of British Studies. XXIII–1.
[5]
Babikian, C. 2021. "Partnership Not Prejudice”: British Nurses, Colonial Students, and the National Health Service, 1948–1962. Journal of British Studies. 60, 1 (Jan. 2021), 140–168. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2020.188.
[6]
Bailkin, J. 2012. The afterlife of empire. Global, Area, and International Archive, University of California Press.
[7]
Bailkin, J. 2018. Unsettled: refugee camps and the making of multicultural Britain. Oxford University Press.
[8]
Beckett, A. 2010. When the lights went out: what really happened to Britain in the seventies. Faber and Faber.
[9]
Becky Taylor 2021. Post-War Settlement (Chapter 2) - Refugees in Twentieth-Century Britain. Refugees in Twentieth-Century Britain: A History. Cambridge University Press.
[10]
Beer, S.H. 1982. Britain against itself: the political contradictions of collectivism. Faber.
[11]
Bell, A.H. 2017. Abortion Crime Scene Photography in Metropolitan London 1950–1968. Social History of Medicine. (Jan. 2017). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkw125.
[12]
Biressi, A. and Nunn, H. 2013. Chapter 2: Essex: Class, Aspiration and Social Mobility. Class and contemporary British culture. Palgrave Macmillan.
[13]
Bivins, R. 2017. Picturing Race in the British National Health Service, 1948-1988. Twentieth Century British History. (Jan. 2017). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hww059.
[14]
Black, L. 2012. An Enlightening Decade? New Histories of 1970s’ Britain. International Labor and Working-Class History. 82, (2012), 174–186. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0147547912000506.
[15]
Black, L. 2010. ‘Consumers of the world unite, you have nothing to lose but your illusions’: The Politics of the Consumers’ Association. Redefining British politics: culture, consumerism and participation, 1954-70. Palgrave Macmillan, an imprint of Macmillan Publishers.
[16]
Black, L. et al. eds. 2013. Reassessing 1970s Britain. Manchester University Press.
[17]
Bocking-Welch, A. 2012. Imperial Legacies and Internationalist Discourses: British Involvement in the United Nations Freedom from Hunger Campaign, 1960–70. The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 40, 5 (Dec. 2012), 879–896. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2012.730840.
[18]
Bourke, J. 2016. Love and Limblessness: Male Heterosexuality, Disability, and the Great War. Journal of War & Culture Studies. 9, 1 (Jan. 2016), 3–19. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/17526272.2015.1106756.
[19]
Brooke, S. 2014. Living in ‘New Times’: Historicizing 1980s Britain. History Compass. 12, 1 (Jan. 2014), 20–32. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12126.
[20]
Brooke, S. 2011. Sexual Politics: Sexuality, Family Planning, and the British Left from the 1880s to the Present Day. Oxford University Press.
[21]
Brown, C.G. 2011. Sex, Religion, and the Single Woman c.1950-75: The Importance of a ‘Short’ Sexual Revolution to the English Religious Crisis of the Sixties. Twentieth Century British History. 22, 2 (Jun. 2011), 189–215. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwq048.
[22]
Bruley, S. The women and men of 1926: a gender and social history of the General Strike and Miners’ Lockout in South Wales. University Of Wales Press.
[23]
Calder, A. 1992. The myth of the Blitz. Pimlico.
[24]
Calder, A. 1992. The people’s war: Britain 1939-1945. Pimlico.
[25]
Carnevali, F. et al. 2007. Twentieth-century Britain: economic, social, and cultural change. Pearson Longman.
[26]
Catterall, P. 2002. Editorial - Contemporary British History: A Personal View. Contemporary British History. 16, 1 (Mar. 2002), 1–10. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/713999442.
[27]
CHARNOCK, H. 2019. TEENAGE GIRLS, FEMALE FRIENDSHIP AND THE MAKING OF THE SEXUAL REVOLUTION IN ENGLAND, 1950–1980. The Historical Journal. (Oct. 2019), 1–22. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X19000396.
[28]
Chemam, M. 2021. From Sound Systems to Disc Jockeys, from Local Bands to Major Success: On Bristol’s Crucial Role in Integrating Reggae and Jamaican Music in British Culture. Narratives from Beyond the UK Reggae Bassline. W. ‘Lez’ Henry and M. Worley, eds. Springer International Publishing. 233–247.
[29]
Coates, D. 2005. Prolonged labour: the slow birth of New Labour Britain. Palgrave Macmillan.
[30]
Cocks, H. 2016. Conspiracy to corrupt public morals and the ‘unlawful’ status of homosexuality in Britain after 1967. Social History. 41, 3 (Jul. 2016), 267–284. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2016.1180899.
[31]
Cohen, M. The eclipse of ‘elegant economy’: the impact of the Second World War on attitudes to personal finance in Britain. Ashgate Pub.
[32]
Collins, M. 2020. The Other Sixties: An Anti-Permissive Permissive Society? The Beatles and Sixties Britain. Cambridge University Press. 23–47.
[33]
Conekin, B. 2003. ‘The autobiography of a nation’: the 1951 Festival of Britain. Manchester University Press.
[34]
Consterdine, E. 2017. Community Versus Commonwealth: Reappraising the 1971 Immigration Act. Immigrants & Minorities. 35, 1 (Jan. 2017), 1–20. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2016.1241712.
[35]
Cook, H. 2005. The English Sexual Revolution: Technology and Social Change. History Workshop Journal. 59, 1 (Mar. 2005), 109–128. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbi009.
[36]
Cook, M. 2017. ‘Archives of Feeling’: the AIDS Crisis in Britain 1987. History Workshop Journal. 83, 1 (2017), 51–78. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbx001.
[37]
Crane, J. 2019. ‘Save our NHS’: activism, information-based expertise and the ‘new times’ of the 1980s. Contemporary British History. 33, 1 (Jan. 2019), 52–74. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2018.1525299.
[38]
Crowson, N.J. et al. NGOs in contemporary Britain: non-state actors in society and politics since 1945. Palgrave Macmillan.
[39]
David Butler and Dennis Kavanagh 1992. Conservatives: Thatcher to Major. The British General Election of 1992. Palgrave.
[40]
David Butler and Dennis Kavanagh 1992. Labour: Seeking Electability. The British General Election of 1992. Palgrave.
[41]
David Butler and Dennis Kavanagh 1992. The Deceptive Battle: March-April 1992. The British General Election of 1992. Palgrave.
[42]
Davis, G. and Davidson, R. 2005. ‘Big White Chief’, ‘Pontius Pilate’, and the ‘Plumber’: The Impact of the 1967 Abortion Act on the Scottish Medical Community, c.1967–1980. Social History of Medicine. 18, 2 (Aug. 2005), 283–306. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/sochis/hki026.
[43]
Davis, M. 2012. Arguing Affluence: New Left Contributions to the Socialist Debate 1957-63. Twentieth Century British History. 23, 4 (Dec. 2012), 496–528. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwr033.
[44]
Dawson, G. et al. eds. 2017. The Northern Ireland Troubles in Britain: impacts, engagements, legacies and memories. Manchester University Press.
[45]
Dromey, J. et al. 2016. Grunwick: the workers’ story. Lawrence and Wishart.
[46]
Ebke, A. 2016. ’From ‘Bloody Brixton’ to ‘Burning Britain’: placing the riots of 1981 in British post-imperial history. A European youth revolt: European perspectives on youth protest and social movements in the 1980s. Palgrave Macmillan. 258–270.
[47]
Ebke, A. 2018. The decline of the mining industry and the debate about Britishness of the 1990s and early 2000s. Contemporary British History. 32, 1 (Jan. 2018), 121–141. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2017.1408542.
[48]
Edgerton, D. 2021. The Nationalisation of British History: Historians, Nationalism and the Myths of 1940. The English Historical Review. 136, 581 (Nov. 2021), 950–985. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceab166.
[49]
Edgerton, D. 2006. Warfare state: Britain, 1920-1970. Cambridge University Press.
[50]
Edited by David Brown, Gordon Pentland, and Robert Crowcroft 2018. Elections. The Oxford Handbook of Modern British Political History, 1800-2000. Oxford University Press.
[51]
Eley, G. 2001. Finding the People’s War: Film, British Collective Memory, and World War II. The American Historical Review. 106, 3 (Jun. 2001). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2692326.
[52]
Evans, N. 1980. The South Wales Race Riots of 1919. Llafur. 3, 1 (1980).
[53]
‘Everyone here wants to help you’: International Co-operation, Refugee Rights, and the 1956 Hungarian Refugee Crisis – History Workshop: 4AD. https://www.historyworkshop.org.uk/everyone-here-wants-to-help-you-international-co-operation-refugee-rights-and-the-1956-hungarian-refugee-crisis/.
[54]
Fabian, S. 2021. Flight to the Sun: Package tours and the Europeanisation of British holiday culture in the 1970s and 1980s. Contemporary British History. 35, 3 (Jul. 2021), 417–438. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2021.1925550.
[55]
Fairclough, N. 2000. New Labour, new language?. Routledge.
[56]
Farrell, N. 2012. Celebrity Politics: Bono, Product (RED) and the Legitimising of Philanthrocapitalism. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations. 14, 3 (Aug. 2012), 392–406. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-856X.2011.00499.x.
[57]
Fielding, S. 2007. Rethinking Labour’s 1964 Campaign. Contemporary British History. 21, 3 (2007). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460600825873.
[58]
Fielding, S. 2017. The Labour Party: Continuity and Change in the Making of ‘New’ Labour. Macmillan Education, Limited.
[59]
Franks, S. 2013. Reporting disasters: famine, aid, politics and the media. Hurst.
[60]
Frost, G.S. 2019. ‘Not always logical’: binational/biracial marriages in Britain, 1900–1940. The History of the Family. 24, 3 (Jul. 2019), 585–607. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2019.1612768.
[61]
Fryer, P. and Gilroy, P. 2010. Staying power: the history of black people in Britain. Pluto Press.
[62]
Gatrell, P. 2013. Europe Uprooted Refugee Crises at Mid-century and ‘Durable Solutions’. The Making of the Modern Refugee. Oxford University Press. 89–117.
[63]
Gillian Bennett 1996. ‘Camera, Lights, Action!’: The British General Election 1992 as Narrative Event. Folklore. 107, (1996).
[64]
Gladden, G.P. 2020. Post Second World War trans-Atlantic travel for business and pleasure: Cunard and its airline competitors. The Journal of Transport History. 41, 2 (Aug. 2020), 160–183. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0022526619883804.
[65]
Gopal, P. 2019. Insurgent empire: anticolonial resistance and British dissent. Verso.
[66]
Gottlieb, J.V. 2015. ‘Guilty women’, foreign policy, and appeasement in inter-war Britain. Palgrave Macmillan.
[67]
Greenhalgh, J. 2017. The Threshold of the State: Civil Defence, the Blackout and the Home in Second World War Britain. Twentieth Century British History. 28, 2 (Jun. 2017), 186–208. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwx009.
[68]
Gunn, S. 2013. People and the car: the expansion of automobility in urban Britain, 1955–70. Social History. 38, 2 (May 2013), 220–237. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2013.790139.
[69]
Gunn, S. 2021. Spatial mobility in later twentieth-century Britain. Contemporary British History. (Jan. 2021), 1–22. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2020.1858060.
[70]
Hall, S. and Jacques, M. 1986. People aid: a new politics sweeps the land. (1986).
[71]
Hammond Perry, K. 2016. London Is The Place For Me: Black Britons, Citizenship, and the Politics of Race. Oxford University Press.
[72]
Hanley, B. 2015. IRA - A Documentary History. Gill.
[73]
Harris, A. and Jones, T.W. 2014. Love and romance in Britain, 1918-1970. Palgrave Macmillan.
[74]
Hennessy, P. 2006. Never again: Britain 1945-1951. Penguin.
[75]
Hodgson, G. and Matthews, R. 2020. Never Failed?The Local Reporting of the Blitzes in Coventry and Liverpool in 1940 and 1941. Media History. (May 2020), 1–15. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2020.1769473.
[76]
Hollow, M. 2016. The age of affluence revisited: Council estates and consumer society in Britain, 1950–1970. Journal of Consumer Culture. 16, 1 (Mar. 2016), 279–296. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/1469540514521083.
[77]
Hollow, M. 2016. The age of affluence revisited: Council estates and consumer society in Britain, 1950–1970. Journal of Consumer Culture. 16, 1 (Mar. 2016), 279–296. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/1469540514521083.
[78]
Holloway, K. 2015. The Bright Young People of the late 1920s: How the Great War’s Armistice influenced those too young to fight. Journal of European Studies. 45, 4 (Dec. 2015), 316–330. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0047244115599145.
[79]
Hollowell, J. 2003. Britain since 1945. Blackwell Publishers.
[80]
Hollows, J. 2013. Second-Wave Feminism and the Politics of Consumption. Feminist Media Studies. 13, 2 (May 2013), 268–287. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2012.708508.
[81]
Huxford, G. 2016. The Korean War Never Happened: Forgetting a Conflict in British Culture and Society. Twentieth Century British History. 27, 2 (Jun. 2016), 195–219. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hww017.
[82]
Jackson, A. 2011. The Empire/Commonwealth and the Second World War. The Round Table. 100, 412 (Feb. 2011), 65–78. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00358533.2011.542296.
[83]
Jackson, B. and Saunders, R. eds. 2012. Making Thatcher’s Britain. Cambridge University Press.
[84]
Jackson, C. and Tinkler, P. 2007. ‘Ladettes’ and ‘Modern Girls’: ‘Troublesome’ Young Femininities. The Sociological Review. 55, 2 (May 2007), 251–272. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-954X.2007.00704.x.
[85]
Jenkinson, J. 2017. Black, Arab and South Asian Colonial Britons in the Intersections Between War and Peace: The 1919 Seaport Riots in Perspective. Minorities and the First World War: from war to peace. H. Ewence and T. Grady, eds. Palgrave Macmillan. 175–198.
[86]
Jenkinson, J. 2007. Black Sailors on Red Clydeside: Rioting, Reactionary Trade Unionism and Conflicting Notions of ‘Britishness’ Following the First World War. Twentieth Century British History. 19, 1 (Jul. 2007), 29–60. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwm031.
[87]
Jennings, R. 2006. The Gateways club and the emergence of a post-Second World War lesbian subculture. Social History. 31, 2 (May 2006), 206–225. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/03071020600562959.
[88]
Jobson, R. 2018. Nostalgia and the post-war Labour party: prisoners of the past. Manchester University Press.
[89]
Jones, C.L. 2016. Under the Covers? Commerce, Contraceptives and Consumers in England and Wales, 1880–1960. Social History of Medicine. 29, 4 (Nov. 2016), 734–756. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkv059.
[90]
Jones, E.L. 2011. Attitudes to Abortion in the Era of Reform: evidence from the Abortion Law Reform Association correspondence. Women’s History Review. 20, 2 (Apr. 2011), 283–298. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2011.556323.
[91]
Jones, E.L. 2011. The Establishment of Voluntary Family Planning Clinics in Liverpool and Bradford, 1926-1960: A Comparative Study. Social History of Medicine. 24, 2 (Aug. 2011), 352–369. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkq045.
[92]
JONES, E.L. and PEMBERTON, N. 2014. TEN RILLINGTON PLACE AND THE CHANGING POLITICS OF ABORTION IN MODERN BRITAIN. The Historical Journal. 57, 4 (Dec. 2014), 1085–1109. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X14000399.
[93]
Jones, H. and Kandiah, M. 1996. The Myth of consensus: new views on British history, 1945-64. Macmillan.
[94]
Julian M Simpson 2014. Reframing NHS history: visual sources in a study of UK-based migrant doctors. Oral History. 42, 2 (2014).
[95]
Kavanagh, D. 1995. Chapter 10: Americanisation. Election campaigning: the new marketing of politics. Blackwell.
[96]
Kean, H. 2015. The Dog and Cat Massacre of September 1939 and the People’s War. European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire. 22, 5 (Sep. 2015), 741–756. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2015.1070125.
[97]
Kearney, H.F. 2012. The British Isles: a history of four nations. Cambridge University Press.
[98]
Kelly, S. 2017. ‘Mr Haughey’s silence condemns him’: Charles J. Haughey and the second Republican hunger strike, 1981. Irish Political Studies. 32, 3 (Jul. 2017), 454–478. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/07907184.2015.1128899.
[99]
King, A. 1993. Britain at the polls, 1992. Chatham House Publishers.
[100]
Klein, R. 2013. The new politics of the NHS: from creation to reinvention. Radcliffe Publishing.
[101]
Klimke, M. and Scharloth, J. 2008. 1968 in Europe: a history of protest and activism, 1956-1977. Palgrave Macmillan.
[102]
Kushner, T. and Knox, K. 1999. Refugees in an age of genocide: global, national, and local perspectives during the twentieth century. F. Cass.
[103]
Kyriakides, C. and Virdee, S. 2003. Migrant labour, racism and the British National Health Service. Ethnicity & Health. 8, 4 (Nov. 2003), 283–305. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13557850310001631731.
[104]
Langhamer, C. 2012. Love, Selfhood and Authenticity in Post-War Britain. Cultural and Social History. 9, 2 (Jun. 2012), 277–297. DOI:https://doi.org/10.2752/147800412X13270753068966.
[105]
Lawrence, J. 2003. Forging a Peaceable Kingdom: War, Violence, and Fear of Brutalization in Post–First World War Britain. The Journal of Modern History. 75, 3 (Sep. 2003), 557–589. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/380238.
[106]
Lawrence, J. 2011. The Culture of Elections in Modern Britain. History. 96, 324 (Oct. 2011), 459–476. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-229X.2011.00529.x.
[107]
Lawrence, J. 20060201. The Transformation of British Public Politics After the First World War. Past & Present. 190, 1 (20060201). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtj002.
[108]
Lesley-Dixon, K. 2018. Northern Ireland: The Troubles. Pen & Sword Military.
[109]
Linda McDowell 2016. Body Work: Nursing, Occupational Therapy and Caring for the British. Migrant women’s voices: talking about life and work in the UK since 1945. Bloomsbury Academic.
[110]
Lousley, C. 2014. ‘With Love from Band Aid’: Sentimental exchange, affective economies, and popular globalism. Emotion, Space and Society. 10, (Feb. 2014), 7–17. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.emospa.2013.02.009.
[111]
Lowe, R. 2005. The welfare state in Britain since 1945. Palgrave Macmillan.
[112]
Major, J.R. 1999. The autobiography. HarperCollins.
[113]
Margaret L. Laware 2004. Circling the Missiles and Staining Them Red: Feminist Rhetorical Invention and Strategies of Resistance at the Women’s Peace Camp at Greenham Common. NWSA Journal. 16, 3 (2004).
[114]
Marsland, J. 2018. Squatting: The Fight for Decent Shelter, 1970s–1980s. Britain and the World. 11, 1 (Mar. 2018), 27–50. DOI:https://doi.org/10.3366/brw.2018.0286.
[115]
Matt Jones 2018. Ending Cold War fears: expectation and interpretation in Mass Observers’ responses to the Gulf War, 1990-1991. Contemporary British History. 32, 2 (2018). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2017.1410435.
[116]
Matthew Hilton 2002. The Female Consumer and the Politics of Consumption in Twentieth-Century Britain. The Historical Journal. 45, 1 (2002), 103–128.
[117]
Matthews, W. 2013. The new left, national identity, and the break-up of Britain. Brill.
[118]
May, R. and Cohen, R. 1974. The Interaction Between Race and Colonialism: A Case Study of the Liverpool Race Riots of 1919. Race. 16, 2 (Oct. 1974), 111–126. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/030639687401600201.
[119]
McCarthy, H. 2012. Whose Democracy? Histories Of British Political Culture Between The Wars. The Historical Journal. 55, 1 (Mar. 2012), 221–238. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0018246X11000604.
[120]
McCormick, L. 2008. ‘The Scarlet Woman in Person’: The Establishment of a Family Planning Service in Northern Ireland, 1950-1974. Social History of Medicine. 21, 2 (Jun. 2008), 345–360. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkn028.
[121]
McDonough, F. 2011. Origins of the Second World War: an international perspective. Continuum.
[122]
McDowell, L. et al. 2014. Striking Narratives: class, gender and ethnicity in the ‘Great Grunwick Strike’, London, UK, 1976–1978. Women’s History Review. 23, 4 (Jul. 2014), 595–619. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2014.906117.
[123]
McDowell, L. et al. 2012. Striking similarities: representing South Asian women’s industrial action in Britain. Gender, Place & Culture. 19, 2 (Apr. 2012), 133–152. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2011.573144.
[124]
McGowan, J. 2008. ‘Dispute’, ‘Battle’, ‘Siege’, ‘Farce’?—Grunwick 30 Years On. Contemporary British History. 22, 3 (Sep. 2008), 383–406. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460701731921.
[125]
McGraw, J. 2018. Sonic Settlements: Jamaican Music, Dancing, and Black Migrant Communities in Postwar Britain. Journal of Social History. 52, 2 (Nov. 2018), 353–382. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/jsh/shy001.
[126]
McKittrick, D. 2002. Making Sense of the Troubles. New Amsterdam Books.
[127]
Mechen, B. 2017. "Closer Together”: Durex Condoms and Contraceptive Consumerism in 1970s Britain. Perceptions of Pregnancy from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Century. J. Evans and C. Meehan, eds. Springer International Publishing. 213–236.
[128]
Merchants of misery | New Internationalist: https://newint.org/features/1981/06/01/merchants-of-misery.
[129]
Mills, H. 2016. Using the personal to critique the popular: women’s memories of 1960s youth. Contemporary British History. 30, 4 (Oct. 2016), 463–483. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2016.1206822.
[130]
Moon, D.S. 2016. ‘We’re Internationalists, not Nationalists’: The Political Ramifications of Welsh Labour’s Internal Power Struggle over the ‘One Wales’ Coalition in 2007. Contemporary British History. 30, 2 (Apr. 2016), 281–302. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2015.1099439.
[131]
Mort, F. 2011. The Ben Pimlott Memorial Lecture 2010 * The Permissive Society Revisited. Twentieth Century British History. 22, 2 (Jun. 2011), 269–298. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwr005.
[132]
Mukherjee, S. 2018. Indian suffragettes. Female identities and transnational networks. Oxford University Press.
[133]
Mulholland, M. 2020. Northern Ireland: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press.
[134]
Müller, T.R. 2013. The Long Shadow of Band Aid Humanitarianism: revisiting the dynamics between famine and celebrity. Third World Quarterly. 34, 3 (Apr. 2013), 470–484. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/01436597.2013.785342.
[135]
Nairn, T. 2001. After Britain: new Labour and the return of Scotland. Granta Books.
[136]
Noakes, L. 2015. Gender, Grief, and Bereavement in Second World War Britain. Journal of War & Culture Studies. 8, 1 (Feb. 2015), 72–85. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1179/1752628014Y.0000000016.
[137]
Nugent, B. and Smith, E. 2017. Intersectional solidarity? The Armagh women, the British left and women’s liberation. Contemporary British History. 31, 4 (Oct. 2017), 611–635. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2017.1401473.
[138]
O’Hara, G. 2006. ‘Dynamic, Exciting, Thrilling Change’: the Wilson Government’s Economic Policies, 1964–70. Contemporary British History. 20, 3 (Sep. 2006), 383–402. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460500407087.
[139]
O’NEILL, J. 2019. ‘Abortion Games’: The Negotiation of Termination Decisions in Post-1967 Britain. History. 104, 359 (Jan. 2019), 169–188. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-229X.12729.
[140]
O’Neill, M. 2013. Devolution and British politics. Routledge.
[141]
Outram, Q. and Laybourn, K. eds. 2018. Bobby Sands, martyrdom and the politics of Irish Republican memory. Secular martyrdom in Britain and Ireland. Springer International Publishing AG. 263–286.
[142]
Overy, R.J. 2009. The morbid age: Britain between the wars. Allen Lane.
[143]
Panayi, P. 1995. World War Two and the Making of Multiracial Britain. War culture: social change and changing experience in World War Two Britain. Lawrence & Wishart.
[144]
Patel, I.S. 2021. We’re Here Because You Were There: Immigration and the End of Empire. Verso.
[145]
Perry, K.H. 2015. London is the place for me: Black Britons, citizenship, and the politics of race. Oxford University Press.
[146]
Pugh, M. 2009. We danced all night: a social history of Britain between the wars. Vintage.
[147]
Ramsden, S. 2019. Working-class community in the age of affluence. Routledge.
[148]
Rappaport, E.D. 2017. A thirst for empire: how tea shaped the modern world. Princeton University Press.
[149]
Rappaport, E.D. et al. 2015. Consuming behaviours: identity, politics and pleasure in twentieth-century Britain. Bloomsbury Academic.
[150]
Renwick, C. 2017. Bread for all: the origins of the welfare state. Allen Lane, an imprint of Penguin Books.
[151]
Reynolds, M. 2017. The Gaelic Athletic Association and the 1981 H-Block Hunger Strike. The International Journal of the History of Sport. 34, 3–4 (Mar. 2017), 217–235. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2017.1330745.
[152]
Richey, L.A. and Ponte, S. Brand aid: shopping well to save the world. University of Minnesota Press.
[153]
Robinson, E. et al. 2017. Telling Stories about Post-war Britain: Popular Individualism and the ‘Crisis’ of the 1970s. Twentieth Century British History. 28, 2 (Jun. 2017), 268–304. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwx006.
[154]
Robinson, L. 2007. Gay men and the left in post-war Britain: how the personal got political. Manchester University Press.
[155]
Robinson, L. 2012. Putting the Charity Back into Charity Singles: Charity Singles in Britain 1984–1995. Contemporary British History. 26, 3 (Sep. 2012), 405–425. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2012.703026.
[156]
Roodhouse, M. 2013. Introduction: the ‘unethical’ consumer. Black Market Britain. Oxford University Press. 1–11.
[157]
Ross, F.S. 2011. Smashing H-Block: the rise and fall of the popular campaign agains criminalization, 1976-1982. Liverpool University Press.
[158]
Rowe, M. 2000. Sex, ‘race’ and riot in Liverpool, 1919. Immigrants & Minorities. 19, 2 (Jul. 2000), 53–70. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2000.9974991.
[159]
Rubinstein, W.D. 1993. Capitalism, culture, and decline in Britain, 1750-1990. Routledge.
[160]
Rugg, J. 2004. Managing ‘Civilian Deaths due to War Operations’: Yorkshire Experiences During World War II. Twentieth Century British History. 15, 2 (Feb. 2004), 152–173. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/15.2.152.
[161]
Ryan, L. 2007. Who do you think you are? Irish nurses encountering ethnicity and constructing identity in Britain. Ethnic and Racial Studies. 30, 3 (May 2007), 416–438. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870701217498.
[162]
Saima Nasar 2020. Commonwealth Communities: Migration and Racial Thinking in Twentieth Century Britain. Commonwealth History in the Twenty-First Century. S. Dubow and R. Drayton, eds. Springer International Publishing.
[163]
Sandbrook, D. 2010. State of emergency: the way we were : Britain, 1970-1974. Allen Lane.
[164]
Sasson, T. 2016. Milking the Third World? Humanitarianism, Capitalism, and the Moral Economy of the Nestlé Boycott. The American Historical Review. 121, 4 (Oct. 2016), 1196–1224. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/ahr/121.4.1196.
[165]
Saunders, J. 2019. Emotions, Social Practices and the Changing Composition of Class, Race and Gender in the National Health Service, 1970–79: ‘Lively Discussion Ensued’. History Workshop Journal. 88, (Oct. 2019), 204–228. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/hwj/dbz023.
[166]
Schaffer, G. 2010. Fighting Racism: Black Soldiers and Workers in Britain during the Second World War. Immigrants & Minorities. 28, 2–3 (Jul. 2010), 246–265. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/02619288.2010.484250.
[167]
Schaffer, G. and Nasar, S. 2018. The white essential subject: race, ethnicity, and the Irish in post-war Britain. Contemporary British History. 32, 2 (Apr. 2018), 209–230. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2018.1455031.
[168]
Scull, M.M. 2019. Catholic Church and the Northern Ireland Troubles, 1968-1998. Oxford University Press, USA.
[169]
Seldon, A. and Hickson, K. 2004. New Labour, old Labour: the Wilson and Callaghan governments, 1974-79. Routledge.
[170]
Shore, H. 2011. Criminality and Englishness in the Aftermath: The Racecourse Wars of the 1920s. Twentieth Century British History. 22, 4 (Dec. 2011), 474–497. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwr011.
[171]
Silies, E.-M. 2015. Taking the Pill after the ‘sexual revolution’: female contraceptive decisions in England and West Germany in the 1970s. European Review of History: Revue européenne d’histoire. 22, 1 (Jan. 2015), 41–59. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13507486.2014.983431.
[172]
Silke, A. 2016. Ferocious Times: The IRA, the RIC, and Britain’s Failure in 1919–1921. Terrorism and Political Violence. 28, 3 (May 2016), 417–434. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09546553.2016.1155929.
[173]
Simpson, J.M. 2019. Empire, migration and the NHS. Migrant architects of the NHS: South Asian doctors and the reinvention of British general practice (1940s-1980s). Manchester University Press.
[174]
Simpson, J.M. et al. 2010. Writing migrants back into NHS history: addressing a ‘collective amnesia’ and its policy implications. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. 103, 10 (Oct. 2010), 392–396. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1258/jrsm.2010.100222.
[175]
Sloman, P. 2011. Rethinking a progressive moment: the Liberal and Labour parties in the 1945 general election. Historical Research. 84, 226 (Nov. 2011), 722–744. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2281.2010.00560.x.
[176]
Smith, L.C. 2019. Marketing modernity: Business and family in British Rail’s "Age of the Train” campaign, 1979–84. The Journal of Transport History. 40, 3 (Dec. 2019), 363–394. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1177/0022526619848549.
[177]
Steber, M. 2018. Fundamentals at stake: the Conservatives, industrial relations and the rhetorical framing of the miners’ strike in 1984/1985. Contemporary British History. 32, 1 (Jan. 2018), 60–77. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2017.1408536.
[178]
Strimpel, Z. 2017. In Solitary Pursuit: Singles, Sex War and the Search for Love, 1977–1983. Cultural and Social History. 14, 5 (Oct. 2017), 691–715. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2017.1375702.
[179]
Stuart Hall 1999. From Scarman to Stephen Lawrence. History Workshop Journal. 48 (1999).
[180]
Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, F. and Thomlinson, N. 2018. National Women Against Pit Closures: gender, trade unionism and community activism in the miners’ strike, 1984–5. Contemporary British History. 32, 1 (Jan. 2018), 78–100. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2017.1408540.
[181]
Szreter, S. and Fisher, K. 2010. Married love: caring and sharing. Sex before the sexual revolution: intimate life in England 1918-1963. Cambridge University Press. 196–226.
[182]
Szreter, S. and Fisher, K. 2010. "We weren’t the sort that wanted intimacy every night”: Birth control and abstinence in England, c.1930–60. The History of the Family. 15, 2 (Jun. 2010), 139–160. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hisfam.2009.10.001.
[183]
Thackeray, D. 20191031. An Age of Promises: British Election Manifestos and Addresses 1900–97. Twentieth Century British History. (20191031).
[184]
Thane, P. 1996. Foundations of the welfare state. Longman.
[185]
Thane, P. and Filby, L. 2010. Unequal Britain: equalities in Britain since 1945. Continuum.
[186]
The birth of the British Nation? ‘Alone’, ‘People’s War’ | St Edmund Hall: https://www.seh.ox.ac.uk/news/the-birth-of-the-british-nation-alone-peoples-war-and-the-mythical-myths-of-1940.
[187]
The Live Aid legacy: the developing world through British eyes: https://www.eldis.org/document/A18982.
[188]
Thomas, J. Labour, the Tabloids and the 1992 General Election. CONTEMPORARY BRITISH HISTORY. 12, 2.
[189]
Thompson, A.S. 2012. Britain’s experience of empire in the twentieth century. Oxford University Press.
[190]
Thorpe, A. 2015. A history of the British Labour Party. Palgrave Macmillan.
[191]
Timmins, N. 2001. The five giants: a biography of the welfare state. HarperCollins.
[192]
Tinkler, P. et al. 2017. Revisioning the History of Girls and Women in Britain in the Long 1950s. Women’s History Review. 26, 1 (Jan. 2017), 1–8. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2015.1123020.
[193]
Tiratsoo, N. 2000. The reconstruction of blitzed British cities, 1945–55: Myths and reality. Contemporary British History. 14, 1 (Mar. 2000), 27–44. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619460008581570.
[194]
Turner, A.W. 2013. Crisis? What crisis?: Britain in the 1970s. Aurum.
[195]
Vernon, J. 2014. Distant strangers: how Britain became modern. University of California Press.
[196]
Vernon, J. 2017. Modern Britain: 1750 to the present. Cambridge University Press.
[197]
"We are the lions, Mr. Manager”: Revisiting the Great Grunwick Strike | Ceasefire Magazine: 2016. https://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/we-lions-mr-manager-revisiting-great-grunwick-strike/.
[198]
Webster, W. 2007. Englishness and Empire 1939-1965. Oxford University Press.
[199]
Webster, W. 2013. ‘Fit to Fight, Fit to Mix’: sexual patriotism in Second World War Britain. Women’s History Review. 22, 4 (Aug. 2013), 607–624. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2012.751770.
[200]
Westlake, M. 2001. Kinnock: the biography. Little, Brown.
[201]
Wills, C. 2017. Digs and Lodging Houses: Literature, Ruins, and Survival in Postwar Britain. Éire-Ireland. 52, 3–4 (2017), 57–74. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1353/eir.2017.0022.
[202]
Wilson, A. Finding a voice: Asian women in Britain. Virago.
[203]
Winkler, H.R. 1960. Some Recent Writings on Twentieth-Century Britain. The Journal of Modern History. 32, 1 (Mar. 1960), 32–47. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/238375.
[204]
WIVEL, A. 1998. Abortion Policy and Politics on the Lane Committee of Enquiry, 1971-1974. Social History of Medicine. 11, 1 (Apr. 1998), 109–135. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/11.1.109.
[205]
Wood, J.C. 2010. ‘The Third Degree’: Press Reporting, Crime Fiction and Police Powers in 1920s Britain. Twentieth Century British History. 21, 4 (Dec. 2010), 464–485. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwq032.
[206]
Yemm, R. 2019. Immigration, race and local media: Smethwick and the 1964 general election. Contemporary British History. 33, 1 (Jan. 2019), 98–122. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13619462.2018.1535973.
[207]
2009. BBC News Michael Buerk Report on Koram (1984).
[208]
2018. Britain and decolonization in an Era of Global Change. The Oxford Handbook of the Ends of Empire. Oxford University Press.
[209]
British Dimensions: ‘Four Nations History’. DOI:https://doi.org/doi-org.bris.idm.oclc.org/10.1093/hwj/40.1.1-s.
[210]
2018. ‘Duties In Aid of the Civil Power’: The Deployment of the Army to Glasgow, ... Journal of Scottish Historical Studies. (2018).
[211]
2014. (Feed The World) Do they Know It’s Christmas Time (Band Aid 1984).
[212]
2017. Four nations approaches to modern ‘British history’: a (dis)united kingdom? Palgrave Macmillan.
[213]
2013. Let’s save Africa! (Radi-Aid Parody, 2013).
[214]
2018. Northern Ireland: The War that came in from the Cold. Irish Studies in International Affairs. (2018). DOI:https://doi.org/10.3318/irisstudinteaffa.2018.0073.
[215]
2003. Researching The Troubles. Transworld Publishers Ltd.
[216]
The Forgotten Strike: Equality, Gender, and Class in the Trico Equal Pay Strike. Labour History Review. 81, 2, 141–169.