All Stories

  1. Book Reviews
  2. ARGUING ABOUT INTERVENTION: A COMPARISON OF BRITISH AND FRENCH RHETORIC SURROUNDING THE 1882 AND 1956 INVASIONS OF EGYPT
  3. Keynes, Liberalism, and ‘The Emancipation of the Mind’
  4. Portrait of a Party: The Conservative Party in Britain 1918–1945
  5. The Rhetorical Culture of the House of Commons after 1918
  6. Thomas C. Mills, Post-war Planning on the Periphery: Anglo-American Economic Diplomacy in South America, 1939–1945 (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2012, £70.00). Pp. x+283. isbn978 0 7486 4388 2.
  7. The Aftermath of Suffrage
  8. From ‘Consensus’ to ‘Common Ground’: The Rhetoric of the Postwar Settlement and its Collapse
  9. 'Perfectly Parliamentary'? The Labour Party and the House of Commons in the Inter-war Years
  10. The International Trade Organization
  11. Britain's War Machine: Weapons, Resources and Experts in the Second World War – By David Edgerton
  12. British Liberal Internationalism, 1880–1930: Making Progress? – By Casper Sylvest
  13. The Rhetorical Premiership: A New Perspective on Prime Ministerial Power Since 1945
  14. Catherine R. Schenk . The Decline of Sterling: Managing the Retreat of an International Currency, 1945–1992 . New York: Cambridge University Press. 2010. Pp. xv, 437. $99.00.
  15. Understanding the British Empire – By Ronald Hyam
  16. History on British Television: Constructing Nation, Nationality and Collective Memory – By Robert Dillon
  17. Redefining British politics: culture, consumerism and participation, 1954–70 – By Lawrence Black
  18. ‘Phrases Make History Here’: Churchill, Ireland and the Rhetoric of Empire
  19. ‘The riddle of the frontier’: Winston Churchill, the Malakand Field Force and the rhetoric of imperial expansion
  20. No Enchanted Palace: The End of Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations – By Mark Mazower
  21. Winston Churchill's “Crazy Broadcast”: Party, Nation, and the 1945 Gestapo Speech
  22. One World, Two Cultures? Alfred Zimmern, Julian Huxley and the Ideological Origins of UNESCO
  23. A History of the Northern Ireland Labour Party: Democratic Socialism and Sectarianism - By Aaron Edwards
  24. Living the Great Illusion: Sir Norman Angell, 1872–1967 – By Martin Ceadel
  25. Wilhelmine Germany and Edwardian Britain: Essays on Cultural Affinity – Edited by Dominik Geppert and Robert Gerwarth
  26. The Good Fight: Battle of Britain Propaganda and the Few – By Garry Campion
  27. Liberals in Schism: A History of the National Liberal Party – By David Dutton
  28. Our Longest Days: A People's History of the Second World War ‐ Edited by Sandra Koa Wing
  29. The Broadening of Economic History
  30. The Churchill Syndrome: Reputational Entrepreneurship and the Rhetoric of Foreign Policy since 1945
  31. H.G. Wells and the New Liberalism
  32. The Labour party and Keynes
  33. The UN and Global Political Economy: Trade, Finance, and Development by John Toye and Richard Toye
  34. How the UN moved from full employment to economic development
  35. After the Victorians: The Decline of Britain in the World
  36. From Multilateralism to Modernisation: US Strategy on Trade, Finance and Development in the United Nations, 1945–63
  37. From New Era to Neo-liberalism: US Strategy on Trade, Finance and Development in the United Nations, 1964–82
  38. THE STUDY OF POLITICS AS A VOCATION
  39. ‘The Smallest Party in History’? New Labour in Historical Perspective
  40. The Origins and Interpretation of the Prebisch-Singer Thesis
  41. Developing Multilateralism: The Havana Charter and the Fight for the International Trade Organization, 1947–1948
  42. ‘The Gentleman in Whitehall’ Reconsidered: The Evolution of Douglas Jay's Views on Economic Planning and Consumer Choice, 1937-47
  43. The Labour Party and Taxation: Party Identity and Political Purpose in Twentieth-Century Britain
  44. Gosplanners versus Thermostatters: Whitehall planning debates and their political consequences, 1945–49
  45. THE LABOUR PARTY'S EXTERNAL ECONOMIC POLICY IN THE 1940s
  46. Occupational dream, relation to parents and depression in the early adult transition
  47. Words of Change
  48. The House of Commons in the Aftermath of Suffrage
  49. Introduction
  50. Trade and Conflict in the Rhetoric of Winston Churchill
  51. ‘The Great Educator of Unlikely People’: H. G. Wells and the Origins of the Welfare State