531 Commission
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
5^ 531 COMMISSION FULBRIGHT-ROBERTSON VISFTING PROFESSORSHIP IN BRITISH HISTORY 1998/99 Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/tcbh/issue/8/3 by guest on 27 September 2021 The Fulbnght Commission is seeking a British historian for a Visiting Professorship at Westminster College (Missoun), a small, selective liberal arts college in Amenca's midwest from August 1998 to June 1999 The Professor will be assigned to the Department of History and will be expected to teach topics of the British History,to undertake public speaking and to participate in academic conferences in the US and Canada The modest teaching load will allow time for personal researchin the Churchill Memorial Library and neighbouring presidential libraries Consult <http //www westmmster-mo edu> for further details Eligibility Applicants must be British citizens, normally resident in the UK, hold a PhD and have at least one year's experience of lecturing to undergraduate students A knowledge of the American higher education system is expected, experience in American higher education is preferred Candidates will also be required to give lectures to non-academic audiences within the community.appropnate expenence is desirable Grant Up to $40,000 plus economy round trip travel for the grantee and up to 4 dependants and a budget for internal travel in the USA related to lectures and attendance at conferences Application forms are available on the Commission's Website <http //www fulbright co uk> or on receipt of an A4 SAE (39p) from the Programme Director, Fulbnght Commission, 62 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LS Tel 0171 4046880 Closing date for receipt of applications is 30 January 1998 Oxford University Press English Feminism, 1780-1980 BARBARA CAINE Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/tcbh/issue/8/3 by guest on 27 September 2021 0-19-820686-0, 354 pp, July 1997, £45.00 0-19-820434-5, paperback. £14.99 NEW IN PAPERBACK War and Law since 1945 William Beveridge GEOFFREY BEST A Biography 'a magnificent exposition of the modern Revised Edition pursuit of legal restraint on warfare' JOSE HARRIS London Review of Books This new edition of Jose Harris's • Joint winner of the triennial Paul biography of William Beveridge draws Reuter Prize for international upon extensive new archive material humanitarian law awarded by the about his private and public career. International Committee of the Red Cross 0-19-820685-2, 522 pp, 4 pp plates, paperback, Clarendon Press, September 1997, £18.99 0-19-820699-2, 450 pp, paperback, Clarendon Press, July 1997, £15.99 Free Trade and Liberal Science at Oxford, England, 1846-1946 1914-1939 ANTHONY HOWE Transforming an Arts University This is the first book to explain why free trade was so important, and to examine JACK MORRELL the reasons for its longevity. Anthony Between the wars science unexpectedly Howe covers a crucial century in free increased in prominence at Oxford so that trade history, from the Repeal of the Corn by 1939 the University was in a position Laws in 1846, through the turbulent years to produce some of the best boffins of the of the Tariff Reform debate, to the end of Second World War. In this pioneering the Second World War. study Jack Morrell examines how the 0-19-820146-X, 344 pp, December 1997. £45.00 study of science developed until it was on a par with traditional Oxford fields of excellence. He explains how innovators in Available through good bookshops. the sciences overcame academic inertia For more information, contact Julia Hall, to build a world-class reputation for Academic Marketing, Oxford University Press, scientific studies. Great Clarendon Street, Oxford 0X2 6DP S+44 (0)1865 556767 0-19-820657-7, 491 pp, 8 halftones, 6 maps, 24-hour credit card hotline Clarendon Press, December 1997, £55.00 8+44(0)1536 454534 http://wwwl.oup.co.uk Oxford University Press The Politics of the British Army HEW STRACHAN Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/tcbh/issue/8/3 by guest on 27 September 2021 7u-4, pp, Hugira iss/. fc.jy.uu British Policy and the The Politics of Planning Weimar Republic, 1918-1919 The Debate on Economic Planning DOUGLAS NEWTON in Britain in the 1930s This book explores the making of British DANIEL RITSCHEL policy toward Germany in the aftermath of The concept of 'economic planning' was a its defeat in the Great War. Douglas central theme of the popular economic Newton shows how British pressures on policy debate in the 1930s. Dr Ritschel Germany during the formative months of traces the many interpretations of the new republic were crucial in planning, and examines the process of debilitating the German Revolution and the idealogical construction and dissemination faltering Weimar democracy. of the new economic ideas. 0-19-820314-4, 494 pp. Clarendon Press, Oxford Historical Monographs July 1997, £50.00 0-19-820647-X, 378 pp, Clarendon Press, Working-Class Housing in July 1997, £45.00 England between the Wars The Problem of Mental The Becontree Estate Deficiency ANDRZEJ OLECHNOWICZ Eugenics and Social Policy in Using interviews with surviving tenants Britain, c.1870-1959 from the inter-year period, Dr Olechnowicz MATHEW THOMSON discusses the early years of the Becontree estate, looking in detail at the philosophy This is the first full study of the great alarm behind its construction and management, about 'mental defectives' in Britain and showing how it eventually came to be between 1870 and 1959, and the resulting denigrated as a social concentration camp. policies of segregation, community care, Oxford Historical Monographs and sexual sterilization. Oxford Historical Monographs 0-19-820650-X. 286 pp, 1 black and white plate, maps, tables. Clarendon Press, January 1997, 0-19-820692-5, 340 pp, December 1997, £45.00 £45.00 Available through good bookshops. For more information, contact Julia Hall, Academic Marketing, Oxford University Press, Great Clarendon Street, Oxford 0X2 6DP B+44 (0)1865 556767 24-hour credit card hotline 8+44 (0)1536 454534 http://www1.oup.co.uk For information on advertising in this journal please contact: Helen Pearson Oxfords Jourrrals Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/tcbh/issue/8/3 by guest on 27 September 2021 Advertising P.O. Box 347 Abingdon SO 0X14 5XX, UK il tel/fax: +44 (0) 1235 201904 e-mail: [email protected] Instructions to Authors 1. Submission of typescripts. Three copies of each typescript should be sent to the Editors, together with the originals and two photocopies of any statistical tables and maps. Only the originals of statistical tables and maps will be returned to authors if a paper is not accepted for publication. The Editors will notify authors as soon as possible about the acceptability of a paper, but will not enter into correspondence about papers considered unsuitable for publica- tion. Neither the Editors nor the publisher accept reponsibility for the views of authors expressed in their contribution. Authors may not submit to Twentieth Centtny British History a typescript that is under consideration elsewhere. Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/tcbh/issue/8/3 by guest on 27 September 2021 Articles should be between 5,000 and 10,000 words in length. 2. Typescript layout. All material should be A4 paper, in double-spaced typing, and on one side of the page only. Ample margins should be left. Each page of the typescript should be numbered. In Notes and Reviews, all material should be incor- porated into the text, there should be no footnotes. In articles, footnotes should be numbered consecutively and placed together in double-spaced typing on a separate page or pages at the end. They will be printed at the foot of the relevant page. In Notes and Reviews, the author's name should appear at the end on the right-hand side, with his/her institution on the left. In articles, the author's name and institution should appear at the beginning, immediately under the title. Quotation marks should be single; double quotation marks should be used only to indicate one quotation within another. A style sheet may be obtained on request from the Editors. 3. References. These should be kept to the minimum. Books are italicized (under- ined in typescript), e.g. Kenneth O. Morgan, labour tn Power 1945-1951 (Oxford, 1984). In second and subsequent references to a work, an abbreviated title should be adopted, e.g., Morgan, Labour, p. 72. A reference to an article in a periodical should include (after the author's name and the title of the article and the title of the journal) the volume numbeT (arabic), date in brackets, and relevant page numbers, e.g., David Fitzpatrick, 'Divorce and Separation in Modern Irish History', Past and Present, 114 {19S7), 172-96. 4. Copyright/offprints. It is a condition of publication in the journal that authors assign copyright to Oxford University Press. This ensures that requests from third parties to reproduce articles are handled efficiently and consistently and will also allow the article to be as widely disseminated as possible. In assigning copyright, authors may use their own material in otheT publications provided that the journal is acknowledged as the original place of publication, and Oxford University Press is notified in writing and in advance. In consideration of this provision, the publisher will supply the author with 25 offprints of his/her paper. It is the author's respon- sibility to obtain permission to quote material from copyright sources. 5. Alterations to articles. To avoid delays in the production of the journal, con- tributors will be asked to return their proofs promptly. Any amendments or correc- tions should be sent to the Editors (or Review Editor) as soon as possible after an author receives notification of acceptance for publication of his/her article.