results
-
Global and European Trade Union Federations
A Handbook and Analysis of Transnational Trade Union Organizations and Policies- Translated by Pete Burgess©2011 Monographs -
In Search of Canine Justice
Law and Practice in the United States and European Union©2019 Monographs -
The New Pension Mix in Europe
Recent Reforms, Their Distributional Effects and Political Dynamics©2017 Edited Collection -
The Polyphony of Utopia
Critical Negativities Across Cultures from Bellamy and Bogdanov to Yefremov, Piercy and Butler©2024 Monographs -
Meanings of Jazz in State Socialism
©2016 Edited Collection -
Neoliberalism and After?
Education, Social Policy, and the Crisis of Western Capitalism©2011 Textbook -
The Quest for an African Economic Community
Regional Integration and its Role in Achieving African Unity – The Case of SADC©2011 Thesis -
Insights into Specialized Translation
©2006 Edited Collection -
British Identities since 1707
ISSN: 1664-0284
The historiography of British identities has flourished since the mid-1970s, spurred on by increasing national consciousness in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and since 1997 by devolution. Historians and other academics have become increasingly aware that identities in the British Isles have been fluid and that interactions between the different parts of the British Isles have been central to historical developments since, and indeed before, the Act of Union between England and Scotland in 1707. This series seeks to encourage exploration of identities of place in the British Isles since the early eighteenth century, including intersections between competing and complementary identities such as region and nation. The series also advances discussion of other identities such as class, gender, religion, politics, ethnicity and culture when these are geographically located and positioned. While the series is historical, it welcomes cross- and interdisciplinary approaches to the study of British identities. British Identities since 1707 examines the unity and diversity of the British Isles, developing consideration of the multiplicity of negotiations that have taken place in such a multinational and multi-ethnic group of Islands. lt will include discussions of nationalism(s), of Britishness, Englishness, Scattishness, Welshness and Irishness, as well as 'regional' identities including, for example, those associated with Cornwall, the Gäidhealtachd region in Scotland and Gaeltacht areas in Ireland. The series will encompass discussions of relations with continental Europe and the United States, with ethnic and immigrant identities and with other forms of identity associated with the British Isles as place. The editors are interested in publishing books relating to the wider British world, including current and former parts of the British Empire and the Commonwealth, and places such as Gibraltar and the Falkland Islands and the smaller islands of the British archipelago. British Identities since 1707 reinforces the consideration of history, culture and politics as richly diverse across and within the borders of the British Isles.
10 publications