Elections in Iran and Its Foreign Policy
- UKLSE-AS1OX010040010017
- Folder
- 2013
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Aniseh Bassiri Tabrizi
Publication date: July 2013
Elections in Iran and Its Foreign Policy
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Aniseh Bassiri Tabrizi
Publication date: July 2013
Elizabeth Greenland interviewed by Florence Weston
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Elizabeth.
Elizabeth talks emotionally about the strength women found in each other and how it felt to have that awakening to your own power. She talks about chanting and singing around the perimeter fence with a group of women, a visit from the Archbishop of Canterbury, and how proud she is of the success of Greenham to the peace movement.
Elizabeth was interviewed by Florence Weston in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Elizabeth Woodcraft interviewed by Rebecca Mordan
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Elizabeth.
Liz went to Greenham with her mum and for Embrace the Base. After being impressed by the women dancing on the silos on New Year's Eve, she represented them at their hearings at Newbury Magistrates Court, remembering the women singing all their answers in court and consequently being sent to the cells. She talks about the impact Greenham Women had on the law and how some women went to Greenham to escape sexual abuse and violence, partly leading to her becoming involved in Women's Aid. She describes Greenham as a wonderful place to be with women being supportive and sisterly.
Liz was interviewed by Rebecca Mordan in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Elspeth Owen, Julia Ball and Gerd Browne interviewed by June Hughes
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and photographs of Elspeth, Julia and Gerd.
Elspeth is interviewed with her close friends Julia Bell and Gerd Browne. They met through a Cambridge peace group and were on one of the first walks from Wales. They produced a book, 1983/4, an anthology of women's writing, 'MY COUNTRIES - THE WHOLE WORLD FROM SAPPHO TO GREENHAM', now out of print. They felt empowered by the Greenham experience, Elspeth going on to be a successful potter, Julia, already an artist, inspired to continue, and Gerd opening her own bookshop.
They were interviewed by June Hughes in Cambridge in 2019.
They were photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Ending the Niger Delta's Oil Wars: Will the Crimilegal Settlement Hold?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Markus Schultze-Kraft
Publication date: 06 September 2018
Endless War? Fallujah Revisited
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 23 June 2016
Engendering Climate Change-Induced Migration
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Martina Angela Caretta
Publication date: 18 December 2017
Environment and Development: The Underlying Global Issues
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: February 2007
Environmental Conservation as a Tool for Post-War Recovery
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Richard Milburn
Publication date: 20 May 2016
Escaping the Subsidy Trap: Why Arms Exports are bad for Britain
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group and BASIC
Publication date: September 2004
Estelle Poingdestre and Jane Staffieri interviewed by Tricia Grace-Norton
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Estelle.
'A Blot on the Landscape'
Estelle and Jane talk about the hostile way in which they were represented in the Press. 'Dirty, rebellious, anarchists, women transgressing the normal female role when they should be at home cooking and looking after their families.' They also reflect on the hostility that the men, left at home, received from other men about letting their wives go off.
Jane tells the story of the secret, well-rehearsed and surprise action in which she and Estelle's mother, Mary, took part. With the women working in twos, Jane stood on Mary's shoulders, reaching up with bolt cutters to slice through the main holding points which caused a huge area of the fence to fall down, taking the soldiers inside by surprise. On being arrested, along with others, she refused to pay the fine of 30 pounds and talks about her experience of serving one week in Holloway Prison.
They both talk about the importance of ensuring that future generations learn of Greenham and that it is possible to make a difference in the world and change Government Policy, if you choose to do so. They said that when the Women of Greenham came together in peaceful and powerful collaboration, they achieved their goal which was to close down the Base to protect the world's children and future generations from the damage of cruise missiles. Together we changed the World.
Estelle and Jane were interviewed by Tricia Grace-Norton in March 2021.
Estelle provided her photograph.
EU Partnership for Peace - Israeli Track
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Ofer Zalzberg
Publication date: April 2009
European Military Integration: Implications for the UK
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oliver Scanlan and Richard Reeve
Publication date: November 2017
European Military Presence in the Sahel: Searching for Purpose
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Delina Goxho, Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen and Abigail Watson
Publication date: February 2020
Europe's Borders, Refugees and the Islamic-State
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Mahmood Monshipouri
Publication date: 30 September 2016
Europe's Extremists: An Interview with Nafees Hamid
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: 14 August 2018
Evelyn Parker interviewed by Leslie Lyle
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Evelyn's involvement in Greenham started in 1979 when Newbury was informed that missiles would be sited there, and she took an interest through the local Labour Party. She is a Quaker, and speaks of how she distanced herself from confrontation, although she was very involved on moral and ethical grounds. In 1982 Evelyn took part in the Embrace the Base action and goes on to describe RAGE (Ratepayers Against Greenham Encampment) which took unpleasant action against the women such as tearing down the camps and using maggots and blood, resulting in many locals opposing their treatment. She shares her memories of Aldermaston, zapping, changes in the law, and the influence her environmental campaigning has had on her children. Her memories of Cruise Watch include how one woman put a potato down the vertical exhaust of one of the military vehicles, managing to stop the whole convoy!
Evelyn was interviewed by Leslie Lyle in September 2020.
Event Podcast: Fusion Doctrine in Five Steps: Lessons Learned From Remote Warfare in Africa
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: November 2019
Event Podcast: Is Remote Warfare Working?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: September 2018
Event Report: Remote Warfare - Theory, Practice and Ethics
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Esther Kersley
Publication date: March 2015
Part of Oxford Research Group
Between 2007 and 2014 ORG's Every Casualty Programme (formerly known as the Recording Casualties of Armed Conflict programme), sought to coordinate and systematise global efforts to enhance the technical, legal and institutional capacity, as well as the political will, for every single casualty of armed conflict throughout the world to be recorded, civilian as well as combatant. Since October 2014, Every Casualty Worldwide has been operating as an independent NGO - please visit www.everycasualty.org for more information.
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Friedman, Ezra
Graduation Day December 21, 2019. MSc International Relations. A group of close friends from a diverse background and nationalities.
Fading Rainbows: Children's Responses to COVID-19
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Deborah Challis
Date: January-April 2021
These posters are based on the responses to a survey of children at a Primary School as part of the LSE Festival 2021. The children were asked for their experiences and feelings around COVID-19 and related restrictions and then turned into infographics by artist Becci Kenning.
Falling Short of Security in Somalia
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Emily Knowles
Publication date: January 2018
Farah London, Independent: manifesto
Part of Election Ephemera Collection
Date Accessed: 13 Apr 2021
Significant context URL: https://votefarah.london/
Internet Archive URL: https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://votefarah.london/
Fatal Attraction: The Lure of Islamic State
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Greg Simons
Publication date: 16 September 2016
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Husni, Fathima Mohamed
Description not submitted by sender
Fear-Filled Apocalypses: The Far-Right's Use of Conspiracy Theories
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Andrew Wilson
Publication date: 26 March 2019