Deterring Atrocities: Assessing The ICC on Justice Day
- UKLSE-AS1OX010070010143
- Folder
- 2017
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Hyeran Jo and Beth Simmons
Publication date: 17 July 2017
Deterring Atrocities: Assessing The ICC on Justice Day
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Hyeran Jo and Beth Simmons
Publication date: 17 July 2017
Development for Peace: The Decline of Naxalite Violence in India
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Gaurav Khanna and Laura Zimmerman
Publication date: 28 September 2017
Development, Conservation and Peace in Post-Conflict Colombia
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Pablo Jose Negret and Cristina Gómez Garcia-Reyes
Publication date: 31 October 2017
Devils in the Detail: Implementing Mali's New Peace Accord
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Richard Reeve
Publication date: March 2015
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Washishth, Dhruv
Speaking at the Lord Beveridge festival in 2017 at the NAB.
Di McDonald interviewed by Emma Gliddon
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
An interview with veteran campaigner Di Macdonald who was at Greenham from the early days and then went on to be a crucial link to Cruise watch in the South East and an inspiration to many of us. Her van was an iconic part of the chase around the countryside after cruise missiles on the move. At the time of the interview, Di continues to campaign against nuclear weapons.
Di was interviewed by Emma Gliddon on 17th March 2021.
Diana Derioz 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.
3 Generations at Greenham, her mother Ursula, daughter Diana and granddaughter, Fenella. Diana has been a pacifist all her life and set up the Totnes Women for Peace. In 1982 she went to the first Greenham demonstration of women's hands around the fence. She had been on many mixed demonstrations which were often violent and thought that women could do it differently.
She lived at Greenham part-time for nearly 3 years. She took part in all of the actions including: The Black Cardigan Demonstration, Easter, Dragon Day Bunny Party. She reads a very interesting letter she sent to her children about the Easter Action she attended with her 3 years old daughter in April 1983. Her mother attended all the demonstrations and was arrested (aged 63) for dancing on the base along with 80 other women and spent 3 weeks in Holloway as examples. She has a press cutting about her mother 'Gran's Strip Ordeal' as Ursula refused a strip search. Diana was arrested and insisted at being tried in her local court supported by many Greenham women.
She speaks very eloquently about the creative conversations with women from around the world (including the miners' wives) sitting around the fire and trying to escape the smoke. She talked about how the women put 'energy' into the vehicles breaking down when they were being removed or making them invisible when trying to hide. 'We really believed in those spells' as they always seemed to work.
Diana was interviewed by Tricia Norton in 2019.
Diane Brace interview: recording (part 1-2)
Part of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, British Section (WILPF)
Did Operation Unified Protector Strengthen R2P?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Benedetta Berti
Publication date: 14 April 2016
Director of the Library shelving books
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Nicola Scally
Date: 19 March 2020
Location: LSE Library
A picture of me shelving just before lockdown one. It was taken by Clive Wilson on 19 March 2020.
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Susan Breau, Marie Aronsson and Rachel Joyce
Publication date: June 2011
Do Natural Disaster Prolong Civil Conflict?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Joshua Eastin
Publication date: 06 November 2017
Does Climate Change Cause Conflicts in the Sahel?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Tor A. Benjaminsen
Publication date: 19 July 2016
Does the UK need a 'War Powers Act'?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Andrew Noakes
Publication date: September 2016
Dr Janet Smith interviewed by Sarah Learmonth
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 Janet.
Remarkably Janet hand-wrote her entire PhD thesis at Greenham during a time when there were daily evictions. She remembers it being anarchic but not chaotic, a community of women that in her words, 'Had your back'. Janet took part in many small and large actions and particularly remembers one blockade where the seated women were rushed by mounted police.
Janet was interviewed by Sarah Learmouth in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: October 2007
Drone Proliferation: An Interview With Ulrike Franke
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: 04 January 2019
Drone Strikes and Never-Ending Wars
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Mahmood Monshipouri and William V. Dunlap
Publication date: 03 October 2016
Drones in the war on Drugs: From Surveillance to Smuggling
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Alejandro Sanchez
Publication date: February 2016
Drugs and Drones: The Crime Empire Strikes Back
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Vanda Felbab-Brown
Publication date: February 2016
East of Suez, West from Helmand: British Expeditionary Force and the Next SDSR
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Richard Reeve
Publication date: December 2014
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 4 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