Climate Change Security and Indigenous Peoples Inuit in Northern Canada
- UKLSE-AS1OX010070010087
- Folder
- 2016
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Wilfrid Greaves
Publication date: 09 December 2016
Climate Change Security and Indigenous Peoples Inuit in Northern Canada
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Wilfrid Greaves
Publication date: 09 December 2016
Climate Change: Prospects for Effective Future Action
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: May 2016
Climate Change: Drivers of Insecurity and the Global South
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Hannah Brock
Publication date: July 2012
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: September 2010
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Publication date: September 2010
Climate Change and Peace Operations
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Diehl
Publication date: 18 January 2019
Climate - Change - Migration - Conflict. What's the Connection?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Christiane Fröhlich
Publication date: 10 August 2016
Clayre Gribben 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 and a photograph of Clayre.
Clayre spent a summer in the mid 1980s at Greenham with a group of friends. She shared baths, broke into the base, cut through wire, sang, did workshops, learned crafts, got arrested, and was part of Cruise Watch. She remembers a fantastic community. 'We have to stop reinventing causes every time. We must try to learn from each other and not think we are doing things for the first time. There is this wave that just grows and grows and keeps growing a we musn't let it die, otherwise we have to start again.'
Clayre was interviewed by Leslie Lyle in London in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Clare Pattinson and Polly High 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 and a photograph of Clare and Polly.
Clare's parents were Catholic and part of the Pax Christi peace movement. Polly's parents were a part of CND and she joined them from a young age on demonstrations. Neither stayed at Greenham but both made frequent day visits with supplies and fresh vegetables.
The only occasion that Clare stayed was one February night when she woke in a bender with 4 inches of snow on her feet - 'Iave never been so cold in my life'. Both discuss the role of men in helping at Greenham a visiting the women with children, bringing supplies, helping with Cruise Watch. Clare, also involved in Cruise Watch, describes driving at night to watch the missile convoys: 'They were terrifying, it was like being in a horror movie.'
Polly and Clare were interviewed by Leslie Lyle in Kent in 2019.
They were photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Clapham Women's Social and Political Union, Second Annual Report, 1913
Corporate author: Clapham Women's Social and Political Union
Note: For citation purposes check full catalogue reference indicated in the Finding Aids field.
Circles of Rage: An Interview with Julia Ebner
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: 24 November 2017
Chronology of Iran's Nuclear Programme, 1957-2007
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Farhang Jahanpour
Publication date: July 2007
China's UN Peacekeeping in Mali: Strategies and Risks
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Marc Lanteigne
Publication date: 13 May 2019
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Earl Conteh-Morgan
Publication date: 19 April 2017
China and the Responsibility to Protect
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Andrew Garwood-Gowers
Publication date: 31 May 2016
Children and Conflict: An Interview with Katrina Lee-Koo
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: 25 October 2019
Chilcot Tells Us What We Already Knew: How Do We Implement It?
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Gabriele Rifkind
Publication date: July 2017
Chilcot: All Peaceful Options Were Not Exhausted
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Gabrielle Rifkind and Scilla Elworthy
Publication date: July 2016
Change in Pakistan and Britain
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: June 2007
Change - From Iraq Through to Pakistan
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: December 2007
Chances for Peace in the Third Decade
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 26 November 2020
Chances for Peace in the Second Decade
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: December 2012
Challenging UK's Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia in the Courts
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Andrew Smith and Vyara Gylsen
Publication date: 02 August 2016
Challenges to Peacebuilding in LIbya
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Ibrahim Natil
Publication date: 06 October 2017
Challenges Facing Women in Peacekeeping
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Lindy Heinecken
Publication date: 05 May 2016
Celia Chasey interviewed by Kitty Gurnos Davies
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Celia helped set-up and run Hayford Peace Camp a a sister camp to Greenham Common that allowed both men and women to protest together. She visited Greenham for Embrace the Base and describes how they decorated the wire fence. She describes protest activities including cruise watch at night in cars along the M4 and monitoring the transport of goods in and out of the camp. Celia is a wonderful artist and made many of the banners for Hayford and discusses the song and dance that surrounded the peace movement. With her husband, Celia hosted many members of the Hayford Peace Camp in her house and relates the sacrifices and impact of protesting on family life. In a particularly touching moment, Celia reads out a poem that her daughter had written aged 16. Much of the interview is structured around looking at photographs and material Celia had collected relating to the peace camps.
Celia was interviewed by Kitty Gurnos Davies in 2019.
Catherine Leyow interviewed by Nicky Arikoglu
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 Catherine.
A member of CND, Catherine first visited Greenham for Embrace the Base in December 1982 and continued to visit over the years, finally living permanently at Yellow Gate from June 1988 to May 1989. She participated in many NVDAs, was arrested multiple times, and served two prison sentences in Holloway.
Catherine was interviewed by Nicky Arikoglu in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Cas Heron 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.
Intrigued by the idea of a peaceful women only revolution, Cas decided to spend an afternoon at Yellow Gate and eventually lived at Blue Gate for two and a half years. She says Greenham was a transformative part of her life which allowed her to step out of one life into another.
She talks about the challenge of balancing home and Greenham visits and the domestic conflict this caused. Her daughter at the age of ten visited the camp and loved it, especially being chased by a helicopter.
Cas tells the story of the women at Blue Gate setting a record for how many arrests could be made until 12 midnight on New Year's Eve. She talks about the women using false names and 200 Nancy Reagans were arrested on that night along with herself as Doctor Norma Shearer.
She said she mourned for the camp when she left and still does. 'My escape was the camp, being outside, the physical work, the sound of just women, their laughter and song.'
Cas was interviewed by Tricia Grace-Norton in February 2021.