Submitted by: Dana Ramadan Date: February 2021 Location: In my room in Islington, London
While everyone went out to enjoy the first snow day in London, I decided to stay in my bed and watch the snow fall outside my window. The photo captures the moment I was having breakfast and doing some readings.
This collection includes material about LSE community and its history, created or collected by members of the community, including LSE alumni, students and staff. The first two series contain photos and interviews produced as a result of projects run to mark two important LSE anniversaries - 120 and 125 years since the foundation of LSE in 1895.
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.
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.
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording. Jacqui's first visit to Greenham was on a bus arranged by a Yeovil group in 1982/83. Later, she made regular weekend visits for years in her work Women's Aid car, taking boxes of food and supplies. She remembers a big police presence, saying they behaved as if it was the women who had the bombs. Jacqui lived in a rural Somerset village where everyone questioned what she was doing - she was reported to social services for being a lesbian, taking her son out of school to home educate him and having women camp in her garden. She recalls the 1986 Chernobyl disaster compounding the fear and reality of the danger and her wanting to support the women standing up against the government in the cold and wet between the military and police officers. 'Those 'silly women' didn't go home... they stayed and prevailed.' Jacqui was interviewed by Vanessa Pini in March 2021.
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording. Loppy was at Green and Yellow Gates for the winter of 1981/82 and was involved in the organising of the 'Embrace the Base'. She then stayed at the peace camp at Burghfield and worked for the Dorset Peace Council. She also talks about being a young mum at the same time and considers how her activism affected her children and the rest of her life. Loppy was interviewed by Jill Raymond (Ray) in January 2021.
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Pixie. Pixie spent two periods of her life at Greenham. Firstly, when she was 18, she went down on an overnight coach from Dundee and lived at Green Gate from 1985-86. She returned for the 10th birthday in 1991 and lived at Blue Gate until January 1994. She talks about the differences in the eras, evictions and bailiffs, women only spaces, learning to value her body and her time in Holloway. She recalls doing doughnuts in a borrowed car in the base during the American leaving ceremony and reads from a Greenham newsletter documenting leaving Blue Gate. Pixie speaks about how ludicrous it was to have nuclear weapons being driven around the country and how Greenham wouldn't have survived without humour and laughter. She also remembers writing to Greenham at school on Dennis the Menace paper and getting a reply! Pixie was interviewed by Vanessa Pini in January 2021.
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording and a photograph of Sian. Sian was living in Southampton when GCWPC began. Orange Gate, on the south side of the common, was the nearest for Southampton activists who were regulars at camp and beyond. Sian's initial involvement included night watch, hot food runs and cruise watch. She enjoyed being on the land with women and the elements and even went to sea with the women's boat action group. She also talks about how the network of Greenham Women grew over the years and the development of other anti-war and international groups like WATFY (Women's Aid To Former Yugoslavia) and Women in Black. In this photo, Sian is staring at the muncher during an eviction at Orange Gate. Sian was interviewed by Jill Raymond (Ray) in February 2021.
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording. Barbara Hughes spent most of her time at Orange Gate, which she describes as the international gate where you could meet 'women from all over the place' which she liked. It wasn't possible for her to live there as she had three young children, so she went down as often as possible for actions. She was first introduced to Greenham at a CND rally, when a group of women got up on the platform to speak about their plans for that original march from Cardiff to Greenham in 1981. Barbara speaks about her own creative actions back in Richmond with the 'Duck and Cover' company, the importance of carrying Greenham home, and her hopes for the future of feminism. Barbara was interviewed by Alice Robinson in January 2021.
Public (redacted) minutes of School Management Committee meetings held from September 2020 to July 2021, as follows: 01 September 2020 08 September 2020 15 September 2020 22 September 2020 29 September 2020 06 October 2020 13 October 2020 19 October 2020 27 October 2020 03 November 2020 10 November 2020 12 November 2020 17 November 2020 01 December 2020 08 December 2020 15 December 2020 05 January 2021 19 January 2021 26 January 2021 02 February 2021 09 February 2021 16 February 2021 23 February 2021 02 March 2021 09 March 2021 16 March 2021 23 March 2021 30 March 2021 13 April 2021 20 April 2021 27 April 2021 04 May 2021 11 May 2021 18 May 2021 25 May 2021 01 June 2021 22 June 2021 29 June 2021 06 July 2021 13 July 2021 20 July 2021 27 July 2021
Submitted by: Sarah Jewett Date: 1 August 2020 Location:John Carpenter Street, Victoria Embankment
Throughout the pandemic, the sculpture Taxi! by Seward Johnson Jr (1983) managed to stay mask free aside for a random day in August, thanks to a passerby with a sense of humor.
This collection contains born-digital records created by ORG, mainly research outputs produced as part of the Sustainable Security, Strategic Peacebuilding, and Remote Warfare programmes, as well as ORG newsletters and blog articles from external contributors. Also included are podcasts and recordings of panel discussions. The majority of this material was downloaded from the ORG website and transferred to LSE Library when the organisation was wound down. The collection also includes some annual accounts and impact reports (a fuller set of annual reports is available in the ORG analogue collection).
The Sustainable Security Programme was established in 2006-2007, expanding on Paul Rogers' work on marginalisation, climate change and geopolitics, as well as ORG's work on recording of casualties in armed conflict. The programme aimed to highlight the limitations of orthodox security policy and to develop policy alternatives that address underlying drivers.