British Academy: The UK's National Academy for the Humanities and Social Sciences
British Academy Review, Issue 10, 2007
This issue may be downloaded in PDF format (2.4MB).
The articles listed below in blue are also available separately in PDF format.
President's Foreword, Onora O'Neill
How Philosophers Die, David Palfrey
Moral Panics: Then and Now, David Garland
Welcome to the Software-Sorted Society, Stephen Graham
Martin Buber: Philosopher of Dialogue and of the Resolution of Conflict, W John Morgan
The West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, Rachel Beckles Willson
The Power of the Past, Harriet Crawford
The Frontiers of the Ottoman World: Fortifications, Trade, Pilgrimage and Slavery, Andrew Peacock
Migration in the Crusades to the Medieval Middle East, Piers D Mitchell and Andrew R Millard
Coercion and Consent in Nazi Germany, Richard J Evans
Cabinets and the Bomb, Catherine Haddon
The Royal African Company of England in West Africa 1681–1699, Robin Law
The British Academy's Africa Panel, Robin Law
Captivated by Africa's Geography: James McQueen, Thomas Fowell Buxton and the Abolition of Slavery, David Lambert
Ibadan 1960, Will Rea
The First English Bible: A Lost Opportunity, Mary Dove
Archimedes and Company, William Noel
Rhyming Pictures: Walter Crane and the Art of Reading, Grace Brockington
Progress in Understanding 'Tone Deafness', Karen Wise, John Sloboda and Isabelle Peretz
Word Comprehension in Younger and Older Adults: When is a Difference a Deficit?, Meredith Shafto
Should We Notice Researchers Outside the University?, Ruth Finnegan
Languages Matter, Marian Hobson
Copyright and Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences: a British Academy Review, John Kay
Peer Review: the Challenges for the Humanities and Social Sciences. A British Academy Review, Albert Weale
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