Shabwa: Progress Despite Turmoil in a Governorate of Competing Identites
- UKLSE-AS1OX010040010043
- Folder
- 2020
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Majd Ibrahim, Nasser al-Khalifi and Casey Coombs
Publication date: November 2020
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Shabwa: Progress Despite Turmoil in a Governorate of Competing Identites
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Majd Ibrahim, Nasser al-Khalifi and Casey Coombs
Publication date: November 2020
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: November 2020
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: November 2020
Planning for the World After COVID-19: Assessing the Domestic and International Drivers of Conflict
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Abigail Watson
Publication date: April 2020
COVID-19 and the Lessons from History
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 28 August 2020
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.
Interview with Lee Eggleston OBE and Sheila Coates MBE
Part of Women's Resource Centre
This file includes the recorded audio of the interview with Lee Eggleston OBE and Sheila Coates MBE, along with a transcript, a summary of the recording, and a photo of the interviewees. At the time of the interview, they were the Operations Manager and Director of South Essex Rape and Incest Crisis Centre respectively. Sheila and Lee set up the South East Essex Rape and Incest helpline as a women's collective in 1984. The organisation developed over the years to become South Essex Rape and Incest Crisis Centre (SERICC), which at the time of the interview was the lead partner for the Essex-wide sexual violence and abuse services, under the title Synergy Essex. Furthermore, at the time of the interview, Lee was also a trustee of Rape Crisis England and Wales and a regional representative for Rape Crisis England and Wales, representing the Eastern region. Date of interview: 30/01/2020. Length of recording: 01:18:51.
NHS/Key Workers graffiti mural near LSE campus
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Sarah Jewett
Date: 30 May 2020
Location: Sainsbury's (now closed), 71 High Holborn
I was walking for exercise around London from Rosebery Hall towards LSE in late May and was struck by this graffiti mural by Bowen and Blackmore (London street artists) on the boarded up Sainsbury's close to campus. It marked a point in the pandemic in which many sought to highlight the importance of key workers just about two months after the lockdown began and restrictions were soon to be eased up a bit. The woman in the photo was one of very few people I came across.
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Devika Hovell
Date: July 2020
Location: At home in Australia
This photo was taken by my husband after we relocated to Australia and will always remind me of the challenge of writing during Covid. Due to home-schooling and nurseries being closed from time to time, pushing ahead with writing projects was often done in the company of children...who were not always entirely respectful of the tools of the research trade!
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Kathie Nissan
Date: c2020
My office has been the spare room since March 2020 and I have had to implement some rules.
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Kendra Mills
Date: 7 April 2020
Location: Southwark park, London
These photos were takenon one of my first walks out of strict quarantine. I was struck by the buoyancy of spring.
Westminster Round-Up: January 2020
Part of Oxford Research Group
Podcast
Discussants: Liam Walpole and Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen
Publication date: 20 January 2020
WarPod Ep #16: The Remote Warfare Paradox
Part of Oxford Research Group
Discussants: Jolle Demmers, Lauren Gould and Alasdair McKay
Publication date: 25 June 2020
WarPod Ep #18: The UN and the Rise of Counter-Terrorism
Part of Oxford Research Group
Discussants: Jordan Street, Ali Altiok, Abigail Watson and Liam Walpole
Publication date: 17 July 2020
WarPod Ep #20: Incorporating the Protection of Civilians into UK Policy
Part of Oxford Research Group
Discussants: Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen, Ewan Lason and Amanda Brydon
Publication date: 24 September 2020
Who Benefits? Trump, Iran and the Bigger Picture
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers and Alasdair Mckay
Date: 31 January 2020
The Integrated Review: Lessons Learned From Remote Warfare
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Abigail Watson
Publication date: April 2020
Sustainable Security Index Report
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Abigail Watson, Alasdair Mckay and Oliver Scanlan
Publication date: May 2020
Special Podcast: 5 Years into the War in Yemen: Debunking 5 Myths
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: March 2020
Collective Strategic Thinking: An Introduction
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oliver Ramsbotham
Publication date: September 2020
Mistrust, Misinformation and Community Engagement
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: November 2020
Women's Experiences of Disease Outbreaks in Conflict
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: November 2020
COVID-19: Not Out of the Woods Yet
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 28 July 2020
Part of Oxford Research Group
In a special series of podcasts, ORG talks with people involved in the development and evolution of ORG in its early days.
A Story of ORG: Scilla Elworthy
Part of Oxford Research Group
Discussants: Scilla Elworthy, Alasdair McKay and Abigail Watson
Publication date: December 2005
An interview with Scilla Elworthy, Director of A Business Plan for Peace and the Founder of ORG.
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Oxford Research Group
Publication date: March 2020
Public (redacted) minutes of School Management Committee meeting, Sept 2020-Jul 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
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Ruiqi Li
Date: November 2020
Location: On the way to campus from Bankside House [LSE halls of residence]
I was on the way to school with a few friends from Bankside; it was one of the first in person classes we had. Having just arrived in London and as international students coming from different places, we were eager to retain everything we see in the city in our minds. Autumn is slightly chilly and the streets were rather empty because of the pandemic, but it was a unique memory that felt strangely cozy and poetic amongst the chaos happening elsewhere in the backdrop.