- UKLSE-AS1OX010020010066
- Folder
- 2011
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: May 2011
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: May 2011
Libya: Between the Sahel-Sahara and the Islamic State Crises
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Richard Reeve
Publication date: August 2015
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: March 2011
Libyan Lessons: Bring Back the Responsibility to Rebuild
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Outi Keranen
Publication date: 11 November 2016
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Richard Reeve
Date: 13 January 2015
Light Footprint' Operations Keep US Troops in the Dark
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen
Publication date: November 2018
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Sun, Lilly
Description not submitted by sender
Limited Accountability: A transparency audit of the anti-ISIL Coalition
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Airwars
Publication date: December 2016
Limited Nuclear Wars - Myth and Reality
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 29 August 2017
Linking spending to strategic priorities: why the MDP should be published in full
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Liam Walpole
Publication date: December 2018
Lisa Halse interviewed by Sara Sherwood
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
This folder includes the recorded audio of the interview along with a transcript of the recording.
Spurred into peace activism as a teenager after seeing images of the Vietnam War, Lisa would travel to Greenham Common from Devon. In this interview, she discusses the ongoing legacy of Greenham Common and her work with 'Carry Greenham Home' which built alliances and educated local communities.
Lisa was interviewed by Sara Sherwood in 2019.
Liz Beech 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 Liz.
'I went to Greenham because I was given an electric kettle for my 40th birthday by my mother!' Liz took a bus to 'Embrace the base' in 1982 with a Glastonbury women's group and consequently lived at Yellow Gate from 1983 to 1987. She thought this was with her husband's support, saying the men's role was to keep 'the home fires burning'. However, she lost custody of her two children, with Greenham being cited as the reason, almost definitely as part of a political strategy to scare other mothers at the camp. Liz says that she was much less afraid of life than before she went.
Liz was interviewed by Leslie Lyle in 2019.
She was photographed by Christine Bradshaw (copyright Christine Bradshaw).
Local Climate Policy-Making in the UK
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Peter Eckersley
Publication date: 28 September 2018
Lois Evans interview: recording
Part of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, British Section (WILPF)
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Grammateia Kotsialou
Date: May 2020
Location: Gunnersbury Park, London
The lockdown period awakened a creative part of me, a passion for photography. During a lockdown 'exercise' walk with my husband, I saw this spot and tried to capture as much as possible of this beauty.
Looking Back to Look Forward: The Value of ORG's Approach to Conflict
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 29 October 2020
Looking Beyond Stalemate in the Middle East
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: 17 September 2015
Looking for Leadership: Sustainable Security in Latin America and the Caribbean
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Ben Zala
Publication date: September 2010
Loppy Oubridge interviewed by Jill Raymond (Ray)
Part of Greenham Women Everywhere
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.
Lorna Richardson 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.
Lorna was involved in her local CND group from the age of 14 and learnt about Greenham through the Quakers. She talks about how her political and moral views were shaped by her aunt and how she first hitched to Green Gate with two friends when she was 16. Lorna recalls staying at Turquoise Gate, prison sentences, underground nuclear testing and singing songs to keep up energy and morale.
Lorna was interviewed by Rebecca Mordan in 2019.
Losing Sight of the Human Cost
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Kate Hofstra and Elizabeth Minor
Publication date: August 2014
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Paul Rogers
Date: June 2003
Lost Generations: Consequences of and Responses to Child Soldier Recruitment
Part of Oxford Research Group
Author(s): Roos Heer
Publication date: 14 September 2016
Louella Crisfield 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.
Lou has been a lifelong activist inspired by her time at Greenham in her teens. She is now a housing adviser in London and feels the experience at camp gave her the courage to be or do anything! She was there in her late teens and shares her experience of camp life, arrest and prison.
Louella was interviewed by Emma Gliddon in 2019.
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Reitmann, Louis
25 November 2018, Cumberland Lodge, Windsor Great Park The study retreat at Cumberland Lodge is my most cherished memory from my time at LSE. Never before did I have the chance to ponder, debate, and appreciate International Relations so intimately with such outstanding, bright minds from around the globe. It was an experience that connected me deeply with my discipline and that created friendships lasting until today. And meeting HM The Queen, who in her lifetime has witnessed and shaped global events as only a few people in history, was a brilliant conclusion to a weekend I will never forget.
Part of LSE Community Histories
Personal author: Tomar, Louisa
MSc Development Management, Big Data consultancy team featuring Tinashe Zimani, William Guicheney, Hope Kyarisiima and Louisa Tomar celebrating end of term in London Fields, Hackney 2016
Luisa Porritt, Liberal Democrats: manifesto
Part of Election Ephemera Collection
Date Accessed: 6 May 2021
Significant context URL: https://www.luisa4london.co.uk/
Internet Archive URL: https://web.archive.org/web/*/https://www.luisa4london.co.uk/
Part of LSE Community Histories
Submitted by: Avanes Khachaturov
Date: 17 March 2021
Location: Red Lion Square, London
With physical lectures being cancelled and all classes moving online by December 2020, I found that I had much more time to explore lunch options around campus. Before, my typical day involved rushing from one lecture hall or classroom to another, with studying in the Library in between, and hence I was limited by how far from campus I could venture out.
Most of the fast causal restaurants dotting Kingsway that specialized in providing food were closed the previous year, with primarily coffee chains remaining open for take away, offering only small sandwiches and toasties as lunch options. On the other hand, Lamb's Conduit Passage and Red Lion Street, which runs parallel to Red Lion Square, offered many small and cheap eateries of various cuisines, from Korean to Malaysian to British classics, which I only found the time to try out now that all of my studies were online and not tied to campus.
The picture taken was during one such lunch time, a relatively warm day for the weather that month, with the benches lining the park offering excellent places to sit back, enjoy a warm meal, and either listen to music or a podcast, or to just take in the sounds around you.