Show
4523 citations
related to Great Britain
Show
4523 citations
related to Great Britain as a subject or category
Country Code GB
Geographic entity type Country
Book
Ashley Sweetman
(2022)
Cyber and the City: Securing London’s Banks in the Computer Age.
(/isis/citation/CBB340774234/)
Article
Guilherme Kasmanas Godinho
(2022)
Humphry Davy: Figura Literária e Filósofo QuÃmico.
Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 33-33).
(/isis/citation/CBB383964413/)
Article
William Rone Vieira
(2022)
O trabalho e as contribuições de Caroline Herschel na Astronomia.
Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science
(pp. 32-32).
(/isis/citation/CBB309964528/)
Article
David J. Harper; Sebastian Townsend
(2022)
From the margins to the NICE guidelines: British clinical psychology and the development of cognitive behaviour therapy for psychosis, 1982–2002.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 260-290).
(/isis/citation/CBB379283288/)
Article
Gal Gerson
(2022)
Fairbairn, Winnicott, and Guntrip on the social significance of schizoids.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 144-167).
(/isis/citation/CBB394978840/)
Book
Sophie Vasset
(2022)
Murky waters: British spas in eighteenth-century medicine and literature.
(/isis/citation/CBB037307385/)
Book
Jennifer Crane; Jane Hand
(2022)
Posters, Protests, and Prescriptions: Cultural Histories of the National Health Service in Britain.
(/isis/citation/CBB466847015/)
Book
Angela Stienne
(2022)
Mummified: The stories behind Egyptian mummies in museums.
(/isis/citation/CBB504477868/)
Article
Aileen Fyfe
(2022)
Self-help for learned journals: Scientific societies and the commerce of publishing in the 1950s.
History of Science
(pp. 255-279).
(/isis/citation/CBB068770139/)
Book
Sean Nixon
(2022)
Passions for Birds: Science, Sentiment, and Sport.
(/isis/citation/CBB323340759/)
Book
Amy Milne-Smith
(2022)
Out of his mind: Masculinity and mental illness in Victorian Britain.
(/isis/citation/CBB859380659/)
Article
Moa Carlsson
(April 2022)
Computing views, remodeling environments.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 227-252).
(/isis/citation/CBB726932342/)
Article
Peter J. Bowler
(2022)
Natural history and the Raj: Popular wildlife literature for readers in Britain and the British Empire in India (1858–1947).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 189-203).
(/isis/citation/CBB749190766/)
Article
Joel Barnes
(2022)
Revisiting the ‘Darwin–Marx correspondence’: Multiple discovery and the rhetoric of priority.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 29-54).
(/isis/citation/CBB053463279/)
Article
Edward J. Gillin
(2022)
The instruments of expeditionary science and the reworking of nineteenth-century magnetic experiment.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 565-592).
(/isis/citation/CBB055349020/)
Book
Michael R. Lynn
(2022)
Magic, Witchcraft, and Ghosts in the Enlightenment.
(/isis/citation/CBB592135235/)
Book
Marelene Rayner-Canham; Geoff Rayner-Canham
(2022)
Pioneers of the London School of Medicine for Women (1874-1947): Their Contributions and Interwoven Lives.
(/isis/citation/CBB283654406/)
Article
Hannah J. Elizabeth; Daisy Payling
(2022)
From cohort to community: The emotional work of birthday cards in the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, 1946–2018.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 158-188).
(/isis/citation/CBB004165529/)
Article
David Garland
(2022)
The emergence of the idea of ‘the welfare state’ in British political discourse.
History of the Human Sciences
(pp. 132-157).
(/isis/citation/CBB344877288/)
Article
Robert Evans
(February 2022)
SAGE advice and political decision-making: ‘Following the science’ in times of epistemic uncertainty.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 53-78).
(/isis/citation/CBB466460955/)
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