Show
701 citations
related to Professions and professionalization
Show
701 citations
related to Professions and professionalization as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Alison Skipper
(2020)
The ‘Dog Doctors’ of Edwardian London: Elite Canine Veterinary Care in the Early Twentieth Century.
Social History of Medicine
(pp. 1233-1258).
(/isis/citation/CBB627479228/)
Article
Nathan E. C. Smith
(2020)
Narrative histories in mycology and the legacy of George Edward Massee (1845–1917).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 361-380).
(/isis/citation/CBB678296077/)
Article
Nathan E. C. Smith
(2020)
Provincial mycology and the legacy of Henry Thomas Soppitt (1858–1899).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 219-235).
(/isis/citation/CBB964246723/)
Article
John Hollier; Anita Hollier
(2020)
Aloïs Humbert (1829–1887), the first professional curator of natural history in Geneva.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 272-285).
(/isis/citation/CBB577277864/)
Book
Wayne Melville; Donald Kerr
(2020)
Virtues as Integral to Science Education: Understanding the Intellectual, Moral, and Civic Value of Science and Scientific Inquiry.
(/isis/citation/CBB298334343/)
Article
Ellen Abrams
(2020)
‘An Inalienable Prerogative of a Liberated Spirit’: Postulating American Mathematics.
British Journal for the History of Mathematics
(pp. 225-245).
(/isis/citation/CBB316729242/)
Book
Nicolas Friederici; Michel Wahome; Mark Graham
(2020)
Digital Entrepreneurship in Africa: How a Continent Is Escaping Silicon Valley's Long Shadow.
(/isis/citation/CBB944544548/)
Multimedia Object
Lisette Varón Carvajal; Hernández Saenz, Luz María
(2020)
Luz María Hernández Sáenz, “Carving a Niche: The Medical Profession in Mexico 1800-1870” (McGill-Queen’s UP, 2018).
New Books Network Podcast.
(/isis/citation/CBB027816130/)
Book
Julia Allison
(2020)
Midwifery from the Tudors to the 21st Century: History, Politics and Safe Practice in England.
(/isis/citation/CBB168548850/)
Article
Jim Wynter Porter
(2020)
Guidance counseling in the mid-twentieth century United States: Measurement, grouping, and the making of the intelligent self.
History of Science
(pp. 191-215).
(/isis/citation/CBB370728709/)
Article
David P Helm
(2020)
“Physician’s Prescriptions Accurately Prepared” - The Mid-Nineteenth-Century Prescription Books of Four Gloucester Chemists.
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
(pp. 270-298).
(/isis/citation/CBB192650727/)
Book
Jean-Paul Barrière; Hervé Leuwers
(2020)
La construction des professions juridiques et médicales: Europe occidentale, XVIIIe-XXe siècle.
(/isis/citation/CBB948590477/)
Article
Ariane Berthoin Antal; Jan-Christoph Rogge
(2020)
Does Academia Still Call? Experiences of Academics in Germany and the United States.
Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy
(pp. 187-210).
(/isis/citation/CBB534002228/)
Article
Ruslan Mitrofanov
(2020)
Alexander Frese and the establishment of psychiatry in the Russian Empire.
History of Psychiatry
(pp. 194-207).
(/isis/citation/CBB047154270/)
Book
James Mussell; Graeme Gooday
(2020)
A Pioneer of Connection: Recovering the Life and Work of Oliver Lodge.
(/isis/citation/CBB706355835/)
Book
Gary Patterson
(2020)
Chemistry in 17th-Century New England.
(/isis/citation/CBB100217599/)
Article
Richard T. Bellis
(2020)
‘As to the Plan of This Work … We Think Dr. Baillie Has Done Wrong’: Changing the Study of Disease Through Epistemic Genre in Georgian Britain.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 39-58).
(/isis/citation/CBB371060031/)
Article
John Lidwell-Durnin
(2020)
William Benjamin Carpenter and the Emerging Science of Heredity.
Journal of the History of Biology
(pp. 81-103).
(/isis/citation/CBB587683100/)
Article
Lisa A. Bitterich; Dominik Gross
(2020)
The signatories of the “Einheitsfront der Zahnärzte” (“United Front of Dentists”) during the Third Reich and after 1945: An in-depth study.
Sudhoffs Archiv: Zeitschrift fuer Wissenschaftsgeschichte
(pp. 101-132).
(/isis/citation/CBB998107135/)
Thesis
Kimberly Paige Farris
(2020)
The Incorporeal Scientific Method: Gender, Hybridity, and the Rise of Material Science in American Literature, 1840–1900.
(/isis/citation/CBB368756822/)
Be the first to comment!