for at udvide
kategorilisten.
Søgning på underkategorier- og emner:
Focusing on Tom Mboya, one of Kenya's founding fathers, this book reveals how the Cold War profoundly shaped the outcome of... Læs mere
A Short Economic and Social History of Twentieth Century Britain (1968) overcomes the statistical complexities of the twentieth century by establishing long-term social and economic trends to provide a succinct analysis of Twentieth Century Britain.
Introducing Yugoslavia (1954) looks at the racial and historic chequer-board of 1950s Yugoslavia, providing a fascinating insight into the social and cultural aspects of a land... Læs mere
Lawless Youth (1947) is a book prepared under the auspices of the International Committee of the Howard League for Penal Reform during the Second World War.... Læs mere
The Financiers and the Nation (1934) examines a dozen or so of the major financial frauds permitted by Bank of England and City merchants in 19th and 20th centuries and... Læs mere
Britain and Nyasaland (1964) is a study of the political development of Nyasaland under British control. The author outlines the muddle of forces which resulted in the British... Læs mere
General T. Perronet Thompson (1957) examines the life of this British Parliamentarian and radical reformer. Active as an agitator against slavery, he was also a military officer and radical reformer who supported universal suffrage, and an activist against the Corn Laws.
Originally published in English in 1928, this volume deals mainly with Anglo-German relations at the end of the... Læs mere
Originally published in English in 1929, this second volume of the German Diplomatic Documents covers a much shorter period: 1890–1898. During this period there was no war or revolution in Europe, but the sphere of German and indeed European politics became enlarged.
Originally published in 1930, this volume opens with some selections dealing with the situation created by the victory of... Læs mere
Originally published in English in 1931, this fourth and final volume of documents brings the reader to the brink of World War I. The despatches beg the question of whether war was inevitable and if so, could it have been postponed?