
The Horse Tamer of Grosvenor Square ’68
What is the story behind a single photograph of the 1968 "Battle of Grosvenor Square"?
What is the story behind a single photograph of the 1968 "Battle of Grosvenor Square"?
What might the trip of Birgitta Dahl to the meet Amílcar Cabral and the PAIGC liberation movement reveal about the motivations of transnational solidarity in the era of decolonisation?
How did feminist activists from the US and the Global South influence the Global Justice Movement?
In the years since the beginning of the Black Lives Matter Movement, Emma-Lee Amponsah reflects on the shared global experience of Black Cultural Memory.
This article is the introduction to a new History Workshop series on Solidarities Across Borders.
Read the latest issue of History Workshop Journal. With a feature on Remembering the Radical Seventies.
Read Article "HWJ 95"This Virtual Special Issue curates History Workshop’s contribution to refugee studies - with a new introduction and 20 articles, free access for six months.
Read Article "Refugees"This series explores how global events, ideas and tactics have impacted feminism, and vice versa. How have feminists worked across differences – for example, of race, nation, politics – more and less successfully?
How did feminist activists from the US and the Global South influence the Global Justice Movement?
May Ayim was key to the Black German civil rights movement in the 1980s and 1990s. But how did her work across borders exemplify cosmopolitanism from below? Tiffany N. Florvil explores the life and networks of a visionary.
How do historical dreams of streets that are safe, joyful, fun and without violence impact on today's movement to reclaim space by South Asian women?
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Insights into today’s world via a deep dive into our archives.
How can we understand the true forces behind Russia’s expansionist aspirations today? Hubertus Jahn traces the long ideological roots of Putin's propaganda.
How did US women have abortions when it was illegal? Rosa Campbell explores an archive of US women's testimonies of abortions across borders, in Japan, Puerto Rico and Mexico, with resonances for today.
What do colonial histories of movement across the ocean tell us about present day proposals to send asylum seekers to offshore sites?
Whether letters, food or ephemera, material objects have acted as radical agents in history. Here, historians, archivists and activists unpack stories of solidarity and everyday lives.
What can the dress of a suffragette tell us about radical feminist politics and fashion during the early twentieth century? Sophia Lambert explores.
Previously untranslated Che Guevara notebook sheds fresh light on the Cuban-African relation and the life of the famed revolutionary.
What can tools - for cutting, sharpening or carrying - tell us about the nature of work in the past? Paul Warde on how the skills that tools embodied can nuance narratives of modernity and productivity.