Living in sin Housing and homelessnessLiving in sin is the first book length study of cohabitation in Victorian England, based on research into the lives of hundreds of couples. The work also analyses marriage, the Victorian legal system, relations with kin and the reactions of the wider comunities to extra legal partnerships.
This book investigates uncertainty as a governing practice from the unique vantage point of ‘citizenisation’ - twenty-first-century integration and naturalisation measures that make and unmake citizens and migrants
This is the first book to recognise the key role of the Adventurers and the centrality of Ireland to the Wars of the Three Kingdoms
Bringing the subject of arms control into the arena of complex
‘Managing Coral Reefs’ compares reef management in Indonesia
churches and children
Featuring case studies drawn from both literary material and current controversial debates
this volume is essential for media professionals and scholars
Her detailed picture brings the Anglo-Saxon countryside very much to life
Drawing on years of research McAuley rejects simplistic notions of playwright or director as 'auteur'
Analyses co-operation between universities and regional authorities
Not only has she managed to capture perfectly the essence of the dishes
A collection of articles selected from the Journal of Beijing Dance Academy