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Histories of Activism Group

‘Activism’ is constantly in the news. From tuition fees to global justice, from consumer protection to human rights – there is hardly an issue which isn’t subject to the efforts of campaigners, lobbyists or pressure groups. How did different forms of activism take shape in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries? This question informs the work of the Histories of Activism research group. It examines political protest, the efforts of interest groups, the promotion of alternative economic and social models, as well as the measures for the protection of particular groups in society.

The group's research acknowledges that ‘activism’ occurs in different forms and at different levels. Action at a local level can be motivated by the desire to ‘make a difference’ through campaigning and the creation of community organisations. Examples range from cooperation in the provision of credit and welfare services to militant campaigning for the rights of a particular ethnic group. At the same time, the concerns of the Histories of Activism group transcend class, race, and gender boundaries.

Key research holdings underpinning student and staff research are:

  • Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), 1917-1978
  • International Workingmen’s Association, 1868-1878
  • Anti-Slavery International (formerly the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society)
  • Anti-Slavery Reporter (1825-1994)

 



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