MRP: Academic contacts
Academic contacts
Editorial history
20/09/11, CSG: Created page
Overview
This page lists individual academics & departments
A
Dr Paul Arblaster
Docent, Zuyd University
Vertaalacademie (School of Translation)
Selected publications:
• 'Piracy and Play: Two Catholic Appropriations of Nieuhof’s Gezantschap', in The Dutch Trading Companies as Knowledge Networks, ed. Jan L. de Jong et al. (Brill, 2010), pp. 129-143
• 'Antwerp and Brussels as Inter-European Spaces', in The Dissemination of News and the Emergence of Contemporaneity, ed. Brendan Dooley (Ashgate, 2010), pp. 193-205
• 'The Southern Netherlands Connection: Networks of Support and Patronage', in Catholic Communities in Protestant States: Britain and the Netherlands c.1570-1720, ed. Benjamin J. Kaplan et al. (Manchester UP, 2009), pp. 123-138
• 'London, Antwerp and Amsterdam: Journalistic Relations in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century', in The Bookshop of the World, ed. Lotte Hellinga et al. (HES & De Graaf, 2001), 145-150
• Arblaster, Paul. Antwerp & the World: Richard Verstegan and the International Culture of Roman Catholicism. Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2004
B
Jonathan Blaney
Project Editor, British History Online
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
LONDON WC1E 7HU
T: +44 (0)20 7862 8789
F: +44 (0)20 7862 8745
E: jonathan.blaney@sas.ac.uk
W: www.history.ac.uk
Dr Mathew Bristow
Research Manager
Victoria County History
Institute of Historical Research
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London
WC1E 7HU
http://www.victoriacountyhistory.ac.uk/about/staff
E: mathew.bristow@sas.ac.uk
T: 0207-664-4899
Dr Jan Broadway
E: janb@xmera.co.uk
- Cell's technical Director, 2002-2010
- Now an independent consultant
- Her research concentrates on early modern gentry society and the development of local and family history
Publications
- a biography of the seventeenth-century herald and scholar Sir William Dugdale and a catalogue of his correspondence.
C
The Cambridge Group for the History of Population Growth & Social Structure
Sir William Hardy Building
Department of Geography
University of Cambridge
Downing Place
Cambridge
CB2 3EN
Deputy director: Leigh Shaw-Taylor
E: Leigh.shaw-taylor@geog.cam.ac.uk
T: 0044-(0)1223 333181
W: http://www.hpss.geog.cam.ac.uk/
Professor Thomas Corns
Head of School of English
University of Bangor
T: +44 (0)1248 382213
E: els009@bangor.ac.uk
D
Dr Stuart Dunn
Lecturer, Centre for e-Research
Centre for e-Research
26-29 Drury Lane, Room 223
King's College London, London WC2B 5RL
E: stuart.dunn@kcl.ac.uk
T: +44 (0)20 7848 2709
Selected publications
Dunn, S. 2011: Dealing with the complexity deluge: VREs in the Arts and Humanities. In Wursteman, J. (ed.): Library Hi-Tech special issue, Virtual research environments: issues and opportunities for librarians: 205-216
Selected conference papers
Reception reconsidered: communicating material culture in the Internet age. Classical Association Conference, Durham, 2011.
GeoParsing: The Digitization and Historical Georeferencing of Text Documents. International Symposium on Grid Computing, Taipei, March 2010.
F
Dr Adam Farquhar
Head of Digital technology
The British Library
Dr Adam Farquhar: JISC Profile
Dr Adam Farquhar: Linked In Profile
G
Dr Perry Gauci
V. H. H. Green Fellow, Tutor in History, Fellow Librarian and Archivist
Lincoln College
Turl Street
Oxford
OX1 3DR
T: 01865 279795 (direct line)
E: perry.gauci@lincoln.ox.ac.uk
See online profile
Dr. James M. Gibson
Bridge Archivist
The Bridge Chamber
5 The Esplanade
Rochester
Kent ME1 1QE
T: 01634 846706
E: bridgearchivist@rbt.org.uk.
Guy Grannum
Discovery Product Manager
The National Archives
Kew
Surrey
TW9 4DU
E: Guy.Grannum@nationalarchives.gsi.gov.uk
T: +44(0)20 8392 5330 x 2307
Formerly:
User Collaboration Manager at The National Archives
Your Archives Manager at The National Archives
Caribbean specialist at The National Archives
Guy Grannum, Tracing Your West Indian Ancestors, 2nd edn (PRO Publications, 2002)
H
Dr John Haggerty
Lecturer in Information Systems Security
School of Computing, Science & Engineering
Room 203 Newton Building, University of Salford, Salford, M5 4WT.
T: 0161-295-6329
E: j.haggerty@salford.ac.uk
CONFERENCES
Papers in Published Conference Proceedings
Haggerty, J & Haggerty, S 2011, Temporal Social Network Analysis for Historians: A Case Study, in: 'Proceedings of the International Conference on Visualization Theory and Applications (IVAPP 2011)', INSTICC, Algarve, Portugal, pp.207-217. Conference details: International Conference on Visualization Theory and Applications (IVAPP 2011), Algarve, Portugal, 5 - 7 March, 2011.
Haggerty, J & Lamb, D & Taylor, M 2009, Social Network Visualization for Forensic Investigation of E-Mail, in: '4th Annual Workshop on Digital Forensics and Incident Analysis (WDFIA 09)', University of Plymouth, Athens, Greece, pp.81-92.
Conference Presentations
Sustaining Business Networks during Uncertain Times: A Case Study of a Liverpool Trade Association, 1750-1810 (Annual Conference of the Association of Business History 2011, Reading, United Kingdom, July 2011 to July 2011).
Merchant Networks in Liverpool, 1750 - 1810: Efficiency, Power and Control (Annual Conference of the Association of Business History 2009, Liverpool, United Kingdom, July 2009).
Visual Analytics of Eighteenth-Century Business Networks: Pretty Useful? (Economic and Social History Conference, Warwick, United Kingdom, April 2009).
Dr Sheryllynne Haggerty
Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts
Room B3a Lenton Grove
University Park
Nottingham
NG7 2RD
UK
T: 0115 84 68358
E: sheryllynne.haggerty@nottingham.ac.uk
INTERESTS
- Expertise is in the area of eighteenth-century traders and the economy of the first British empire - both formal and informal
- Interest in networks of people, credit and goods and the lives of men and women who facilited this trade
- Member of the Centre for International Business History
- School of History representative for the management board of the Institute for the Study of Slavery (ISOS)
- Serve on the Council of the British Commission for Maritime History (BCMH)
RESEARCH
"Writing up my second monograph entitled 'Merely for Money'? Business Culture in the British Atlantic, due for pubication with Liverpool University Press in 2012.
This is the culmination of a long term project which began with an ESRC award for 2004-5 entitled Business Culture and Community: Liverpool in the 18th Century British Atlantic. This is an inter-disciplinary study into business culture during this period, but taking a wide, Atlantic perspective. Using a variety of primary sources, it adopts social-science theory to investigate the concepts of risk, trust, reputation, obligation and networks within the eighteenth-century trading community. I was Caird North American Research Fellow 2006, granted by the National Maritime Museum (UK) and the John Carter Brown Library (Rhode Island, USA) which contributed to this study."
"First monograph was entitled The British-Atlantic Trading Community 1760-1810: Men, Women, and the Distribution of Goods (Brill Press, 2006). This study investigated and profiled a far wider trading community than elite (male) merchants, and detailed the networks of people, credit and goods both within each city, regionally and across the Atlantic, between the two cities"
"Previously worked with Professor Kenneth Morgan (Brunel) and Professor Trevor Burnard (Warwick) on a Leverhulme funded research project entitled "Merchants and Merchandising: Kingston, Jamaica in the Eighteenth Century". This research investigated both the social and economic history of Kingston itself, and its business and social networks within the Atlantic framework."
"Liverpool University recently conducted research on the nineteenth-century Liverpool mercantile community which will result in a major web accessible database. See www.liv.ac.uk/merchants"
"Presently working with the school of Computing, Science and Engineering at the University of Salford, using Visual Analytic tools for the analysis of business networks. We have already published on this work. See my publications below"
CONFERENCES
Forthcoming
International Maritime and Economic History Conference, Ghent, " 'Merely for Money'? Business Culture in the British-Atlantic, 1750-1815" (Jul 2012).
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
HAGGERTY, S., 2012. 'You promise well and perform as badly': The Failure of the 'implicit contract of family' in the Scottish Atlantic International Journal of Maritime History. 1-15
HAGGERTY, JOHN AND SHERYLLYNNE HAGGERTY, 2011. The Life Cycle of a Metropolitan Business Network: Liverpool 1750-1810 Explorations in Economic History. 48(2), 189-206
HAGGERTY, J. and HAGGERTY, S., 2011. Temporal Social Network Analysis for Historians: A Case Study: Proceedings of the International Conference of Visualization Theory and Application In: International Conference on Visualization Theory and Applications. 207-217
HAGGERTY, SHERYLLYNNE AND JOHN HAGGERTY, 2010. Visual Analytics of an Eighteenth-Century Network Enterprise and Society. 11(1), 1-25
HAGGERTY, SHERYLLYNNE, 2010. Risk and Risk Management in the Liverpool Slave Trade Business History. 51(6), 816-834
HAGGERTY. S, A. WEBSTER and N. J. WHITE, 2008. The Empire in One City? Liverpool's Inconvenient Imperial Past Manchester: Manchester University Press.
HAGGERTY, S., 2006. The Structure of the Philadelphia Trading Community on the Transition from Colony to State Business History. 48(2), 171-192
HAGGERTY, S., 2002. The structure of the trading community in Liverpool, 1760-1810 Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 151, 97-125
HAGGERTY, S., 2002. A link in the chain: trade and the trans-shipment of knowledge in the late eighteenth century International Journal of Maritime History. 14(1), 157-172
Professor Elizabeth Harvey
University of Nottingham
E: XXXX
T: XXXC
Dr Mark Hedges
Principal investigator, KCL crowdsourcing review
Director of the Centre for e-Research
Senior Lecturer in the Department of Digital Humanities, KCL
E: mark.hedges@kcl.ac.uk
T: XXXX
Professor Tim Hitchcock
University of Hertfordshire
Hatfield
Hertfordshire
AL10 9AB
T: +44 (0)1707 284000
E: T.Hitchcock@herts.ac.uk
Online profile
J
Professor Lisa Jardine
Centre for Editing Lives and Letters
ArtsOne
Queen Mary, University of London
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
E: l.a.jardine@qmul.ac.uk
T:
L
Centre for Urban History
University of Leicester
Marc Fitch House
3-5 Salisbury Road
Leicester, LE1 7QR
T: +44 (0)116 252 2378
E: cuh@le.ac.uk
www.le.ac.uk/ur
tinyurl.com/urbanhistory
M
Dr Julia Merritt
Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts
University of Nottingham
E: julia.merritt@nottingham.ac.uk
T: 0115 951 5931
Dr Noah Moxham
E: N.Moxham@uea.ac.uk
Centre for Editing Lives and Letters
ArtsOne
Queen Mary, University of London
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
Specific enquiries:
- Research projects: Dr Matt Symonds, m.symonds@qmul.ac.uk, 020 7882 8905
- M.Res. and M.A. degree programmes: Dr Robyn Adams, r.adams@qmul.ac.uk, 020 7882 8907
- Events: Alex Filby, a.l.filby@qmul.ac.uk, 020 7882 8905
- Mailing list for the AHRC Centre for Editing Lives and Letters
N
University of Nottingham: Centre for International Business History (CIBH)
The overall aim of this Centre is to develop the study of British and International business history and to act as a mechanism to promote and disseminate research on business history across the University as well as enhance the profile of business history in the UK. Business history illuminates how business strategies develop within political, institutional and economic environments.
Directors : Chris Wrigley, Department of History and Mark Billings, Nottingham University Business School.
Co-Directors
Dr Mark Billings, Business School
Dr Sheryllynne Haggerty, Department of History
Members
Dr Richard Goddard, Department of History
Professor Elizabeth Harvey, Department of History
Professor Colin Heywood, Department of History
Dr Peter Lyth, Business School
Dr Stephen Morgan, Contemporary Chinese Studies
Andy Newnham, Nottingham City Museums and Galleries in partnership with the School of History
Dr Susan Townsend, Department of History
Emeritus Professor Maggie Walsh, Department of American and Canadian Studies
Professor Chris Wrigley, Department of History
Visiting Professors
Professor Forrest Capie, Cass Business School, City University London
Emeritus Professor Phil Cottrell, School of Historical Studies, University of Warwick
P
Ms. Theresa Phipps
Doctoral candidate
University of Nottingham
E: ahxtp1@nottingham.ac.uk
Theresa Phipps (2011-present): 'Women, Power and Identity in Nottingham, c. 1350-1450'
Co-superviser: Richard Goddard
Co-superviser: Ross Balzetti
Ross Balzaretti
Associate Professor, Faculty of Arts
Room A12 Lenton Grove
University Park
Nottingham
NG7 2RD
UK
E: ross.balzaretti@nottingham.ac.uk
T: 0115 9515943
Between 2004-2010 Ross Balzaretti UK editor with my colleague Karen Adler of Gender & History, one of the leading international History journals.
PRISM
University of Virginia
Jo Pugh
Education Technical Officer
The National Archives
T: +44 (0)20 8392 5330 x2748
E: jo.pugh@nationalarchives.gov.uk
www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education
R
Dr William O'Reilly
Trinity Hall
Cambridge
CB2 1TJ
T: +44 (0)1223 765956
E: wto@cam.ac.uk
See online profile
Dr. Geoffrey Rockwell
3-67 Assiniboia Hall
Department of Philosophy
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta
T6G 2E7
Tel: 780 248-1209
Email: geoffrey.rockwell@ualberta.ca
Project director: TAPoR
S
Professor Robert Shoemaker
University of Sheffield
E: r.shoemaker@sheffield.ac.uk
T: +44-(0)114-22 22584
- C18th century historian
- Steering Committee, 18thConnect (project which aggregates 18th century digital resources; a partnership between Miami University, Ohio, and the University of Virginia)
- 18thConnect will soon offer access here to Voyeur: Reveal Your Texts, a window that allows using TaPOR tools to analyze these texts.
Selected publications:
- Arising out the London Lives project, Shoemaker is writing a book, co-authored with Hitchcock, entitled Poor Man, Sick Man, Beggarman, Thief: Plebeian Lives and the Making of Modern London, 1690-1800. Planned as an e-book, this will examine the role played by plebeian Londoners, through their interactions with the agencies of poor relief and criminal justice, in the evolution modern social policy.
E-projects
Data Mining with Criminal Intent
- Using Zotero and TAPoR on the Old Bailey Proceedings
- Zotero, a popular environment for managing online scholarship has been created that allows humanists to collect, index and manipulate large amounts of text
- TAPoR Tools, a range of facilities for the quantitative analysis of text, has been piloted and tested.
Newgate Commons: The creation of Newgate Commons: a new form of interface for the Old Bailey Proceedings that supplements the current search interfaces. The Newgate Commons will allow scholars to use mining and clustering techniques to identify, collect and work with, sets of relevant trials and related texts, and to extract them for further study with other tools. The interface will also make it easy for users to train machine learning ‘agents’ to help identify patterns in the text (and underlying account of prosecutions and punishments) of interest to the researcher.
Zotero Virtual Collections: The modification of Zotero Virtual Collections,the Zotero bibliographic reference management tool, so it can be used to manage the collections of documents created within the Newgate Commons and call upon full texts only when needed.
Voyeur Analytics: Voyeur Analytics. the project will connect Zotero to analytical tools designed by the TAPoR project to work on large collections, including the Voyeur toolset for analysis and visualization. The emphasis throughout will be on extending existing tools as needed to allow researchers to navigate between them seamlessly and to use Zotero as a hub from which to manage large study collections. In the process we will create the potential to analyze and visualize change over time in a way that goes beyond current historical methodologies, illuminating the relationship between text and event in new ways.
- Funder: JISC, NEH, SSHRC
- Programme: Digging into Data Challenge
- Partners
- PI: Tim Hitchcock (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
- PI: Daniel Cohen (George Mason University, USA)
- PI: Geoffrey Rockwell (University of Alberta, Canada)
- William Turkel (University of Western Ontario, USA)
- Stéfan Sinclair (McMaster University, Canada)
- Robert Shoemaker (University of Sheffield, UK)
- HRI Digital, Humanities Research Institute (University of Sheffield, UK)
T
Dr Bruce Tate
Institute of Historical Research
ReScript project manager
Y
Dr Neil Younger, Essex University
E: nyounger@essex.ac.uk
T: 01206-872299