On Monday 19 February, LSE Festival opened with ‘The Five Giants and the Ministers Who Made a Difference’. Chaired by LSE Director Minouche Shafik, Nicholas Timmins, author of The Five Giants: A Biography of the Welfare State, and Professor Sir Julian Le Grand debated the key UK politicians who really made a difference when it came to Beveridge’s ‘Five Giants’: listen to the podcast here. Ahead of the event, Nicholas Timmins gives insight into the reception and impact of Beveridge’s 1942 report, as well as its enduring significance in today’s global, 21st-century context
In The Pound and the Fury: Why Anger and Confusion Reign in an Economy Paralysed by Myth, Jack Mosse...
Edward Kemp, although best known as a park superintendent and as a designer of parks and gardens, wa...
The Burden of Gravity, a poetry collection, explores the fraught history of Woodlands School, a form...
On Tuesday 20 February 2018, LSE hosted a ‘Citizen’s Basic Income Day’, including the LSE Festival e...
Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Beveridge Report and written in the spirit of George Orw...
Sarah Leavitt is an artist, cartoonist and writer, and a member of the Creative Writing Department a...
In A University Education, former Minister of State for Universities and Science (2010-14) David Wil...
How will Boris Johnson’s time as UK Prime Minister be remembered? Ben Worthy and Mark Bennister draw...
On Monday, September 29, 2014, fifteen veterans of the Freedom Summer Project residing in New Englan...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
This paper was written as an academic provocation for the 'Reflections on The Ring' symposium, and i...
This article was originally published in The Prophet -- a journal created by and for the students at...
‘Tomorrow Belong to Us’: The British Far Right since 1967, edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
Julian Hopwood writes about an unsettling event on the field that led him to reflect on mob justice ...
In The Pound and the Fury: Why Anger and Confusion Reign in an Economy Paralysed by Myth, Jack Mosse...
Edward Kemp, although best known as a park superintendent and as a designer of parks and gardens, wa...
The Burden of Gravity, a poetry collection, explores the fraught history of Woodlands School, a form...
On Tuesday 20 February 2018, LSE hosted a ‘Citizen’s Basic Income Day’, including the LSE Festival e...
Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the Beveridge Report and written in the spirit of George Orw...
Sarah Leavitt is an artist, cartoonist and writer, and a member of the Creative Writing Department a...
In A University Education, former Minister of State for Universities and Science (2010-14) David Wil...
How will Boris Johnson’s time as UK Prime Minister be remembered? Ben Worthy and Mark Bennister draw...
On Monday, September 29, 2014, fifteen veterans of the Freedom Summer Project residing in New Englan...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
This paper was written as an academic provocation for the 'Reflections on The Ring' symposium, and i...
This article was originally published in The Prophet -- a journal created by and for the students at...
‘Tomorrow Belong to Us’: The British Far Right since 1967, edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley...
This essay co-authored with Mark Hope, co-founder of the Barn, Banchory, forms a chapter in the book...
Julian Hopwood writes about an unsettling event on the field that led him to reflect on mob justice ...
In The Pound and the Fury: Why Anger and Confusion Reign in an Economy Paralysed by Myth, Jack Mosse...
Edward Kemp, although best known as a park superintendent and as a designer of parks and gardens, wa...
The Burden of Gravity, a poetry collection, explores the fraught history of Woodlands School, a form...