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Jeremy Black is Emeritus Professor of History at Exeter University. He studied at Queens’ College Cambridge, St John’s College Oxford, and Merton College Oxford before joining the University of Durham as a lecturer in 1980. There he gained his PhD and ultimately his professorship in 1994. Black is a prolific lecturer and writer, the author of over 100 books. Many concern aspects of eighteenth century British, European and American political, diplomatic and military history. But he has also broadened his perspective, both temporally and geographically, and published on the history of the press, cartography, warfare, culture and on the nature and uses of history itself. Jeremy’s work adds up to the most sustained presentation of British history in recent decades. He is a major exponent of military, diplomatic and cartographic history and has been important in helping the British to look at their past, as well as in representing British history to foreign audiences. His books include Modern British History (Palgrave, 2000), The Politics of James Bond (Praeger, 2001), America as a Military Power 1775-1882 (Praeger, 2002), The World in the Twentieth Century (Longman, 2002), Parliament and Foreign Policy in the Eighteenth Century (Cambridge, 2004), The English Seaborne Empire, Yale, 2004, and World War Two: A Military History (Routledge, 2003), Great Military Leaders and their Campaigns (Oct. 2008), Maps of War: Mapping conflict through the centuries (Conway, October 11, 2016), The Holocaust: History and Memory (Indiana University Press, August 14, 2016), Air Power: A Global History (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, March 10, 2016), War in Europe: 1450 to the Present (Bloomsbury Academic, February 11, 2016), Insurgency and Counterinsurgency: A Global History (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, August 3, 2016). The Society of Military History recognized Jeremy Black’s work in April 2008, presenting him with the Samuel Eliot Morison Prize for lifetime achievement.
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RT @MrPaulStott My article in The Times on the #Prevent Review, William Shawcross and the challenge posed by Islamist and far-right extremism. The status quo is not an option: thetimes.co.uk/artic…
Watch the event in full here: policyexchange.org.u…
The UK's fertility rate was 1.59 in 2020 - yet on average women would like to have 2.3 and men 2.2 children. This fertility gap is a tragedy - argues @CristinaOhq at Policy Exchange @David_Goodhart pic.twitter.com/9WFX…
RT @JimBethell 🇬🇧 expertise in cutting-edge specialised services demonstrates #NHS at its most innovative. But its huge success means tough decisions if we are to benefit from these advances. This @Policy_Exchange report from @Robert_WH_Ede is so important. Read it! policyexchange.org.u…
RT @edking_I This is a pretty interesting 2021 piece on #climate risk by ex CIA chief David Petraeus + @BenMcAleenan... excerpt below pertinent given escalating global food crisis policyexchange.org.u… pic.twitter.com/knI4…
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