Great Britain -- Politics and government
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Great Britain -- Politics and government
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- A New looking-glass for the Kingdom : wherein those that admire the late governments, may have a true prospect of liberty and slavery, and take their choice
- A Rejoynder by way of animadversions upon Mr. Ashurst his ansvver to the agreement of the people : by an unknown friend, both to him, and his answer, so farre as stands with truth and safety
- A Short historical collection touching the succession to the crown
- A Short history of the kings of England : shewing, what right every king had to the crown, and the manner of their wearing of it, especially from William the Conqueror, to James the Second, that abdicated his three kingdoms : wherein is made appear there hath been no direct succession in the line to create an hereditary right, for six or seven hundred years
- A bone to gnaw, for the Democrats : or, Observations on a pamphlet, entitled, "The political progress of Britain."
- A charge delivered to the Grand Jury, : at the Quarter Sessions, at the New Bayley Court-House, In Salford, April the twenty-fifth, 1798. By Thomas Butterworth Bayley, Esq. Chairman
- A collection of Cato's letters, in the British Journal. : I. Of parties in England; their variableness, and frequent revolutions. II. Of publick disaffection, and its causes. III. Address to the present Parliament: of publick probity and corruption, and the state of the Nation. IV. Of the duty of attending in Parliament. V. VI. Upon libels. VII. The vanity of ambition. VIII. IX. Upon eloquence. X. Upon plantations. XI. Of publick credit: what it is; and the many mischievous mistakes about it. XII. The vanity and madness of conquerors
- A comparative view of the French and English nations, in their manners, politics, and literature. By John Andrews, LL. D
- A compendium of the laws and government ecclesiastical, civil and military, of England, Scotland & Ireland, and dominions, plantations and territories thereunto belonging, with the maritime power thereof, and jurisdiction of courts therein : methodically digested under their proper heads
- A continuation of the account of British subjects who have suffered by the French Revolution. 1795
- A critical review of the new administration
- A dialogue between Jack High and Will Low; proper for the perusal of those who have a right to choose members for the ensuing Parliament
- A dialogue between Mr. Worthy and John Simple, : on some matters relative to the present state of Great Britain. 1792
- A dialogue between Wat Tyler, mischievous Tom, and an English farmer
- A discourse of government as examined by reason, Scripture, and law of the land, or, True weights and measures between soveraignty and liberty
- A discourse of the contests and dissentions between the nobles and the commons in Athens and Rome, : with the consequences they had upon both those states
- A discourse of the contests and dissentions between the nobles and the commons in Athens and Rome, : with the consequences they had upon both those states. : [Two lines in Latin from Lucretius]
- A dissertation on the liberty of the subject in Great Britain. : Most Humbly Inscribed to His Royal Highness Frederick-Augustus, Prince of Wales, &c
- A fair representation of the present political state of Ireland : in a course of strictures on two pamphlets, one entitled 'The case of Ireland re-considered;' the other entitled 'Considerations on the state of public affairs in the year 1799, - Ireland;' ... By Patrick Duigenan,
- A fair representation of the present political state of Ireland : in a course of strictures on two pamphlets, one entitled 'The case of Ireland re-considered;' the other entitled 'Considerations on the state of public affairs in the year 1799, - Ireland;' with observation on ... 'The speech of Lord Minto in the House of Peers, April 11, 1799.' By Patrick Duigenan,
- A fair representation of the present political state of Ireland : in a course of strictures on two pamphlets, one entitled 'the case of Ireland re-considered;' the other entitled 'considerations on the state of public affairs in the year 1799, - Ireland;' with Observations on other modern Publications on the Subject of an incorporating union of great Britain and Ireland, Particularly on a Pamphlet entitled the speech of Lord Minto in the house of Peers, April 11, 1799. By Patrick Duigenan, L. L. D. one of the representatives of the city of Armagh in Parliament
- A genuine and complete collection of all the protests made in the House of Lords, from their original, in the year 1641, to the present time
- A glasse of truth : wherein the bondages of the nation of England under the Norman yoke are clearly seen and discovered, made manifest both by Scripture and reason to be arbitrary and tyrannical over the natives of England : as also shewing why the Lord hath a controversie with the land and gives empiers and kingdomes from one to another, proved both by Scripture and chronicle : very necessary to be looked upon in this present age of ours by an eye of equitie and reason : being an addition to a little booke lately set forth intituled a Prosepctive glasse
- A history of labour representation
- A letter from Earl Stanhope, : to the Right Honourable Edmund Burke: containing a short answer to his late speech on the French Revolution
- A letter from Earl Stanhope, to the Right Honourable Edmund Burke: containing a short answer to his late speech on the French Revolution
- A letter from Timothy Sobersides, : Extinguisher-Maker, at Wolverhampton, to Jonathan Blast, Bellows-Maker, at Birmingham
- A letter from a right honourable aristocrat, to the Right Honourable William Pitt, : on the anti-aristocratical tendency of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke's letter to a noble lord; with hints for amending Lord Grenville's, and Mr. Pitt's patriotic bills. Also, a recommendation of a tax, for Raising the Splendid sum of Four Millions Annually, by a Mode Perfectly Comfortable, and Never Yet Adopted
- A letter of condolence and congratulation from Antichrist to John Bull : and the answer
- A letter to Mr. Sheridan, : on his conduct in Parliament, by a Suffolk freeholder
- A letter to the Right Hon. Edmund Burke, : In reply to his r̀̀eflections on the Revolution in France, &c.'' By a member of the Revolution Society
- A letter to the Right Hon. Edmund Burke, in reply to his Reflections on the revolution in France, &c. : The third edition; with considerable additions. Including also various passages from Mr. Burke's former publications. By a member of the Revolution Society
- A letter to the Right Hon. the Lord Mayor, on the state of the country; the measures to be pursued, in order to obtain peace; and his Lordship's duty at the present crisis
- A letter to the Whigs
- A new dialogue between Monsieur Francois and John English, : on the French revolution
- A political essay, or, Summary review of the kings and government of England since the Norman Conquest
- A review of the political principles of the modern Whigs : In a second letter addressed to the Right Hon. Lord Sheffield. By the Rev. Jerom Alley, L.L.B. M.R.I.A. Chaplain to his Lordship, And Author of Historical Essays on the Lives and Characters of William the Third of England and Louis the Fourteenth of France, &c
- A seasonable, legal, and historical vindication of the good old fundamental liberties, franchises, rights, properties, laws, government of all English freemen : with a chronological collection of their strenuous defenses ...
- A seasonable, legal, historical vindication and chronological collection of the good old fundemental liberties, franchises, rights and laws of all English freemen : their best inheritance, birthright and only security irrefragably evinced by Parliamentary records ... during all the Britons, Romans, Saxons, Danes, Normans and English kings reigns to this present ... with an introductory epistle to all true zealous Protestants, freemen of England ...
- A second letter to Mr. Sheridan. : With strictures on the general conduct of opposition. By a Suffolk freeholder
- A serious exhortation to the electors of Great Britain : wherein the importance of the approaching elections is particularly proved from our present situation both at home and abroad
- A short exposition of the important advantages to be derived by Great Britain from the war, whatever its issue and success by the author of The glimpse through the gloom
- A short seasonable hint, addressed to the landholders and merchants of Great Britain, on the alarm of a war with Russia
- A state of play : British politics on screen, stage and page, from Anthony Trollope to 'the thick of it'
- A supplement to the protests of the Lords; being a list of all such gentlemen of the House of Commons, as voted for, or against the present number of standing forces in this kingdom
- A third letter to a Member of the present Parliament, : on the proposals for peace with the regicide directory of France. By the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke
- A third letter to a member of the present Parliament, : on the proposals for peace with the regicide directory of France. By the late Right Hon. Edmund Burke
- A treatise of taxes & contributions : shewing the nature and measures of crown-lands, assesments, customs, poll-moneys, lotteries, benevolence, penalties, monopolies, offices, tythes, raising of coins, harth-money, excize, &c. : with several intersperst discourses and digressions concerning warrs, the church, universities, rents and purchases, usury and exchange, banks and Lombards, registries for conveyances, beggars, ensurance, exportation of money, wool, free-ports, coins, housing, liberty of conscience, &c. : the same being frequently applied to the present state and affairs of Ireland
- A view of the internal policy of Great Britain. : In two parts. Part I. Of the alterations in the constitution, from the reign of Henry the seventh to the End of George the Second; representing the reciprocal Effects, which these and Commerce have had on each other. Part II. Of the various stages of political society, and the Principles upon which they move, drawn from History, and Nature. With an Application to the Interest of Great Britain, shewing the great Improvement this Island is capable of in respect to Numbers, Riches, and Powers and that it does not depend on Foreign Connexions, however useful, but on itself alone
- Account of the proceedings of a meeting of the people, : in a Field near Copenhagen-House, Thursday, Nov. 12; including the substance of the speeches of citizens Duane, Thelwall, Jones, &c. With the petitions to the King, Lords, and Commons, of nearly four hundred thousand Britons, inhabitants of London and its environs; Assembled together in the open Air, to express their Free Sentiments, According to the Tenure of the Bill of Right, on the subject of the threatened invasion of their Rights by a Convention Bill
- Acta regia : or, an account of the treaties, letters and instruments between the monarchs of England and foreign powers, publish'd in Mr. Rymer's Foedera, which are the basis of the English history, and contain those authorities which rectify the mistakes that most of our writers have committed for want of such a collection of records. Translated from the French of M. Rapin, as publish'd by M. Le Clerc. With the heads of the kings and queens, curiously engrav'd by Mr. Vandergucht. .
- Adam Ferguson in the Scottish enlightenment : the Roman past and Europe's future
- America compared with England : the respective social effects of the American and English systems of government and legislation, and the mission of democracy
- An answer to the pamphlet, : entitled Arguments for and against an union, &c. &c. In a letter addressed to Edward Cooke, Esq. Secretary at War. By Pemberton Rudd, Esq. Barrister at Law
- An answer to the pamphlet, : entitled Arguments for and against an union, &c. &c. In letters addressed to Edward Cooke, ... By Pemberton Rudd, ... Letter the second
- An answer to the pamphlet, entitled Arguments for and against an union, : &c. &c. In a letter addressed to Edward Cooke, Esq. Secretary at War. Nolumus Leges Hiberniae Mutari. By Pemberton Rudd, Esq. Barrister at Law
- An elementary programme for the salvation of the English monarchy
- An essay on liberty. : Libertas auro pretiosior
- An essay on military education. : By Lewis Lochée, Master Of The Military Academy, Little Chelsea
- An essay on republican principles, : and on the inconveniencies of a commonwealth in a large country and nation; illustrated by examples from ancient and modern history; and concluding with some reflections on the present situation of Great Britain. By John Andrews, L.L.D
- An essay on the causes which have produced, the principles which support, and the consequences which may follow, from the two Bills of Lord Grenville and Mr. Pitt. The One Entitled, à ̀n Act for the Safety and Preservation of his Majesty's Person and Government, &c. &c.'' The Other, an Act for the More Effectually Preventing Seditious Meetings and Assemblies.'' Dedicated (by Permission) to the Honourable Thomas Erskine. By James Roper Head, of Hermitage, in the County of Kent, Esq
- An historical essay on different governments. : By James Green, Lieutenant In His Majesty's Marine Forces. As all Government began, so all Government must end, by the People: Tyrannical Governments by their Virtue and Courage,-And Free Governments by their Vice and Baseness
- An historical essay, shewing that the crown and Kingdom of Scotland, is imperial and independent. : Wherein the gross mistakes of a late book, intituled, The superiority and direct dominion of the imperial crown and kingdom of England, over the crown and kingdom of Scotland, and of some other books to that purpose are exposed. With an appendix, Containing the Copies of some Writs and Seals, which illustrate this Subject. By James Anderson A. M. Writer to Her Majesties Signet
- An historical view of the English government, : from the settlement of the Saxons in Britain to the accession of the House of Stewart. By John Millar, Esq
- An historical view of the English government, : from the settlement of the Saxons in Britain to the accession of the house of Stewart. By John Millar, Esq. Professor of Law in the University of Glasgow
- An historical view of the English government, : from the settlement of the Saxons in Britain to the accession, of the House of Stewart. By John Millar, Esq. Professor of Law in the University of Glasgow
- An historical view of the English government, from the settlement of the Saxons in Britain to the revolution in 1688
- An oration, delivered before the Harmony Society, in New-Haven, on the fortieth anniversary of American independence,
- Arguments for and against an union, : between Great Britain and Ireland, considered
- Arguments for and against an union, between Great Britain and Ireland, considered
- Bagehot : the English constitution
- Brexit : a negotiation update : hearing before the Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia, and Emerging Threats of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifteenth Congress, first session, December 6, 2017
- British government and politics : a comparative guide
- British government and politics : balancing Europeanization and independence
- British idealism and political theory
- British political culture and the idea of 'public opinion', 1867-1914
- British political thought in history, literature and theory, 1500-1800
- British politics for dummies
- British public policy, 1776-1939 : an economic, social, and political perspective
- British working class politics, 1832-1914
- Business life and public policy : essays in honour of D.C. Coleman
- Business, politics, and society : an Anglo-American comparison
- By the King : a proclamation for the auoiding of all intercourse betweene His Maiesties royall court, and the cities of London and Westminster, and places adioyning
- Cabinet government,
- Capitalism, culture, and decline in Britain, 1750-1990
- Catholic lyceum course season 1872-3. Under the auspices of the above society ...
- Cato's letters : or, essays on liberty, civil and religious, and other important subjects. In four volumes.
- Cato's letters. ...
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books.
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books.
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books.
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books. By Sir William Blackstone, Knt. One of His Majesty's judges of the Court of Common Pleas. Re-printed from the British copy, page for page with the last edition
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books. By Sir William Blackstone, Knt. One of the late justices of His Britannic Majesty's Court of Common Pleas. In four volumes. Vol. I.--Book I [-Vol. IV. Book IV.]
- Commentaries on the laws of England. : In four books. By Sir William Blackstone, Knt. One of the late justices of His Britannick Majesty's Court of Common Pleas. In four volumes.
- Comparing Westminster
- Comrade or Brother? : a history of the British labour movement,
- Considerations on the French war, : in which the circumstances leading to it, its object, And the Resources of Britain for carrying it on, are examined, in a letter, to the Rt. Honble. William Pitt, by a British Merchant
- Coup-d'œil sur la Grande-Bretagne
- Crossing borders : political essays
- Crowds and popular politics in early modern England
- CultureQuest business : UK, Government [video]
- Daily watch, How can Britain fix Brexit?
- Dedication to the collective body of the people of England, : in which the source of our present political distractions are (sic) pointed out, and a plan proposed for their remedy and redress. By the Earl of Abingdon
- Del teatro Brittanico, o, Vero historia dello stato, antico & presente, corte, gouerno spirituale e temporale, leggi, massime, religioni & euuenimenti della Grande Brettagna
- Democracy and the vote in British politics, 1848-1867 : the making of the second Reform Act
- Disraeli the destroyer of Toryism
- Economy, polity, and society : British intellectual history, 1750-1950
- Education policy at the party conferences
- Eight speeches made in Parliament, on several important occasions. : Recommended to the electors of Great-Britain, as a seasonable preparative for the ensuing elections
- Electoral shocks : the volatile voter in a turbulent world
- Electoral systems and voting in the United Kingdom
- Empire's endgame : racism and the British state
- England's true interest considered, : with honour to the prince, and Safety to the People
- England, the civilizer : her history developed in its principles
- English liberties : or, the free-born subject's inheritance. Being a help to justices as well as a guide to constables, containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, The Habeas Corpus Act, &c. With Comments upon each of them. The Proceedings in Appeals of Murder; The Work and Power of Parliaments, the Qualifications necessary for such as should be Chosen to that great Trust. The Advantage Englishmen enjoy by Trials by Juries; That they are Judges of Law as well as Fact; and are not Fineable, nor to be Punish'd, for going contrary to the Judges Directions. II. Of justices of the peace; their Oath, Office, and Power, in many Respects; With several Law-Cases Alphabetically Degested for Ease and Brevity, and Warrants proper thereto, concluding with Directions for Drovers, Badgers, Butchers, Toll-Keepers, and Clerks of the Market, &c. III. The coroner and constable's duty, Relating to Dead Bodies, Murder, Man-Slaughter, and Felo-de-se; Arrests, Escapes, and Conservation of the Peace. And Lastly, The Church-Warden, Overseer, and Scavenger's Duty at Large, in the most necessary Particulars. First compiled by Henry Care, and now inlarged with new and useful additions, by a wellwisher to his country. Dedicated to the Honourable House of Commons
- English liberties : or, the free-born subject's inheritance. Being a help to justices as well as a guide to constables. Containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, The Habeas Corpus Act, &c. With Comments upon each of them. The Proceedings in Appeals of Murder; The Work and Power of Parliaments, the Qualifications necessary for such as should be Chosen to that great Trust. The Advantage Englishmen enjoy by Trials by Juries That they are Judges of Law as well as Fact; and are not Fineable, nor to be Punish'd, for going contrary to the Judges Directions. II. Of justices of the peace; their Oath, Office, and Power, in many Respects; With several Law-Cases Alphabetically Digested for Ease and brevity, and Warrants proper thereto. concluding with Directions for Drovers, Badgers, Butchers, Toll-Keepers, and Clerks of the Market, &c III. The coroner and constable's duty, Relating to Dead Bodies, Murder, Man-Slaughter, and Felo-de-se; Arreste, Escapes, and Conservation of the Peace, The Church Warden, Over Seer, and Scavenger's Duty at Large, in the most necessary Particulars. And Lastly, An Abstract of the act now in force against Popery and Papists First compiled by Henry Care, and now inlarged with new and useful additions, by a wellwisher to his country
- English liberties, : or the free-born subject's inheritance; containing Magna Charta, Charta de Foresta, the statute De Tallagio non concedendo, the Habea Corpus act, and several other statutes; with comments on each of them. Likewise. The Proceedings in Appeals of Murder: Of Ship-Money; Of Tonnage and Poundage. Of Parliaments, and the Qualification and Choice of Members: Of the Three Estates, and of the Settlement of the Crown by Parliament. Together with a Short History of the Succession, not by any Hereditary Right: Also a Declaration of the Liberties of the Subject: And of the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy. The Petition of Right; with a short but impartial Relation of the Difference between Charles I. and the Long Parliament, concerning the Prerogative of the King, the Liberties of the Subject, and the Rise of the Civil Wars. Of Trials by Juries, and of the Qualifications of Jurors; their Punishment for Misbehaviour, and of Challenges to them. Lastly, Of Justices of the Peace, Coroners, Constables. Church-Wardens, Overseers of the Poor, Surveyors of the Highways, &c. With many Law-Cases throughout the Whole. Compiled first by Henry Care, and now continued, with large additions, by W. N. of the Middle-Temple, Esq;
- English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance ...
- English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance ...
- English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance : containing, I. Magna Charta, the Habeas Corpus Act, and divers other most useful statutes ... II. The proceedings in appeals of murther, the work and power of parliaments ... as also the oath and duty of grand and petty juries, III. All the laws against conventicles and Protestant dissenters ... and an abstract of all the laws against rapists
- English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance : containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, the Habeas Corpus Act ... II. The proceedings in appeals of murther, the work and power of Parliament, the qualifications necessary for such ... III. All the laws against conventicles and Protestant dissenters with notes, and directions both to constables and others ..., and an abstract of all the laws against papists
- English liberties, or, The free-born subject's inheritance : containing, I. Magna Charta, the petition of right, the habeas corpus act &c. ... II. Of justices of the peace ... III. The coroner and constable's duty ...
- Essay philosophique sur le gouvernement civil, : Ou l'on traite De la Necessite, de L'Origine, des Droits, des Bornes, & des differentes formes de la Souverainete; Selon les Principes De feu M. Francois de Salignac de la Motthe-Fenelon, Archeveque Duc de Cambray
- Essays on the following interesting subjects : viz. I. Government. II. Revolutions. III. The British constitution. IV. Kingly government. V. Parliamentary representation & reform. VI. Liberty & equality. VII. Taxation. and, VIII. The present war, and the stagnation of credi as connected with it. By John Young,
- Essays philosophical and moral, historical and literary : By W. Belsham. In two volumes. .
- Essays, philosophical, historical, and literary
- Essays, philosophical, historical, and literary : In two volumes. .
- Essays, philosophical, historical, and literary. In four volumes. Vol. III
- Ethics and integrity in British politics : how citizens judge their politicians' conduct and why it matters
- Examen legum Angliæ, or, The laws of England examined, by Scripture, antiquity and reason
- Extermination, or an appeal to the people of England, on the present war, with France
- Foedera, : conventiones, literæ, et cujuscunque generis acta publica, inter reges Angliæ, et alios quosuis imperatores, reges, ... ab anno 11O1, ad nostra usque tempora, habita aut tractata; ... In lucem missa de mandato Reginæ. Accurante Thoma Rymer, .
- Foedera, : conventiones, literæ, et cujuscunque generis acta publica, inter reges Angliæ, et alios quosvis imperatores, reges, pontifices, principes, vel communitates, ab Ineunte Saeculo Duodecimo, viz. ab anno 1101, ad nostra usque tempora, habita aut tractata; Ex Autographis, infra Secretiores Archivorum Regiorum Thesaurarias, per multa Saecula reconditis, fideliter Exscripta. In lucem missa de mandato nuperæ Reginæ. Accurante Thoma Rymer, Ejusdem Serenissimae reginae Historiographo
- Four discourses on the following subjects : viz. I. Of obedience to the supreme powers, and the Duty of Subjects in all Revolutions. II. Of the laws of nations, and the Rights of Sovereigns. III. Of the power of the magistrate, and the Rights of Mankind, in Matters of Religion. IV. Of the liberty of the press
- Fox and Pitt's speeches in the House of Commons, : on Tuesday, June 8, 1784. These speeches (which are an abridgement of all the arguments of both parties, upon (the business of the Westminster scrutiny, and contain the accusation of government by the former, and the defence of it by the latter leader ) are preceded by a brief impartial detail of the progress and proceedings in this affair, from the close of the poll to the determination of the House of Commons, comprehending in the whole a body of information, which will enable the plainest understanding to form a decisive opinion upon a question of the very first moment to every citizen of this country
- Free Parliaments : or, an argument on their constitution; proving some of their powers to be independant. To which is added, an appendix, containing several original letters and papers, which passed between the Court of Hanover, and a Gentleman at London, in the Years 1713 and 1714, touching the right of the Duke of Cambridge to reside in England, and sit in Parliament. By the author of The Britannic constitution
- Gender and the liberal democrats : representing women?
- Gentile folly : the Rothschilds
- Governmental and royal perfidy
- Great Britain : historical precedents on the electoral appointment process
- Hume's politics : coordination and crisis in the history of England
- Is all we want worth a civil war? : Or, Conciliatory Thoughts upon the present crisis
- Journals of the House of Commons. : From November the 26th, 1778, In the Nineteenth Year of the Reign of King George the Third, to August the 24th, 1780, In the Twentieth Year of the Reign of King George the Third
- Journals of the House of Commons. : From November the 26th, 1782, In the Twenty-Third Year of the Reign of King George the Third, to March the 24th, 1784, In the Twenty-Fourth Year of the Reign of King George the Third
- Journals of the House of Commons. : From October the 31st, 1780, In the Twenty-First Year of the Reign of King George the Third, to October the 10th, 1782, In the Twenty-Second Year of the Reign of King George the Third
- Journals of the House of Lords, beginning anno decimo quarto Georgii Tertii, 1774. Vol. XXXIV
- Journals of the House of Lords, beginning anno undecimo Georgii Tertii, 1770. Vol. XXXIII
- Judge Ashhurst's charge, to the Grand Jury of Middlesex. : II. Proclamation of May, 1792. III. Proclamation of Nov. 1792. IV. Lord Grenville's circular letter. V. Thanks of the Common Council of London, to the Lord Mayor. VI. Resolutions of the corporation of London
- Jura Anglorum. : The rights of Englishmen. By Francis Plowden, Esq. Conveyancer, of the Middle Temple
- Leading the localities : executive mayors in English local governance
- Letter to the Right Hon. Henry Dundass, : Secretary of State for the Home Department. By the London Corresponding Society, united for the purpose of obtaining a reform in Parliament
- Liberals : a history of the Liberal and Liberal Democratic parties
- Machiavel, as he lately appeared to his deare sons, the modern proiectors : divulged for the pretended good of the kingdomes of England, Scotland, and Ireland
- Magnæ Britanniæ notitia : or, the present state of Great-Britain; With divers remarks upon The Ancient State thereof. By John Chamberlayne, Esq; Fellow of the Royal Society. And more exact and larger Additions in the List of the Officers, &c. than in any former Impression. With His Majesty's Royal Privilege
- Marketing sovereign promises : monopoly brokerage and the growth of the English state
- Meet the lords, 3, Brexit and exit
- Meet the lords, [1], Joining the club
- Meet the lords, [2], Rebel lords
- Memo from Machiavelli
- Memoires touchant le gouvernement D'Angleterre, : Divisʹes en deux parites: et Dʹediʹes au Roi. Premiere partie. Contenant Une Histoire abregee des Changemens les plus considerables, qui sont arrives dans le Gouvernement D'Angleterre, depuis le tems de Guillaume I. Jusques a la derniere grande Revolution
- Miscellanea parliamentaria : containing presidents 1. of freedom from arrests, 2. of censures : 1. upon such as have wrote books to the dishonour of the Lords or Commons, or to alter the constitution of the government, 2. upon members for misdemeanors, 3. upon persons not members, for contempts and misdemeaners, 4. for misdemeanors in election : besides other presidents and orders of a various nature, both of the House of Lords and Commons : with an appendix containing several instances wherein the Kings of England have consulted and advised with their parliaments 1. in marriages, 2. peace and war, 3. leagues, and other weighty affairs of the kingdom
- Miscellanea parliamentaria : containing presidents 1. of freedom from arrests, 2. of censures : 1. upon such as have wrote books to the dishonour of the Lords or Commons, or to alter the constitution of the government, 2. upon members for misdemeanours, 3. upon persons not members, for contempts and misdemeanours, 4. for misdemeanours in elections ... : with an appendix containing several instances wherein the kings of England have consulted and advised with their parliaments 1. in marriages, 2. peace and war, 3. leagues ...
- Moral and political dialogues : with letters on chivalry and romance: by the Reverend Doctor Hurd, Now Lord Bishop of Worcester. In three volumes. .
- Moral and political dialogues : with letters on chivalry and romance: by the Reverend Doctor Hurd. In three volumes. .
- Moral capital : foundations of British abolitionism
- Mr. St. George, : a true story. Giving an Account of this eminent Merchant's Quarrel with a celebrated House in France, for devising a new System of Book-Keeping-His Endeavours to suppress it in every Part of Europe-His prosecuting his junior Clerks for favouring the Innovation-His Liberality in paying the Reckoning for Foreign Merchants, the bad Return he has met with for his Services-His Connections with a House at Turin-His regulating the Balance of Trade-His Endeavours to prevent a late Bankruptcy in Flanders-The Decline of his Interest in the Bank of Amsterdam-His being humbugged by a Prussian Swindler-His Purchase of Rhenish Wine-The Dissentions in his own Family-His immense Debts-Approaching Bankruptcy-And incurable Obstinacy in still opposing French Book-Keeping. By John Bull
- Narrative of the proceedings at a general meeting of the London Corresponding Society. Second edition, revised and corrected. ... A general meeting of the London Corresponding Society having been proposed and approved ... accordingly, on Monday the 29th of June, 1795, the society met in an inclosed field, ...
- National Socialism now
- Negotiating the North : meeting-places in the Middle Ages in the North Sea zone
- Nil dictum quod non dictum prius, or, The case of the government of England established by law : impartially stated and faithfully collected from the best historians, president [sic] of former ages, and authority of records
- Observations on government, : including some animadversions on Mr. Adams's Defence of the constitutions of government of the United States of America: and on Mr. De Lolme's Constitution of England.
- Observations on government, : including some animadversions on Mr. Adams's Defence of the constitutions of government of the United States of America: and on Mr. De Lolme's Constitution of England. By a farmer, of New-Jersey
- Observations on the conduct of Great-Britain, : in respect to foreign affairs. In which all the objections that have been thrown out in some late pamphlets and discourses are fairly answered, and the Measures of the Present Ministry fully Vindicated
- Observations on the conduct of Great-Britain, in respect to foreign affairs. : In which all the objections that have been thrown out in some late pamphlets and discourses are fairly answered, and the Measures of the Present Ministry fully Vindicated
- Old English loyalty & policy agreeable to primitive Christianity, The first part
- On British Islam : religion, law, and everyday practice in shari'a councils
- On the laws and governance of England
- Our republican constitution
- Panorama : Britain speaks, [Series 64, Episode 21], Why we voted leave
- Paradoxes of civil society : new perspectives on modern German and British history
- Pearls cast before swine, : by Edmund Burke, scraped together by Old Hubert
- Plain reasons for adopting the plan of the societies calling themselves The Friends of the People, : and their convention of delegates, as copied from the works of Mr. Thos. Paine. In a serious address to the citizens of Edinburgh. By A. Scott, citizen & hairdresser
- Political conferences between several great men, : in the last and present century. With notes by the editor
- Political conferences between several great men, : in the last and present century. With notes by the editor, Thomas Tyers, Esq. of the inner temple
- Political dialogues, : upon the subject of equality
- Political discourses : tending to the introduction of a free and equal commonwealth in England
- Political disquisitions; or, An enquiry into public errors, defects, and abuses. : Illustrated by, and established upon facts and remarks, extracted from a variety of authors, ancient and modern. : Calculated to draw the timely attention of government and people, to a due consideration of the necessity, and the means, of reforming those errors, defects, and abuses; of restoring the constitution, and saving the state.
- Political disquisitions; or, An enquiry into public errors, defects, and abuses. : Illustrated by, and established upon facts and remarks, extracted from a variety of authors, ancient and modern. Calculated to draw the timely attention of government and people, to a due consideration of the necessity, and the means, of reforming those errors, defects, and abuses; of restoring the constitution, and saving the state. By J. Burgh, gentleman; author of the Dignity of human nature, and other works.
- Political power and democratic control in Britain : the democratic audit of the United Kingdom
- Prospectus of a course of lectures, : to be delivered every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, during the ensuing lent. In strict conformity with the restrictions of Mr. Pitt's Convention Act. By John Thelwall
- Prosperity of England midst the clamors of ruin, by a merchant of London
- Putting voters in their place : geography and elections in Great Britain
- Reason urged against precedent, in a letter to the people of Derby. : By Henry Yorke
- Reasons for a new bill of rights : humbly submitted to the consideration of the ensuing sessions of Parliament
- Reform and its complexities in modern Britain : essays inspired by Sir Brian Harrison
- Reformers no rioters. : Printed by order of the London Corresponding Society
- Remarks on a letter relative to the late petitions to Parliament, for the safety and preservation of his majesty's person, and for the more effectually preventing seditious meetings and assemblies; with compleat abstracts of the several clauses contained in each bill. For The Use Of The Public. By Sir Edward Harington, Knt. Author of an Excursion from Paris to Fontainbleau; a Schizzo on Genius; and Desultory Thoughts on the French Nation, &c
- Remarks on the history of England : From the minutes of Humphry Oldcastle, Esq;
- Remarks on the history of England. : By the Right Honorable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke
- Remarks on the history of England. : By the Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke
- Remarks, addressed to the Rev. Charles Weston, chairman of a committee of the Durham County and City Association, on the resolutions dated February 11, published February 19, 1793
- Ruling the world
- Searching for the state in British legal thought : competing conceptions of the public sphere
- Searchlight interview with Andy Bell
- Searchlight interview with Anna Sullivan
- Searchlight interview with Clive Bloom
- Searchlight interview with David Foreman, Part 1
- Searchlight interview with David Landau, August 24, 2015
- Searchlight interview with David Landau, August 7, 2015
- Searchlight interview with Ken Leech, Part 2
- Searchlight interview with Kevin Dixon
- Searchlight interview with Mark Charlton Metcalf
- Searchlight interview with Max Levitas, Part 2
- Searchlight interview with Philip Pedley
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 1
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 11
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 12
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 13
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 16
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 2
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 5, Part 1
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 5, Part 2
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 6, November 9, 2015
- Searchlight interview with anonymous subject 9
- Select speeches, forensick and parliamentary : with prefatory remarks
- Sexual politics : sexuality, family planning, and the British Left from the 1880s to the present day
- Simon Hughes
- Sport and the making of Britain
- Spring comes again : a farmer's philosophy
- Storm over Britain
- Stuart Hall
- Substance of Lord Mornington's speech : in the House of Commons, on Tuesday, January 21, 1794, on a motion for an address to His Majesty at the commencement of the Sessions of Parliament
- Substance of the speech of Lord Auckland, : in the House of Peers, April 11, 1799, ... respecting the resolutions adopted by the two Houses of Parliament, as the basis of an union between Great Britain and Ireland
- Substance of the speech of the Right Honourable Henry Addington, : Speaker of the House of Commons, on the 12th February, 1799, in the Committee of the Whole House, To whom His Majesty's most gracious Message of the 22d January, relative to an Union between Great Britain and Ireland, was referred
- Substance of the speech of the Right Honourable Henry Addington, : Speaker of the House of Commons, on the 12th of February, 1799, in the Committee of the Whole House, To whom his Majesty's Most Gracious Message of the 22d January, Relative to Ireland, was Referred
- Substance of the speech of the Right Honourable Henry Addington, : speaker of the House of Commons, on the 12th February, 1799, in the Committee of the Whole House, to whom His Majesty's most gracious message of the 22d January, relative to Ireland, was referred
- Substance of the speech of the Right Honourable Henry Addington, : speaker of the House of Commons, on the 12th February, 1799, in the committee of the whole House, to whom His Majesty's most gracious message of the 22d January, relative to Ireland, was referred
- The British and Irish ruling class, 1660-1945
- The British political process : an introduction
- The British system of government and its historical development
- The Churchill myths
- The Disloyal forty & forty one and the loyal eighty : presented to publick view in a prospect & scheme, shewing the difference of the years forty and forty one from the year eighty : drawn up and published to answer the clamours of the malicious and to inform the ignorant
- The English constitution : myths and realities
- The English king; : a study of the monarchy and the royal family, historical, constitutional, and social
- The Liberal Unionist Party : a history
- The Narrow way, or, Political maxims and considerations respecting the present state of affairs : tending to dissipate humourous fears and jealousies on all sides, perswasive of unity and moderation, and not unworthy the cognizance (perhaps) of an House of Commons
- The New Left in Britain : the origin, development and impact of the New Left, with a comment on its failure to contribute to a solution of the problems of to-day
- The Oxford handbook of British politics
- The Parliamentary or Constitutional history of England : Being a faithful account of all the most remarkable transactions in Parliament, from the earliest times, to the restoration of King Charles II. Collected from the records, the journals of both Houses, original manuscripts, scarce speeches, and tracts; all compared with the several contemporary writers, and connected, throughout, with the history of the times. By several hands. Vol. IX. From the first meeting of the long Parliament, November 3, 1640, to their recess, in September 1641
- The Parliamentary or constitutional history of England : from the earliest times, to the restoration of King Charles II. ... By several hands
- The Parliamentary register : or, history of the proceedings and debates of the House of Commons;
- The Parliamentary register : or, history of the proceedings and debates of the House of Commons; ... and a list of the acts
- The Parliamentary register; or, History of the proceedings and debates of the House of Commons : Containing an account of the most interesting speeches and motions; accurate copies of the most remarkable letters and papers; of the most material evidence, petitions, &c. laid before and offered to the House, during the first session of the fifteenth Parliament of Great Britain. Begun to be holden at Westminster on the 31st day of October 1780
- The Pocket Essential The Rise of New Labour
- The Real War on Obesity : Contesting Knowledge and Meaning in a Public Health Crisis
- The Rt. Hon. J.R. Clynes P.C., M.P., D.C.L : memoirs
- The Tories : from Winston Churchill to David Cameron
- The UK Parliament
- The ancient and present manner of holding parliaments in England : with their priviledges
- The ancient method and manner of holding parliaments in England
- The ancient method and manner of holding parliaments in England
- The beauties of the Brinsleiad : or, a sketch of the opposition: a poem. Interspersed with notes. No. I
- The britannic constitution : or, the fundamental form of government in Britain. Demonstrating, the original contract entered into by King and people, according to the Primary Institutions thereof, in this Nation. Wherein is proved, that the placing on the throne King William III. was the natural fruit and effect of the constitution. And That the Succession to This Crown, established in the Present Protestant Heirs, is De Jure, and Justified by the Fundamental Laws of Great-Britain. And Many Important Original Powers and Privileges, of Both Houses of Parliament, are Exhibited. By Roger Acherley, late of the Inner-Temple, Esq; The second edition. To which is added, a supplement, containing reasons for uniformity in the state
- The britannic constitution : or, the fundamental form of government in Britain. Demonstrating, the original contract entred into by King and people, according to the Primary Institutions thereof, in this Nation. Wherein is proved, that the placing on the throne King William III. was the natural fruit and effect of the original constitution. And That the Succession to This Crown, Establish'd in the Present Protestant Heirs, is De Jure, and Justify'd, by the Fundamental Laws of Great Britain. And Many Important Original Powers and Privileges, of Both Houses of Parliament, are Exhibited. By Roger Acherley, Esquire, of the Inner-Temple, London
- The charge given by Sr. William Smith, Brt. : at the quarter-sessions of the peace held for the county of Middlesex, at Westminster, on Monday the 24th of April, 1682
- The conduct of the Admiralty, : in the late expedition of the enemy to the coast of Ireland, as stated by ministers, in the House of Commons, on the 3d of March, 1797: With an authentic copy of the official papers on that Subject, ordered to be printed by Parliament
- The conspiracy of the aristocrats laid open
- The constitution of England, or, An account of the English government, in which it is compared, both with the republican form of government, and the other monarchies in Europe
- The constitution of England; or, An account of the English government : in which it is compared, both with the Republican form of government, and the other monarchies in Europe. By J.L. de Lolme, advocate, member of the Council of Two Hundred in the Republic of Geneva
- The constitution of England; or, An account of the English government: : in which it is compared, both with the Republican form of government, and the other monarchies in Europe.
- The constitutional defence of England, internal and external. By John Cartwright, Esq
- The converts: a familiar ode. Addressed to Sir G----- L--------, Chan-----r of the Ex------r
- The correspondence of the London Corresponding Society revised and corrected, : with explanatory notes and a prefatory letter, by the Committee of Arrangement, Deputed For That Purpose: published for the use of members, Pursuant To The 17th Article Of The Society's Regulations
- The court register, and statesman's remembrancer : containing, a series of all the great officers, prime ministers of state, &c. Viz. Lords High Stewards. Archbishops and Bishops. Lords Chancellors, Lord Keepers and Commissioners of the Great Seal. Lords President of the Council. Lords Treasurers and Commissioners of the Treasury. Knights of the Garter, Principal Secretaries of State. Lord Chief Justices and other Judges of the several Courts at Westminster. Masters of the Rolls. Serjeants at Law. Attornies and Solicitors General, &c. Masters in Chancery, Recorders of London, &c. &c. &c. Together with The Commissioners for managing the several Branches of the Crown Revenues, from the first Appointment; and also some Account of the Institution, Nature, and Business of the several Offices. The whole corrected to June 3, 1782. With a Copious Index of Names
- The forme of government of the kingdome of England : collected out of the fundamental lawes and statutes of this kingdome : wherin is manifested the customary uses of the kings of England upon all occasions, either of marriage, peace or warre, to call their peeres and barons of the realme to be bartners [sic] in treatizes, and to give their judicious advice : the state and security of the whole kingdome depending upon such counsells and determinations : likewise the names of the kings and the times when such Parliaments were called, and the acts that passed upon those and the like occasions : Henry I, Iohn, Henry 3, Edward I, Edward 2, Edward 3, Richard 2, Henry 4, Henry 5, Henry 6, Edward 4, Henry 7, Henry 8 : published for the satisfaction of all those that desire to know the manner and forme of the government of the land, and the fundamentall lawes of the kingdome
- The free-Holder : Or political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq;
- The free-Holder, : or, political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq;
- The free-Holder. : Or, political essays
- The free-born subject, or, The Englishmans birthright asserted against all tyrannical vsurpations either in church or state
- The free-holder, : or, political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq
- The free-holder, or, Political essays
- The free-holder. Or Political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq
- The free-holder; Or, Political essays. By the Right Honourable Joseph Addison, Esq
- The good state : on the principles of democracy
- The impossible office? : a history of the British prime minister
- The infant lawyer; or the government of England. Explained to the capacity of youth. ... By a lawyer
- The miscellaneous works of Hugh Boyd, the author of the letters of Junius. With an account of his life and writings, by Lawrence Dundas Campbell. ...
- The nature and extent of supreme power, : in a letter to the Rev. David Williams, (author Of Letters ON Political Liberty) showing the ultimate end of all human power, and of a free government under God. And in which Mr. Locke's theory of government is examined and explained; Contrary to the general Construction of that Writer's particular Sentiments ON The Supremacy Of The People. By M. Dawes, Esq
- The new democracy and the constitution
- The new state of England under Their Majesties K. William and Q. Mary : in three parts
- The parliamentary or constitutional history of England : being a faithful account of all the most remarkable transactions in Parliament, from the earliest times. Collected from the journals of both Houses, the records, ... By several hands.
- The parliamentary register, : containing lists of the twenty four Parliaments from 1660 to 1741. In which The Names of the Members are not only register'd under the Names of the Counties, Cities and Boroughs, represented by them; (and a Margin left to register many succeeding Parliaments;) but they are Collected again into an Alphabetical Index, referring to the Places they have been return'd for, and distinguishing the Restoration Parliament and the last. The second edition, Corrected by the Returns to Parliament; with a Preface containing some Observations on each Parliament. To which is added, an exact list of the present House of Lords, and of the Peers and Members for Scotland in every Parliament since the Union; and the Peers extinct since the Restoration
- The path of American public policy : comparative perspectives
- The pillars of Parliament struck at by the hands of a Cambridge doctor, or, A short view of some of his erroneous positions, destructive to the ancient laws & government of England : to which is added the true state of the doctor's error about the Parliament, 49 H.3
- The planning polity : planning, government, and the policy process
- The political salvation of Great Britain, by means entirely new; rendered necessary by the urgency of circumstances: concluding with a remedy for the depreciated state of the funds, highly interesting to stockholders. By a gentleman independent of party
- The political state of Great Britain : containing an impartial account of the most important and remarkable transactions; Changes in the Ministry; And Proceedings in Parliament and Convocation; And in Particular, The Whole Debates and Examinations of the House of Peers about the Affairs of Spain, viz. The Earl of Peterborow's Answers, to the Five Questions put to his Lordship; The Earl of Galway's Narrative and Reply; Original Letters of the Earl of Sunderland, and Mr. Stanhope; The Speeches and Protests of several Lords on that Occasion; and other Valuable Pieces not yet Publish'd. In a letter, from a secretary to a foreign minister, who has resided Twenty One Years in England, to his friend at the Hague. To be continu'd monthly. February, 1710/11
- The politics of expertise : how NGOs shaped modern Britain
- The politics of heritage : the legacies of 'race'
- The pre-eminence and pedigree of Parlement : whereunto is added a vindication of som passages reflecting upon the author in a book call'd The popish royal favorite, pen'd and published by Mr. Prynne wherein he stiles him no frend [sic] to Parlements, and a malignant, pag. 42 : with a clearing of som occurrences in Spain at His Maiesties being there, cited by the said Master Prynne out of the vocal forest
- The present state of Great Britain and Ireland, : in three parts. The I. Of South Britain II. Of North , III. Of Ireland. Containing An Accurate and Impartial Account of these Famous Islands: Of their several Counties, and Inhabitants; the Advantages and Disadvantages of Both, in respect to Foreign Countries; and their Curiosities, of Nature and Art. Of the vast, populous, and opulent City of London, the Metropolis of England; and of the Two celebrated Universities, Oxford and Cambridge. Of the Britons Original, Language, Temper, Genius, Religion, Morals, Trade, &c. Their Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, and Commonalty. Their Laws and Government; and a succinct History of all the English Monarchs to this Time. With Lists of the present Officers in Church and State; And of both Houses of Parliament; Also the present state of His Majesty's dominions in Germany
- The present state of Great Britain. : In two parts. The I. Of South II. Of North Britain. Containing an accurate and impartial account of this great and famous island; Of the Country, and its Inhabitants; the Advantages and Disadvantages of Both, in respect to Forein Countries; and the Curiosities both of Nature and Art. Of the vast, populous, and opulent city of London, the Metropolis of Great Britain, and of the Famous Universities of the Land. Of the Britains original, language, temper, Genius, Religion, Morals, Trade, &c. Their Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, and Commonalty. Their Laws and Government; With a succinct History of all the English Monarchs to this time. The present Princes and Princesses of the Blood Royal, and the Settlement of the Succession in the Protestant Line. Lastly, of Queen Anne's dominions, titles, arms, Land and Sea-Forces, Court, and Revenues. Of the Privy-Council, the High Court of Parliament, and all courts of justice. With the Lists Of the Present Officers in Church and State; Of Both Houses of Parliament; and of the Convocation
- The present state of Great-Britain and Ireland, : in three parts. The I. Of South II. Of North Britain. III. Of Ireland. Containing An Accurate and Impartial Account of these great and famous Islands: Of their several Counties, and their Inhabitants; the Advantages and Disadvantages of Both, in respect to Foreign Countries; and their Curiosities, both of Nature and Art. Of the vast, populous, and opulent City of London, the Metropolis of Great Britain; and of the Famous Universities of the Land. Of the Britains Original, Language, Temper, Genius, Religion, Morals, Trade, &c. Their Nobility, Gentry, Clergy, and Commonalty. Their Laws and Government; with a succinct History of all the English Monarchs to this Time. With the Lists of the present Officers in Church and State. Of both Houses of Parliament, and of the Convocation. To which are added Maps of the Three Kingdoms. Also the present state of His Majesty's dominions in Germany, containing an Exact Description of the same; and a New Map of them all
- The previous question in politics. : Honesty is the best policy
- The prime ministers' craft : why some succeed and others fail in Westminster systems
- The principles of government, in a dialogue, between a gentleman & a farmer. : By the late Sir William Jones. Re-Published, with notes and historical elucidations, by T. S. Norgate
- The referendum in Britain : a history
- The right of British subjects to petition and apply to their representatives asserted and vindicated. : In a letter to ***** With an excerpt from the Review of the Excise-Scheme, &c. on the duty of Members of Parliament to advise with their constituents; and an address to the people of Scotland on the same heads
- The right of British subjects, to petition and apply to their representatives, asserted and vindicated : In a letter to *****
- The rights of British slaves
- The search for democratic renewal : the politics of consultation in Britain and Australia
- The sense of the people concerning the present state of affairs. : With remarks upon some passages of our own and the Roman history. In a letter to a Member of Parliament
- The soldier's tale, : extracted from the Village Association: with two or three words of advice by Old Hubert
- The speech of the Lord Haversham's ghost
- The state of freedom : a social history of the British state since 1800
- The superiority and direct dominion of the imperial crown of England over the crown and Kingdom of Scotland, The True Foundation of a Compleat Union, Reasserted. By William Atwood, Esq;
- The true portraiture of the kings of England, drawn from their titles, successions, raigns and ends, or, A short and exact historical description of every king, with the right they have had to the crown, and the manner of their wearing of it, especially from William the Conqueror : wherein is demonstrated that there hath been no direct succession in the line to create an hereditary right, for six or seven hundred years : faithfully collected out of our best histories, and humbly presented to the Parliament of England
- The truth about democracy! : an exposure
- The two unions : Ireland, Scotland, and the survival of the United Kingdom 1707-2007
- The village association or the politics of Edley. : Containing The soldier's tale, The Headborough's mistake, The sailor's tale. The curate's quotations and Old Hubert's advice
- Thoughts on the Prince's debts
- Thoughts on the interference of Great Britain with the political concerns of the continent
- Three dialogues on the rights of Britons, : between a farmer, a sailor, and a manufacturer
- Tony Blair : the long goodbye
- True Brits, The minister's story
- Understanding US/UK government and politics : a comparative guide
- Vernacular bodies : the politics of reproduction in early modern England
- Why the UK voted for Brexit : David Cameron's great miscalculation
- Women, privilege, and power : British politics, 1750 to the present
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