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Publications that Cite the Old Bailey Proceedings Online

This is not a comprehensive bibliography. It is primarily the result of searches in Google Scholar, Google Books and Scopus looking for mentions of "oldbaileyonline.org", "Old Bailey Proceedings Online", and similar search terms. The search results are checked where possible but not all of the publications have been viewed directly, so there may be a few erroneous entries.

Additionally, a wide range of topics are covered, and the extent and type of use of Old Bailey Online in the publications is extremely variable, ranging from a passing mention to intensive research on the site. We do not attempt to evaluate or categorise the entries in any way.

If you know of something we have missed, please join the public Zotero Group and add the reference (which should be tagged obpo). We will review contributions when we carry out site updates. An alternative searchable version of this bibliography can also be found at the Zotero Citations Bibliography.

  • Abbott, Philippa. Popular Fictions of Gender in the Newgate Novels. Nineteenth-century Gender Studies, 12:3 (2016).
  • Adam, Robert and Stone, Christopher. Through a historical lens. In Advances in Interpreting Research: Inquiry in Action. 2011.
  • Adams, Derek Westwood. The Rise and Fall of the Apothecaries' Assistants 1815 - 1923. PhD thesis. 2011.
  • Aitken, R. and Aitken, M. The M'Naghten Case: The Queen Was Not Amused. Litigation, 36 (2009).
  • Alker, Zoe. The Digital Classroom: New Social Media and Teaching Victorian Crime.
  • Allen, Michael. Charles Dickens and the Blacking Factory. Oxford-Stockley Publications, 2011.
  • Andersson, Peter K. ‘Bustling, crowding, and pushing’: pickpockets and the nineteenth-century street crowd. Urban History, 41:02 (2014).
  • Archer, D. Data Retrieval in a Diachronic Context. The Oxford Handbook of the History of English (2012).
  • Archer, Dawn. Exploring verbal aggression in English historical texts using USAS. Diachronic Corpus Pragmatics, 243 (2014).
  • Archer, Dawn. Historical Pragmatics: Evidence From The Old Bailey. Transactions of the Philological Society, 112:2 (2014).
  • August, Andrew. “A Horrible Looking Woman”: Female Violence in Late-Victorian East London. Journal of British Studies, 54:4 (2015).
  • Azfar, F. Self-preservation in early Eighteenth-Century London. London Journal, 35:2 (2010).
  • Azfar, Farid. Genealogy of an Execution: The Sodomite, the Bishop, and the Anomaly of 1726. Journal of British Studies, 51:3 (2012).
  • Bailey, Craig. “A Child of the Emerald Isle”: Ireland and the Making of James Johnson, MD. Eighteenth-Century Life, 39:1 (2015).
  • Bailey, J. English Marital Violence in Litigation, Literature, and the Press. Journal of Women's History, 19:4 (2007).
  • Baker, James. The business of satirical prints in Late-Georgian England. Springer, 2017.
  • Baker, James. Trade Networks. In The Business of Satirical Prints in Late-Georgian England. Springer, 2017.
  • Baker, James. The Covent Garden Old Price Riots: Protest and Justice in Late-Georgian London. Open Library of Humanities, 2:1 (2016).
  • Ballyn, Sue. The Biography of Adelaide de la Thoreza: Fact or Fiction?. Coolabah (2016).
  • Banks, S. Very Little Law in the Case: Contests of Honour and the Subversion of the English Criminal Courts, 1780-1845. King's Law Journal, 19:3 (2008).
  • Banks, Stephen. A Polite Exchange of Bullets: The Duel and the English Gentleman, 1750-1850. Boydell & Brewer, 2010.
  • Banks, Steve. Dangerous friends: the second and the later English duel. Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 32:1 (2009).
  • Barnaby, Alice. Dresses and Drapery: Female Self-Fashioning in Muslin, 1800–1850. In Crafting the Woman Professional in the Long Nineteenth Century: Artistry and Industry in Britain, ed. by Kyriaki Hadjiafxendi and Patricia Zakreski. 2016.
  • Barnaby, Alice. Light Touches: Cultural Practices of Illumination, 1800-1900. Taylor & Francis, 2016.
  • Barnard, Edwin. Exiled: The Port Arthur Convict Photographs. National Library Australia, 2010.
  • Barratt, Nick. Greater London: The Story of the Suburbs. Random House, 2012.
  • Barrie, M. and Pittman, C. Mandatives: Lessons on raising/control diagnostics. The Canadian Journal of Linguistics/La revue canadienne de linguistique, 55:1 (2010).
  • Bates, Victoria. ‘Under Cross-Examination She Fainted’: Sexual Crime and Swooning in the Victorian Courtroom. Journal of Victorian Culture, 21:4 (2016).
  • Bates, Victoria. Knowledge: The Foundations of Forensics. In Sexual Forensics in Victorian and Edwardian England. Springer, 2016.
  • Bates, Victoria. Consent: Violence and the Vibrating Scabbard. In Sexual Forensics in Victorian and Edwardian England. Springer, 2016.
  • Bates, Victoria. Sexual Forensics in Victorian and Edwardian England: Age, Crime and Consent in the Courts. Springer, 2016.
  • Battis, Jes. Molly Canons: The Role of Slang and Text in the Formation of Queer Eighteenth-Century Culture. Lumen: Selected Proceedings from the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century StudiesLumen:/Travaux choisis de la Société canadienne d'étude du dix-huitième siècle, 36 (2017).
  • Beal, Joan C. and Sen, Ranjan. Towards a corpus of eighteenth-century English phonology. Language and Computers, 78:1 (2014).
  • Bearman, Peter. Big Data and historical social science. Big Data & Society, 2:2 (2015).
  • Beattie, J. M. Sir John Fielding and public justice: The bow street magistrates' court, 1754-1780. Law and History Review, 25:1 (2007).
  • Beattie, J. M. The First English Detectives: The Bow Street Runners and the Policing of London, 1750-1840. Oxford University Press, 2012.
  • Beeching, Kate. Pragmatic markers in British English: Meaning in social interaction. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
  • Bergen, Linda van. Early progressive passives. Folia Linguistica Historica, 34 (2013).
  • Berkovitz, Barry K. B. Nothing but the Tooth: A Dental Odyssey. Newnes, 2012.
  • Berkowitz, M. Jewish Fighters in Britain in Historical Context: Repugnance, Requiem, Reconsideration. Sport in History, 31:4 (2011).
  • Berry, H. and Foyster, E. A. The family in early modern England. Cambridge Univ Pr, 2007.
  • Berry, Helen. The Castrato and His Wife. Oxford University Press, 2011.
  • Betts, Oliver. Sharing a Cab with Mr Pooter: A Reply to Peter K. Andersson’s ‘How Civilized Were the Victorians?’. Journal of Victorian Culture, 22:1 (2017).
  • Bibbings, Lois S. Binding Men: Stories About Violence and Law in Late Victorian England. Routledge, 2014.
  • Bindler, Anna and Hjalmarsson, Randi. Prisons, recidivism and the age–crime profile. Economics Letters, 152 (2017).
  • Bissonette, Melissa Bloom. “A Right Judgment”: Rape Trial Conventions Revisited in Joseph Andrews and Tom Jones. Law, Culture and the Humanities (2016).
  • Blake, Christopher, Sheldon, Barrie and Williams, Peter. Policing and Criminal Justice. SAGE, 2010.
  • Blanco-Suárez, Zeltia. Oh he is olde dogge at expounding deade sure at a Catechisme: Some considerations on the history of the intensifying adverb dead in English. Acta Linguistica Hafniensia, 46:1 (2014).
  • Bodziak, William J. Forensic footwear evidence. CRC Press, 2016.
  • Boon, Sonja. “I did not mean to make away with the child, I did not know what I was about”: Autobiographical Traces of Infanticide in Eighteenth-Century Trial Records. European Journal of Life Writing, 4 (2015).
  • Boulton, J. Welfare Systems and the Parish Nurse in Early Modern London, 1650-1725. Family & Community History, 10:2 (2007).
  • Bowling, Tom. Pirates and Privateers: A History of Piracy. Oldcastle Books, 2015.
  • Bradley, J. Texts into databases: The evolving field of new-style prosopography. Literary and Linguistics Computing, 20:SUPPL. 1 (2005).
  • Bradley, J., Kippen, R., Maxwell-Stewart, H., McCalman, J. and Silcot, S. Research note: The founders and survivors project. The History of the Family (2010).
  • Brant, C. and Whyman, S. E. Walking the streets of eighteenth-century London: John Gay's Trivia (1716). Oxford University Press, USA, 2007.
  • Brant, Clare. "I Will Carry You with Me on the Wings of Immagination": Aerial Letters and Eighteenth-Century Ballooning. Eighteenth-Century Life, 35:1 (2011).
  • Bressey, Caroline. Race, antiracism, and the place of blackness in the Making and remaking of the English Working Class. Historical Reflections/Reflexions Historiques, 41:1 (2015).
  • Bridges, Karl. Beyond the Browser. ABC-CLIO, 2012.
  • Bronitt, Simon and Kukulies-Smith, Wendy. Crime, punishment, family violence, and the cloak of legal invisibility. Journal of Australian Studies, 37:3 (2013).
  • Brown, Douglas. Supplying London's Workhouses in the Mid-Nineteenth Century. The London Journal, 41:1 (2016).
  • Bryden, DJ. The Scientific Instrument Trade in Georgian London: Gleanings from Old Bailey Trials. Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society, 118 (2013).
  • Buchanan, Ann. The Social Construction of Grandfatherhood Across Time in England and the United States. In Grandfathers. Springer, 2016.
  • Bulger, M., Meyer, E., Terras, M., Wyatt, S., Jirotka, M., Eccles, K. and Madsen, C. Reinventing research? Information practices in the humanities. 2011.
  • Burgess Jr, Douglas R. Piracy in the Public Sphere: The Henry Every Trials and the Battle for Meaning in Seventeenth-Century Print Culture. Journal of British Studies, 48:4 (2009).
  • Burrow, Merrick. Oscar Wilde and the Plaistow Matricide: Competing Critiques of Influence in the Formation of Late-Victorian Masculinities. Culture, Society and Masculinities, 4:2 (2012).
  • But, Roxanne. The role of context in the meaning specification of cant and slang words in eighteenth-century English. Meaning in the History of English: Words and texts in context, 148 (2013).
  • But, Roxanne. “He said he was going on the scamp”: Thieves’ cant, enregisterment and the representation of the social margins in the Old Bailey Sessions Papers. Journal of Historical Sociolinguistics, 3:2 (2017).
  • Butler, O. M. Noxiousness and the Offenses against the Person Act 1861: Protecting the Hypersensitive Victim. Cambridge Student L. Rev., 5 (2009).
  • Böker, U., Detmers, I. and Giovanopoulos, A. C. John Gay's The Beggar's Opera, 1728-2004: adaptations and re-writings. Editions Rodopi, 2006.
  • Cadou, Carol Borchert. The George Washington Collection: Fine And Decorative Arts at Mount Vernon. Hudson Hills, 2006.
  • Callahan, Kathy. On the Receiving End: Women and Stolen Goods in London 1783‐1815. The London Journal, 37:2 (2012).
  • Callister, Graeme. War, Public Opinion and Policy in Britain, France and the Netherlands, 1785-1815. Springer, 2017.
  • Capp, B. Gender and the culture of the English alehouse in late Stuart England. COLLeGIUM: Studies across Disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences 2., 2 (2007).
  • Capp, Bernard. Bigamous marriage in early modern England. Historical Journal, 52:3 (2009).
  • Capp, Bernard. ‘Jesus Wept’ But Did the Englishman? Masculinity and Emotion in Early Modern England. Past & Present, 224:1 (2014).
  • Carrabine, E. Criminology: a sociological introduction. Taylor & Francis, 2009.
  • Carter, David J., Brown, James and Rahmani, Adel. Reading the high court at a distance: Topic modelling the legal subject matter and judicial activity of the high court of Australia, 1903-2015. UNSWLJ, 39 (2016).
  • Cartwright, Celia. A miserable place for prisoners: Nineteenth century convict letters from Tasmania. In Papers and {Proceedings}: {Tasmanian} {Historical} {Research} {Association}. Tasmanian Historical Research Association, page 75.
  • Casson, Douglas. John Locke, Clipped Coins, and the Unstable Currency of Public Reason. Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics, XVIII:2 (2016).
  • Casson, Mark and Hashimzade, Nigar. Large Databases in Economic History: Research Methods and Case Studies. Routledge, 2013.
  • Caswell, Marisha. Mothers, Wives and Killers: Marital Status and Homicide in London, 1674–1790. In Female Transgression in Early Modern Britain: Literary and Historical Explorations. 2016.
  • Caswell, Marisha. Married Women, Crime, and Questions of Liability in England, 1640-1760. PhD thesis, QSpace at Queen's University. 2012.
  • Causer, T. 'The worst types of sub-human beings'? The myth and reality of the convicts of the Norfolk Island penal settlement, 1825-1855. In Islands of History. 2011.
  • Cecconi, Elisabetta. Comparing discourse construction in 17th-century news genres. In Changing Genre Conventions in Historical English News Discourse, ed. by Bos, Birte and Kornexl, Lucia. 2015.
  • Cecconi, Elisabetta. Power confrontation and verbal duelling in the arraignment section of XVII century trials. Journal of Politeness Research. Language, Behaviour, Culture, 7:1 (2011).
  • Celeste, Renee Therese. Forty lashes: The comparison of court punishments in early modern England and colonial Virginia. PhD thesis. 2014.
  • Chaemsaithong, Krisda. Interactive patterns of the opening statement in criminal trials: A historical perspective. Discourse Studies, 16:3 (2014).
  • Chater, K. Job mobility amongst black people in England and wales during the long eighteenth century. Immigrants and Minorities, 28:2 (2010).
  • Chater, K. Commentary on 'Of Africa's brightest ornaments'. Social and Cultural Geography, 6:2 (2005).
  • Chater, K. Black people in England, 1660–1807. Parliamentary History, 26:S1 (2007).
  • Chatterjee, Choi. Imperial incarcerations: Ekaterina Breshko-Breshkovskaia, Vinayak Savarkar, and the original sins of modernity. Slavic Review, 74:4 (2015).
  • Cheney, Deborah. Dr Mary Louisa Gordon (1861–1941): A Feminist Approach in Prison. Feminist Legal Studies, 18:2 (2010).
  • Chill, Adam. Boundaries of Britishness: Boxing, Minorities, and Identity in Late-Georgian Britain. ProQuest, 2007.
  • Christopher, E. A “Disgrace to the very Colour”: Perceptions of Blackness and Whiteness in the founding of Sierra Leone and Botany Bay. Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, 9:3 (2008).
  • Christopher, Emma. A Merciless Place:The Fate of Britain's Convicts after the American Revolution. Oxford University Press, 2011.
  • Christopher, Emma. The Murderer and His Victim: Tracing a Lost Convict of the Botany Bay Decision. Life Writing, 8:1 (2011).
  • Claridge, Claudia and Kytö, Merja. I had lost sight of them then for a bit, but I went on pretty fast. In Diachronic Corpus Pragmatics, ed. by Taavitsainen, Irma and Jucker, Andreas H and Tuominen, Jukka. 2014.
  • Clark, A. Twilight moments. Journal of the History of Sexuality, 14:1-2 (2005).
  • Clark, Anna. Desire: A History of European Sexuality. Routledge, 2012.
  • Clark, Geoffrey W., Anderson, Gregory, Thomann, Christian and Schulenburg, J. The Appeal of Insurance. University of Toronto Press, 2010.
  • Clark, Gregory and Cummins, Neil. Intergenerational Wealth Mobility in England, 1858-2012. Surnames and Social Mobility. The Economic Journal (2014).
  • Clark, Gregory and Cummins, Neil. Intergenerational wealth mobility in England, 1858–2012: Surnames and social mobility. The Economic Journal, 125:582 (2015).
  • Clark, Gregory, Cummins, Neil, Hao, Yu and Vidal, Dan Diaz. Surnames: A new source for the history of social mobility. Explorations in Economic History, 55 (2015).
  • Clark, Jessica P. Pomeroy v. Pomeroy: beauty, modernity, and the female entrepreneur in fin-de-siècle London. Women's History Review, 22:6 (2013).
  • Clayton, Mary. Changes in Old Bailey trials for the murder of newborn babies, 1674–1803. Continuity and Change, 24:02 (2009).
  • Clegg, Jeanne. The Prosecution and Trial of Moll Flanders. Digital Defoe, 7 (2015).
  • Clegg, Jeanne. Moll Flanders, Ordinary's Accounts and Old Bailey Proceedings. In Liminal Discourses: Subliminal Tensions in Law and Literature, ed. by Carpi, Daniela and Gaakeer, Jeanne. De Gruyter, 2013.
  • Clement, Matt. Custom, Law and Class. In A People’s History of Riots, Protest and the Law. Springer, 2016.
  • Cocks, H. G. Making the sodomite speak: Voices of the accused in English Sodomy Trials, c. 1800-98. Gender and History, 18:1 (2006).
  • Cohen, M. L. Researching legal history in the digital age. Law Library Journal, 99 (2007).
  • Cokley, J. The Mirror-ball Effect: investigating channels, messages and participation levels.. Ejournalist, 5:1 (2010).
  • Collins, E. and Jubb, M. How do Researchers in the Humanities Use Information Resources?. Liber Quarterly, 21:2 (2012).
  • Collins, Ellen, Bulger, Monica E. and Meyer, Eric T. Discipline matters Technology use in the humanities. Arts and Humanities in Higher Education, 11:1-2 (2012).
  • Collins, John M. Martial Law and English Laws, c. 1500–c. 1700. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
  • Conforti, Michael. Reflections on Teaching the History of Early Modern European Law, Crime, and Punishment to Undergraduates. Law, Crime and History, 4 (2014).
  • Coote, Anne. Science, Fashion, Knowledge and Imagination: Shopfront Natural History in 19th-Century Sydney. Sydney Journal, 4:1 (2013).
  • Coulton, Richard, Mauger, Matthew and Reid, Christopher. Courts. In Stealing Books in Eighteenth-Century London. Springer, 2016.
  • Coulton, Richard, Mauger, Matthew and Reid, Christopher. Stealing Books in Eighteenth-Century London. Springer, 2016.
  • Cox, David J. ‘HAND IN GLOVE WITH THE PENNY-A-LINERS’: THE BOW STREET ‘RUNNERS’IN FACTUAL AND FICTIONAL NARRATIVE. In Law, Crime and Deviance Since 1700: Micro-Studies in the History of Crime, ed. by Nash, David and Kilday, Anne-Marie. 2016.
  • Cox, David J. Crime in England 1688-1815. Routledge, 2014.
  • Cozens, Joseph. ‘The Blackest Perjury’: Desertion, Military Justice, and Popular Politics in England, 1803-1805. Labour History Review, 79:3 (2014).
  • Craig, Scott. Women, Crime and the Experience of Servitude in Colonial America and Australia.. Limina, 19 (2013).
  • Cramer, C. E and Olson, J. Pistols, Crime, and Public Safety in Early America. Willamette Law Review, 44 (2008).
  • Crawford, Patricia. 'Civic fathers' and children: Continuities from Elizabethan England to the Australian colonies. History Australia, 5:1 (2008).
  • Crone, Rosalind. Violent Victorians: Popular entertainment in nineteenth-century London. Manchester University Press, 2012.
  • Crowdy, Terry. Military Misdemeanors: Corruption, Incompetence, Lust and Downright Stupidity. Osprey Publishing, 2007.
  • Cruickshank, D. London's Sinful Secret: The Bawdy History and Very Public Passions of London's Georgian Age. St. Martin's Press, 2010.
  • Crymble, Adam. A Comparative Approach to Identifying the Irish in Long Eighteenth-Century London. Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History, 48:3 (2015).
  • Crymble, Adam. How Criminal Were the Irish? Bias in the Detection of London Currency Crime, 1797–1821. The London Journal (2017).
  • Culpeper, Jonathan and Kytö, Merja. Early Modern English Dialogues: Spoken Interaction as Writing. Cambridge University Press, 2010.
  • D'Cruze, Shani and Jackson, Louise A. Women, crime and justice in England since 1660. Palgrave Macmillan: Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire; New York, N.Y., 2009.
  • Dabhoiwala, F. Lust and Liberty. Past & Present, 207:1 (2010).
  • Dalby, J. T. The case of Daniel McNaughton: Let's get the story straight. American Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, 27:4 (2006).
  • Dalby, Jonathan R. ‘Such a Mass of Disgusting and Revolting Cases’: Moral Panic and the ‘Discovery’of Sexual Deviance in Post-Emancipation Jamaica (1835–1855). Slavery & Abolition, 36:1 (2015).
  • Darr, Orna Alyagon. Narratives of “Sodomy” and “Unnatural Offenses” in the Courts of Mandate Palestine (1918–48). Law and History Review, 35:1 (2017).
  • Davie, Neil. ‘NOTHING KEPT BACK, NOTHING EXAGGERATED’: PIETY, PENOLOGY AND CONFLICT: JOSEPH KINGSMILL, PRISON CHAPLAIN (1842–60). In Law, Crime and Deviance Since 1700: Micro-Studies in the History of Crime. 2016.
  • Davies, Andrew, Balderstone, Laura and Peel, Mark. Digital Histories of Crime and Research-Based Teaching and Learning. Law, Crime and History, 5:1 (2015).
  • Dawson, N. English Trade Mark Law in the Eighteenth Century–the Fate of Thomas Hill. The Journal of Legal History, 30:1 (2009).
  • Day, Matthew. Restoration commerce and the instruments of trust: Robert Boyle and the science of money. History of the Human Sciences, 29:1 (2016).
  • DeDeo, Simon. Major Transitions in Political Order. In From Matter to Life: Information and Causality, ed. by Walker, Sara Imari and Davies, Paul CW. 2017.
  • DeDeo, Simon, Hawkins, Robert XD, Klingenstein, Sara and Hitchcock, Tim. Bootstrap methods for the empirical study of decision-making and information flows in social systems. Entropy, 15:6 (2013).
  • Deacon, D., Russell, P. and Woollacott, A. Transnational ties: Australian lives in the world. ANU E Press, 2008.
  • Dean, Katrina. Digitising the modern archive. Archives and Manuscripts, 42:2 (2014).
  • Delgado-Rodrigues, Raimundo Nonato, Allen, Alexander N., Santos, Leandro Galuzzi dos and Schenck, Carlos H. Sleep Forensics: a critical review of the literature and brief comments on the Brazilian legal situation. Arquivos de neuro-psiquiatria, 72:2 (2014).
  • Derry, Caroline. ‘Female Husbands’, Community and Courts in the Eighteenth Century. The Journal of Legal History, 38:1 (2017).
  • Deswarte, R. Growing the ‘Faith in Numbers’: Quantitative Digital Resources and Historical Research in the Twenty-First Century. Journal of Victorian Culture, 15:2 (2010).
  • Devereaux, S. Imposing the royal pardon: Execution, transportation, and convict resistance in London, 1789. Law and History Review, 25:1 (2007).
  • Devereaux, S. From sessions to newspaper? Criminal trial reporting, the nature of crime, and the London press, 1770-1800. London Journal, 32:1 (2007).
  • Devereaux, Simon. Recasting the Theatre of Execution: The Abolition of the Tyburn Ritual. Past & Present, 202:1 (2009).
  • Devereaux, Simon. England’s “Bloody Code” in Crisis and Transition: Executions at the Old Bailey, 1760–1837. Journal of the Canadian Historical Association/Revue de la Société historique du Canada, 24:2 (2013).
  • Devereaux, Simon. The Bloodiest Code: Counting Executions and Pardons at the Old Bailey, 1730-1837.
  • Dickie, S. Fielding's rape jokes. Review of English Studies, 61:251 (2010).
  • Dobrowolski, P. T. By coach to the scaffold: theatres of remorse in eighteenth-century London. Kwartalnik Historyczny, 121:Special Issue (2014).
  • Dolan, Frances E. Mopsa's Method: Truth Claims, Ballads, and Print. huntington library quarterly, 79:2 (2016).
  • Dolin, K. A critical introduction to law and literature. Cambridge Univ Pr, 2007.
  • Dorset, Shaunnagh. 'Destitute of the knowledge of God': Maori testimony before the New Zealand courts in the early Crown Colony period. In Past Law, Present Histories, ed. by Diane Kirkby. ANU E Press, 2012.
  • Draper, N. The City of London and slavery: evidence from the first dock companies, 1795-1800. The Economic History Review, 61:2 (2008).
  • Drew, John and Williams, Tony. ‘Mr Popular Sentiment’ Conducts … Dickensian Journalism Then and Now. 19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century (2012).
  • Drucker, Johanna. Why Distant Reading Isn't. PMLA, 132:3 (2017).
  • Duffield, Ian. Identity Fraud: Interrogating the Impostures of “Robert de Bruce Keith Stewart” in Early Nineteenth-Century Penang and Calcutta. Journal of Social History, 45:2 (2011).
  • Dukore, Bernard F. Crimes Past, Crimes Present. In Crimes and Punishments and Bernard Shaw. Springer, 2017.
  • Durston, G. Rape in the eighteenth-century metropolis: Part 1. British Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 28:2 (2005).
  • Durston, Gregory J. Whores and Highwaymen. Waterside Press, 2012.
  • Durston, Gregory J. Wicked Ladies: Provincial Women, Crime and the Eighteenth-Century English Justice System. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014.
  • Durston, Gregory J. Burglars and Bobbies: Crime and Policing in Victorian London. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012.
  • Dyndor, Zoe. The Gibbet in the Landscape: Locating the Criminal Corpse in Mid-Eighteenth-Century England. In A global history of execution and the criminal corpse. Springer, 2015.
  • Décharné, Max. Capital Crimes: Seven Centuries of London Life and Murder. Random House, 2012.
  • Eacott, Jonathan. Selling Empire: India in the Making of Britain and America, 1600-1830. UNC Press Books, 2016.
  • Eacott, Jonathan P. Making an Imperial Compromise: The Calico Acts, the Atlantic Colonies, and the Structure of the British Empire. The William and Mary Quarterly, 69:4 (2012).
  • Easterby-Smith, Sarah. Cultivating Commerce: Cultures of Botany in Britain and France, 1760–1815. Cambridge University Press, 2017.
  • Eccles, Audrey. ‘Furiously Mad’: Vagrancy Law and a Sub-Group of the Disorderly Poor. Rural History, 24:01 (2013).
  • Edwards, L. O.C. Working Hand Knitters in England from the Sixteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries. Textile History, 41:1 (2010).
  • Ehrman, E. Dressing well in old age: The clothing accounts of Martha Dodson, 1746-1765. Costume (2006).
  • Eisner, Manuel. From swords to words: Does macro-level change in self-control predict long-term variation in levels of homicide?. Crime and justice, 43:1 (2014).
  • Ellison, Katherine. Media Scholarship and 18th-Century Studies. Literature Compass, 14:3 (2017).
  • Emsley, C. Community Policing/Policing and Communities: Some Historical Perspectives. Policing (2007).
  • Emsley, C. The English and Violence Since 1750. Hambledon Pr, 2007.
  • Epstein, J. The Great Engine That Couldn't: Science, Mistaken Identifications, and the Limits of Cross-Examination. Stetson Law Review, 36:3 (2007).
  • Erastus-Obilo, B. G. A. Jury deliberations–how do reasoning skills interplay with decision-making?. Nexta Journal of Contemporary Legal Studies, 1:3 (2011).
  • Erickson, A. L. Married women's occupations in eighteenth-century London. Continuity and Change, 23:02 (2008).
  • Erickson, Amy Louise. Eleanor Mosley and Other Milliners in the City of London Companies 1700–1750. History Workshop Journal, 71:1 (2011).
  • Evans, Catherine L. At Her Majesty's Pleasure: Criminal Insanity in 19th-Century Britain. History Compass, 14:10 (2016).
  • Evans, D. M. The Society of Antiquaries, 1707–18: meeting places and origin stories. The Antiquaries Journal, 89 (2009).
  • Evans, T. Secrets and Lies: the Radical Potential of Family History. History Workshop Journal, 71 (2011).
  • Ezell, Margaret JM. Dying to be Read: Gallows Authorship in Late Seventeenth-Century England. Authorship, 3:1 (2014).
  • Fausey, C. M and Boroditsky, L. Subtle linguistic cues influence perceived blame and financial liability. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 17:5 (2010).
  • Fawcett, Julia H. Unmapping London: Urbanization and the Performance of Personal Space in Aphra Behn's The Lucky Chance. Eighteenth-Century Studies, 50:2 (2017).
  • Fennetaux, A. Women's Pockets and the Construction of Privacy in the Long Eighteenth Century. Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 20:3 (2008).
  • Ferguson, Christopher. The political economy of the street and its discontents: beggars and pedestrians in mid-nineteenth-century London. Cultural and Social History, 12:1 (2015).
  • Finnane, Mark and Piper, Alana. The Prosecution Project: Understanding the Changing Criminal Trial Through Digital Tools. Law and History Review, 34:4 (2016).
  • Fisher, M. H. Counterflows to colonialism: Indian travellers and settlers in Britain, 1600-1857. Orient Blackswan, 2006.
  • Fisher, M. H. Migration to Britain from South Asia, 1600s–1850s. History Compass, 3:1 (2005).
  • Fisher, Michael H. Finding Lascar ‘Wilful Incendiarism’: British Ship-Burning Panic and Indian Maritime Labour in the Indian Ocean. South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies.
  • Ford, Lisa and Roberts, David Andrew. New South Wales Penal Settlements and the Transformation of Secondary Punishment in the Nineteenth-Century British Empire. Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, 15:3 (2014).
  • Forell, Caroline Anne. Convicts, Thieves, Domestics, and Wives in Colonial Australia: The Rebellious Lives of Ellen Murphy and Jane New SSRN {Scholarly} {Paper} ID 2080526, Social Science Research Network.
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