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==Principal publications==
==Principal publications==
===Books===
===Books===
*''[http://www.palgrave.com/products/title.aspx?pid=362621 Governing Post-War Britain: The Paradoxes of Progress]'' (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2012).
*''[http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0230218296 Britain and the Sea since 1600]'' (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2010).
*''[http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0230218296 Britain and the Sea since 1600]'' (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2010).
* (With Dr. Tom Crook, Oxford Brookes University) ''[http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0415878942 Numbers, Norms and the People: Statistics and the British Public Sphere since 1750]'' (London: Routledge, 2010).
* (With Dr. Tom Crook, Oxford Brookes University) ''[http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0415878942 Numbers, Norms and the People: Statistics and the British Public Sphere since 1750]'' (London: Routledge, 2010).

Revision as of 12:28, 7 February 2012

Glen O'Hara (born 1974) is an academic historian at Oxford Brookes University in the United Kingdom. He gained a Double First at Oxford University as an undergraduate between 1993 and 1996, and then a Distinction as an M.Sc. student in Economic and Social History in the 1996-97 academic year. He was a Scholar, and then a Graduate Scholar, of Jesus College, Oxford, where he also won the Eubule Thelwall Prize for History and the Gladstone Prize for History and Politics. [1]

After a period as a schoolteacher, and as a journalist at The Independent, he moved back into academia at University College London. He took his PhD there in 2002 under the supervision of Professor Kathleen Burk, UCL's Professor of Modern History. In 2001 he was appointed Lecturer in Economic History at the University of Bristol, where he spent a year before moving to New College, Oxford, as Lecturer in Modern History. He took up his present post as a Lecturer at Oxford Brookes in January 2005 and was promoted to Senior Lecturer in January 2006, before becoming Reader in the History of Public Policy during October 2010. During November 2006 he was a Visiting Fellow of the University of Oslo.

His work chiefly looks at British governments' decision-making and ideas in the twentieth century, drawing on insights from disciplines as far apart a geography, literary theory, telecommunications, politics, diplomatic history, management studies and economics. He has released a book about British economic and social planning in the 1960s; an edited collection about the Wilson governments of those years has been published by Routledge. Recently his work has begun to emphasise long-term elements in the making of British 'national identity', particularly the country's status as an island and oceanic nation as reflected in his 2010 book Britain and the Sea.

More currently, he has argued—both in print and online—that the British Conservatives' electoral strength is weaker than is apparent, and that the present Coalition government's spending reductions are too rapid, unstable and economically unsound.[2]

Principal publications

Books

Academic articles

  • 'The Parliamentary Commissioner for Administration, the Foreign Office and the Sachsenhausen Case', Historical Journal 53, 3 (2010), pp. 771–81.
  • 'New Histories of British Imperial Communications and the "Networked World" of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries', History Compass 8, 7 (2010), pp. 609–25.
  • '"This is What Growth Does": British Views of the European Economies in the Prosperous "Golden Age" of 1951-1973', Journal of Contemporary History 44, 4 (2009), pp. 697–717.
  • '"The Sea is Swinging into View": Modern British Maritime History in a Globalised World', English Historical Review CXXIV, 510 (2009), pp. 1109–34.
  • '"What the Electorate Can Be Expected to Swallow": Nationalisation, Transnationalism and the Shifting Boundaries of the State in Post-War Britain', Business History 51, 4 (2009), pp. 1–28.
  • ‘Towards a New Bradshaw: Economic Statistics and the British State in the 1950s and 1960s’, Economic History Review 60, 1 (2007), pp. 1–34.
  • ‘“Dynamic, Exciting, Thrilling Change”: The Wilson Government’s Economic Policy 1964-1970’, Contemporary British History 20, 3 (2006), pp. 383–402.
  • ‘“We Are Faced Everywhere With a Growing Population”: Demographic Change and the British State, 1955-64’, Twentieth Century British History 15, 3 (2004), pp. 243–66.
  • ‘“Intractable, Obscure and Baffling”: The Incomes Policy of the Conservative Government, 1957-64’, Contemporary British History 18, 1 (2004), pp. 25–53.

References

  1. ^ "Oxford Brookes University: Glen O'Hara". Retrieved 8 March 2010.
  2. ^ (With Niall Ferguson, Harvard University), 'Do Not Count on the Tories Winning Just Yet', Financial Times, 29 June 2009; 'Bad History: An Ill-Starred Chamber', Times Higher Education, 15 October 2009; 'How (Not) to Cut Government Spending and Reduce Public Sector Debt', History and Policy (December 2009).

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