How Portugal spied on Muslims in colonial Mozambique
At the ISRF’s November Congress, Fellow Sandra Araújo revealed the remarkable hidden history behind her forthcoming book.
At the ISRF’s November Congress, Fellow Sandra Araújo revealed the remarkable hidden history behind her forthcoming book.
Lars Cornelissen sits down with two-time ISRF Fellow Greg Constantine to talk about his recent research on the untold history of the Rohingya.
In his ambitious new book, ISRF Fellow Martin Thomas provides a compelling account of how the decline of empire is inextricably linked to the rise of globalisation.
In this contribution to Bulletin 27, Io Chaviara, Danae Karydaki, Michalis Kastanidis, and Regina Mantanika introduce OpenEleusis, an interdisciplinary digital platform that maps the cultural history and living memory of the city of Eleusina.
In this contribution to Bulletin 27, Styliani Lepida discusses the affordances and challenges that digital technologies represent for the study of Ottoman History.
ISRF Fellow Stephen Legg takes a closer look at the historical geographies of the Round Table Conference, which took place in London between 1930 and 1932.
Britain’s historical licensing of plays by Black theatre-makers has inadvertently produced an extensive historical archive of surveillance and censorship.
Putin’s war has rekindled the civilisational clash between democracy and authoritarianism. However, a fundamental contradiction lies at the heart of Western foreign policy: economic liberalism undermines democracy promotion.
The work of locating, recovering and identifying the remains of the dead is both a social act and technical challenge. Different tools are mobilised at each stage in this process, mediating between the living and the dead, and between layperson and scientist.