Britain and the World

Papers
(The median citation count of Britain and the World is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2022-05-01 to 2026-05-01.)
ArticleCitations
A ‘large family’ in ‘circumstances of interest and excitement’: British Troops and the Occupation of France, 1815–18182
The ‘Myth’ of Beaumont-Hamel: Counter-Monumentality and Newfoundland Identity in Edward Riche's Dedication2
Perfect Timing: British Slave Resistance in Florida2
Scottish in the Margins of New France: Marie Hiroüin de la Conception, a Nun at the Hôtel-Dieu Hospital in Seventeenth-Century Québec1
Czechoslovak Land Reform on the Estates of British Subjects, 1918-19380
Lusaka: New Capital and the Imperial Garden City Movement0
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The Fragmented Realities of Britain's Liberal-Empire: An Open Letter0
‘The Indian Maharaja under check…’: The Abolition of Privy Purses and Princely Privileges, 1967–71 and the End of an Era0
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Not All Roads Lead to Kashmir: British Road Construction in the High Himalayas and the Railroad That Never Was0
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British Performance on the International Stage: Theatre, Cultural Diplomacy, and the British Council's Early Years0
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Australian Squatter Space 1850–18800
Contesting an Elastic Constitution: British Nationality and Protection in the Mandates0
Resets and Resignation: UK–US Relations and the Elections0
‘Why does Africa matter and what should be our aim?’ British Foreign Policy, the Commonwealth, and the 1965 East and Central African Heads of Missions Meeting0
Richard Carr, March of the Moderates: Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, and the Rebirth of Progressive Politics0
Nothing Reigns but Confusion and Anarchy: Disease and Military Discipline in the Late-Eighteenth-Century Caribbean0
Flagellating Females: Insense and Insensibility in Plantation Jamaica0
Anna Maguire, Contact Zones of the First World War: Cultural Encounters across the British Empire0
Soldier Sojourners and Cityscapes: Anzac Impressions of the Port Cities of Durban, Cape Town, and Freetown During the First World War and the Significance of the Built Environment0
Sailors, Spies, and Sovereignty: Greenock’s Revolutionary Turmoil, 1688–16910
Soft Power and Hard Choices: Royal Diplomacy in the Carolean Age0
Towards a Local History of Interwar Anglo - American Relations: Commemorating the Pilgrim Fathers on the Humber, c.1918–19250
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Spatial Continuities? The Commonwealth Prime Ministers’ Meetings, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the Diplomacy of South Asian Decolonisation, 1944–19650
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James Gregory, Mercy and British Culture, 1760–19600
A Welsh Vision of Empire? Welsh Imperialists and the Indian Empire0
Trade and Diplomacy: The Failure of Preparing for the Chinese Exhibition in the Crystal Palace in 18510
‘Not a Weapon for an English Policeman’: Nevil Macready and the Limits of Liberal Imperialism 1910–19220
William Paterson and the Apotheosis of the Scoto-British View of the British Atlantic Empire, 1747–17620
British Ambitions in International Postwar Cultural Reconstruction: The European Inheritance (1954)0
In Mutual Recognition of the Value of Seapower: Anglo-American Unity and the Destroyers Transferred Under the Destroyers-for-Bases Deal0
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From ‘Imperial Federation’ to ‘British Commonwealth’: The Evolution of the Rhetoric of Imperial Unity, 1910–19210
Beyond God, Country, and Empire: The United Kingdom and the Transnational Turn in the First World War0
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Early Modern Bibliotourism: The Case of English and Scottish Visitors to Continental Europe, c. 1600–17000
Restraining Sub-imperialism in Southern Rhodesia, 1889–18980
‘Can you wonder that foreigners are prone to talk about “these mad Englishwomen”?’: Britain's Bright Young People in Europe0
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