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RUSI Journal, 18 December 2019Emma De Angelis with Kristina Spohr
The Journal’s Editor, Emma De Angelis, interviews Kristina Spohr, author of Post Wall, Post Square: Rebuilding the World After 1989, on how the current era was forged after the Cold War.
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Book Review: ‘These Meritorious Objects of the Royal Bounty’: The Chelsea Out-Pensioners in the Early Eighteenth Century
RUSI Journal, 29 November 2019Alan Guy
Alan J Guy reviews ‘These Meritorious Objects of the Royal Bounty’: The Chelsea Out-Pensioners in the Early Eighteenth Century, by Andrew Edward Cormack.
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Military Videogames: More Than a Game
RUSI Journal, 25 September 2019Nick Robinson
The uncertainty of contemporary conflicts encourages game developers to turn to past and future wars.
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Dealing With the ‘Blackadder’ View of the First World War: The Need for an Inclusive, Bi-Partisan Centenary
Commentary, 13 January 2014The intervention of Education Secretary Michael Gove on the First World War suggests that the Centenary has become a political football. However, it is not too late to disentangle the Centenary of the First World War from crude partisan politics.
Tags: History
Dealing With the ‘Blackadder’ view of the First World War: Were the Leaders Trapped by Circumstance?
Commentary, 13 January 2014Michael Gove’s intervention on how we remember the First World War has sparked off a national debate. The Education Secretary is adopting a stance that helps give depth to issues of judgment, morality and education, as well as to the drivers of memory and identity.
Tags: Art, Culture and Literature, History
Poppies and Remembrance Sunday: Multicultural and Multifaith Britain Joins In
Commentary, 8 November 2013As the nation marks Remembrance Sunday, Britain’s ethnic minorities will be joining commemorations as well. This is not well reflected, however, in public and media discourse, where those who protest noisily can get a hearing often denied to those who participate quietly in our shared national commemorations.
Tags: Art, Culture and Literature, History, UK Defence, EuropePages

The Toxic Legacy of the Northern Ireland Troubles
RUSI Newsbrief, 21 June 2019Aaron Edwards
The 50th anniversary of the day that British troops first deployed to Northern Ireland offers an opportunity to reflect on the legacy of Operation Banner, and whether the security forces contributed to the troubles or prevented them.
Tags: Armed Forces, UK Counter-terrorism, RUSI Newsbrief, Tackling Extremism, UK, History, National Security, Terrorism
Remembering D-Day
RUSI Newsbrief, 6 June 2019Hew Strachan
On the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings, RUSI and YouGov have conducted a special opinion poll to assess current public attitudes to the event. The poll indicates that only half of Britain knows the significance of D-Day, a source of irony amid today’s polarised politics, says Sir Hew Strachan.
Tags: RUSI Newsbrief, UK, History
Maximising Sensory Perception: Watch and Battle Station Choices Aboard US Navy Submarines in the Second World War
RUSI Journal, 31 May 2019S P MacKenzie
Submariners were carefully selected for tasks based on their ability to perceive their surroundings.
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Duke of Westminster Medal for Military Literature 2013
Events, 5 December 2013The Royal United Services Institute is pleased to announce that this year’s 2013 Duke of Westminster Medal for Military Literature – the only major UK award for multi-discipline military and security...
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Take Me Back to Constantinople - How Byzantium, not Rome, can help preserve Pax Americana
Events, 22 September 2010A lecture by Edward Luttwak, Senior Associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (Washington, DC) and author of The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire. In this lecture, Edward...
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The Politics of UK Accession to Pacific Free Trade Club
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Failure to Lift Off: The UK’s Space Launch Ambitions