Stories
- Article
The psychological impact of nuclear war
How would you hold up psychologically if a nuclear bomb was dropped? Discover the British government’s secret predictions from the 1980s.
- Article
Can our sexual desires be transformed?
In the 1950s, many psychiatrists thought that homosexuality could be reformed. One found that it couldn’t – and his discoveries led to a change in the law.
- Article
The Martians are coming
For over a hundred years, antagonistic alien invaders have been a popular focus for the imagined end of the world. But the destructive consequences of human behaviour is far more frightening.
- Article
Native Americans through the 19th-century lens
The stories behind Rinehart's photographs may not be as black and white as they first appear.
Catalogue
- Books
- Online
A dialogue on the principles of the constitution and legal liberty, compared with despotism; applied to the American question; and the Probable Events of the War, with observations on some important law authorities.
Date: 1776- Archives and manuscripts
International Study Team report drafts
Date: 1991Reference: SA/MED/L/1/1/8Part of: Medact- Archives and manuscripts
International Study Team (IST)
Date: 1991Reference: SA/MED/L/1/1Part of: Medact- Books
The Routledge international handbook of mad studies / edited by Peter Beresford and Jasna Russo.
Date: 2022- Books
- Online
Thoughts on war, political, commercial, religious, and satyrical; by Josiah Tucker, Dean of Gloucester, William Law M. A. and Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patricks.
Tucker, Josiah, 1712-1799.Date: MDCCXCIII. [1793]