No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2017
1 Keith Jeffery’s principal individual contributions to the study of modern British institutions will be discussed and noted below, but his first major publication, his important collaborative study with Peter Hennessy, should be registered here: States of emergency: British governments and strikebreaking since 1919 (London, 1983).
2 The British Army and the crisis of empire, 1918–1922 (Manchester, 1984).
3 Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson: a political soldier (Oxford, 2006).
4 MI6: The history of the Secret Intelligence Service, 1909–1949 (London, 2010).
5 Ireland and the Great War (Cambridge, 2000).
6 London, 2015.
7 A full bibliography of Keith Jeffery’s writings pertaining to Irish history can be extracted from Irish History Online (www.irishhistoryonline.ie).
8 Thomas Bartlett and Keith Jeffery (eds), A military history of Ireland (Cambridge, 1996); but see also Robert K. Blyth and Keith Jeffery (eds), The British Empire and its contested pasts: Historical Studies XXVI (Dublin, 2009); Neil Garnham and Keith Jeffery (eds), Culture, place and identity: Historical Studies XXIV (Dublin, 2005); Keith Jeffery (ed.), An Irish empire?: aspects of Ireland and the British Empire, (Manchester, 1996); T. G. Fraser and Keith Jeffery (eds), Men, women and war: Historical Studies XVIII (Dublin, 1993).
9 I.H.S., xxvi, no. 104 (Nov. 1989), pp 329–51.