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Bibliography of urban history 2025

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2025

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Abstract

Information

Type
Bibliography
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2025. Published by Cambridge University Press

The present bibliography is a continuation of and a complement to those published in the Urban History Yearbook 1974–91 and Urban History from 1992. The arrangement and format closely follows that of previous years. The list of abbreviations identifies only those periodicals from which articles cited this year have been taken, though many other journals are also checked.

I General

  • Maps and plans

  • Archives – descriptions and examples

  • Urban history, definitions and aims

  • Historiography

  • Empirical studies of urbanization

  • History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

II Population

  • General features of urban populations

  • Natality and mortality

  • Diseases

  • Medicine

  • Urban public health

  • Migration to, from and between towns

III Physical structure

  • Research methods, aims and materials

  • Physical/structural characteristics of towns

  • Architecture

  • Housing

  • Space and place

  • Heritage and the historic environment

IV Social structure

  • Social organizations, clubs and societies

  • Urban social identity

  • Class structure

  • Social life

  • Religion

  • Recreation

  • Crime and policing

  • Minority groups

  • Race

  • Family life

  • Gender

  • Sexualities

V Economic activity

  • Research methods, aims and materials

  • Urban economic activity

  • Industry

  • Food supply

  • Finance, banking and services

  • Consumption

  • Working conditions

  • Labour organization

VI Urban networks

  • Urban networks

  • Knowledge networks

  • Transport

VII Politics and administration

  • Aspects of urban administration

  • Voting and electoral history

  • Political activism

VIII Shaping the urban environment

  • Town planning

  • Environment and the city

  • Environmental disaster and climate change

  • War and the urban environment

  • Animals and the city

  • Urban renewal

IX Urban culture

  • Research methods, aims and materials

  • Folklore, storytelling and art

  • Urban culture and entertainment

  • Education

  • Emotions and the senses

  • Attitudes towards cities

  • Views of the city in literature/graphics/drama

Journals abbreviations used

I General

Maps and plans

  1. 1 AVINAIN J, BLANCOT C, FAURE E & NOIZET H, L’accès numérique aux plans historiques géolocalisés comme moyen d’approfondissement des connaissances urbaines [Digital access to geolocated historical maps as a means of deepening urban knowledge]. HU 71 3 (2024) 5–32.

  2. 2 BRAND A L, Syncopating the ground rhythm: W. E. B. Du Bois and Black geographic futurity on New Orleans’s North Claiborne Avenue. CitC 23 4 (2024) 341–62.

  3. 3 GERBINO A, Picturing versus mapping in the French Renaissance. IM 76 2 (2024) 235–56.

  4. 4 GOLISZEK S, City-forming the role of the metro in Warsaw. C 150 104994 (2024).

  5. 5 PAPELITZKY E, Mapping tianxia and mapping the world: cosmopolitan ideas in geographic sources of fifteenth- to eighteenth-century China. MSsS 58 4 (2024) 1154–80.

  6. 6 PETÖ A & KLACSMANN B, Exigi monumentum: monuments of Jews in public spaces in Budapest as texts (1880–1944). IM 42 1 (2024) 54–82.

  7. 7 REINHARDT B, Exploring submerged resilience: the atlas of drowned towns. AHR 129 4 (2024) 1677–701.

  8. 8 SCHULMAN K, Memory space: a case study of a Holocaust digital mapping project of Łomża, Poland. CJ 44 (2024) 261–80.

  9. 9 SHACKEL P A, The unchecked capitalism behind the bird’s-eye view. PH 91 1 (2024) 26–46.

  10. 10 THINH N K & KAMALIPOUR K, Mapping informal/formal morphologies over time: exploring urban transformations in Vietnam. C 152 105168 (2024).

  11. 11 VAN OOSTRUM M, Walkability and colonialism: the divergent impact of colonial planning practices on spatial segregation in East Africa. C 144 104662 (2024).

  12. 12 WILMOTT C & WOOD A E, Terra infirma: on the base map in urban cartography and GIS. EPD 42 5–6 (2024) 734–57.

Archives – descriptions and examples

  1. 13 CAUL N, MILLIGAN K & FOGARTY A, In the archives: at home in Dublin – the Curran-Laird collection in the James Joyce Library, University College Dublin. IUR 54 2 (2024) 379–92.

  2. 14 FROMENT P, From Du Sommerard to Poldi Pezzoli: the Musée de Cluny, a model for a Milanese collector? JHC 36 3 (2024) 409–16.

  3. 15 JOHNSON-SYMINGTON, N R, Sure as the sunrise: insights into the material culture of Albion Motors from Glasgow Life’s museums and archives collection. FL 62 2 (2024) 140–59.

  4. 16 JORNET-BENITO N & BRUGUÉS MASSOT I, La muerte de la abadesa: comunidad y ritualización en el monasterio de Sant Pere de les Puelles [The dead of the abbess: community and ritualization in the monastery of Saint Pere de les Puelles]. JMIS 61 2 (2024) 15–32.

  5. 17 LECAT P, LEMIRE V & TURIANO A, Les data papers du projet ‘Archival City’. Un nouveau support de réflexion, de diffusion et de valorisation pour les archives urbaines [The papers of the ‘Archival City’ project. A new resource for reflection, dissemination and promotion of urban archives]. HU 70 2 (2024) 113–33.

  6. 18 McDONALD D, Grassroots archives: memory, dictatorship, and the city. AHR 129 2 (2024) 669–80.

  7. 19 THOMAS R & TATLIOGLU T, Gasholders: a history in pictures. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2024. 240pp.

Urban history, definitions and aims

  1. 20 ALTHAUS A, Perfect match? Zum Zusammenspiel von Oral History und Citizen Science [Perfect match? on the interplay of oral history and citizen science]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  2. 21 BRUNNER T, Les critères de centralité urbaine de Douai, de l’an mil au milieu du XIVe siècle [The criteria for urban centrality of Douai, from the year 1000 to the middle of the fourteenth century]. RN 448 (2024) 193–233.

  3. 22 CHAN A & CROSSLEY P K, Cosmopolitanisms in China’s Eurasian history: a critical approach. MAsS 58 4 (2024) 1005–16.

  4. 23 GOEBEL M, Density and differentiation: cities in global social history. HJ 67 4 (2024) 670–91.

  5. 24 HAUMANN S, Stadtgeschichtsforschung und ihre Bürger/innen. Für einen Perspektivwechsel auf das Demokratisierungspotenzial von Citizen Science [Urban history research and its citizens. For a change of perspective on the democratization potential of citizen science]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  6. 25 JOHN A, Stadtgeschichte als forschend-entdeckendes Lernen und Citizen Science [Urban history as research-based learning and citizen science]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  7. 26 KRAUS A, Von der Konfrontation zur Partizipation. Kommunale Erinnerungsarbeit als Feld der Bürgerwissenschaften in Wolfsburg [From confrontation to participation: communal remembrance work as a field of citizen science in Wolfsburg]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  8. 27 MINNER K, Stadtgeschichtliches Wissen produzieren und kommunizieren – Was Public History, Citizen Science und Wissenschaftsbetrieb verbindet und trennt [Producing and communicating urban history knowledge – what connects and separates public history, citizen science and the scientific community]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  9. 28 QI W & DENG Y, How to define the city size in China? A review over a century from 1918 to 2020. C 144 104649 (2024).

  10. 29 SANDERS W, Conference report: ‘The state of urban history: past, present, future’, Leicester, 11–13 July 2023. UH 51 3 (2024) 654–6.

  11. 30 VERGARA À, The city, the neighborhood, and the street: toward a global urban labor history? ILWCH 106 (2024) 464–74.

Historiography

  1. 31 ADRIAN D, Un monument à soi-même. Les élites urbaines et leurs écrits mémoriels à Augsbourg (1400–1520) [A monument to oneself. Urban elites and their memorial writings in Augsburg (1400–1520)]. RH 710 (2024) 201–36.

  2. 32 BLOCK PFISTER A, Stadtgeschichte im Auftrag [City history on commission]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  3. 33 DAINESE E, The human settlement: Erwin Anton Gutkind’s fascination with Africa and critique of modern design. PLP 39 5 (2024) 983–1006.

  4. 34 GELHART J, LORKE C & ZUMLOH T, Stadtgeschichtsschreibung partizipativ. Kooperationen und Konfrontationen in der Geschichte der Gegenwart Gütersloh [Participatory urban historiography: cooperation and confrontation in contemporary Gütersloh history]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  5. 35 HAUMANN S & LORKE C, Citizen Science. Zwischen akademischer und bürgerschaftlicher Stadtgeschichtsforschung [Citizen Science. Between academic and civic urban history research]. MS 55 1 (2024).

  6. 36 JOHNSON-SCHLEE S, Gentrification, Ruth Glass, and the legacy of London: aspects of change (1964). LJ 49 3 (2024) 263–71.

  7. 37 JÖNS H, BRIGSTOCKE J, BRUINSMA M, COUPER P, FERRETTI F, GINN F, HAYES E & VAN MEETEREN M, Conversations in geography: journeying through four decades of history and philosophy of geography in the United Kingdom. JHG 85 (2024) 40–54.

  8. 38 OOMMEN T, Catherine Bauer’s passage through India: frontier urbanization and the construction of ‘interdisciplinary’ urban research at the College of Environmental Design, Berkeley. JPH 23 4 (2024) 279–303.

  9. 39 SCHWAKE G & STANIČIĆ A, Post-socialist neoliberalism: towards a new theoretical framework of spatial production. UP 9 8779 (2024).

  10. 40 STRONG S, Unequal lives in London: Ruth Glass, London’s newcomers, and the roots/routes of inequality in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. LJ, 49 3 (2024) 290–306.

  11. 41 THOM C, The Survey of London: past, present and future [Annual Lecture 2022]. JHBP 3 (2024) 9–30.

  12. 42 VANNIEUWENHUYZE B & RUTTE R, The rise of cities revisited: reflections on Adriaan Verhulst’s vision of urban genesis and developments in the medieval Low Countries. Turnhout: Brepols, 2024. 275pp.

Empirical studies of urbanization

  1. 43 BAKIRTZIS N & ZAVAGNO L, The Routledge handbook of the Byzantine city: from Justinian to Mehmet II (ca. 500–ca.1500). Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 508pp.

  2. 44 BLACKMAN A J, The making of Australia’s Gold Coast: a historical perspective. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 164pp.

  3. 45 CHAKRAVARTY P, Urbanisation in Bengal: ideas, institutions and policies. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 258pp.

  4. 46 CHANG J, Thermal governance, urban metabolism and carbonised comfort: air-conditioning and urbanisation in the Gulf and Doha. US 61 15 (2024) 2928–44.

  5. 47 CHASE A, CHASE A & CHASE D, Ancient Mesoamerican population history: urbanism, social complexity, and change. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2024. 432pp.

  6. 48 DROSTE E, Urban life in Nordic countries. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 448pp.

  7. 49 FALOLA T, Understanding Nigeria: British rule and its impact. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 694pp.

  8. 50 GHEITASI M, MADDAHI A & SALARI N, Unplanned rapid urban growth in Birjand, Iran (1986–2022). PLP 39 2 (2024) 441–57.

  9. 51 HELLER A & HALLMANNSECKER M, The Oxford handbook of Greek cities in the Roman Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 824pp.

  10. 52 MURRAY C, Colonial urbanism in the age of the Enlightenment: the Spanish Bourbon reforms in the River Plate. London: Anthem Press, 2024. 237pp.

  11. 53 OFER I, Spatial crisis and the experimental production of urban space in Franco’s Spain: the history of Madrid’s poblados dirigidos. JUH 50 1 (2024) 61–77.

  12. 54 SHANKAR P, History of urban form of India: from beginning till 1900’s. New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2024. 304pp.

  13. 55 VILLAESCUSA R G, Cities and territories of the Western Roman Empire 4th century BC to the 3rd century AD, transl. by RIGG C. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 120pp.

  14. 56 WHARTON A, Tbilisi, Baku, and Yerevan: neoclassicism and imperial signification in the Caucasus. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  15. 57 WOJCIECHOWSKA A, Metropoleis in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt from the early Ptolemaic age to Septimius Severus. Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz Verlag, 2024. 234pp.

History, growth and fortunes of individual towns

This section is arranged alphabetically by the name of the town

  1. 58 WORKNIH A G, An Ethiopian imperial town: the forgotten historical geographies of ʾAmba Čara. JHG 86b (2024) 391–400.

  2. 59 EDLUND-BERRY I E M & ZACCAGNINO C, Arretium (Arezzo). Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024. 240pp.

  3. 60 BOEHME K, Princely urbanism and the colonial city: Bombay, c. 1860–1940s. UH 51 1 (2024) 108–24.

  4. 61 DERNTL M F, ‘Capitality’ beyond the capital city? Brasília and its satellite towns. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  5. 62 ARMUS D & ANDRADE L U, The Buenos Aires reader: history, culture, politics. Durham: Duke University Press, 2024. 400pp.

  6. 63 MATTHEWS J, From Byzantium to Constantinople: an urban history. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 280pp.

  7. 64 STEFFES T L, Structuring inequality: how schooling, housing, and tax policies shaped metropolitan development and education. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 376pp.

  8. 65 MAGDALINO P, Roman Constantinople in Byzantine perspective: the memorial and aesthetic rediscovery of Constantine’s beautiful city, from late antiquity to the Renaissance. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 178pp.

  9. 66 BEN-BASSAT Y & BUESSOW J, Late Ottoman Gaza: an Eastern Mediterranean hub in transformation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 192pp.

  10. 67 LOEW P O, Gdańsk: portrait of a city. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 296pp.

  11. 68 MAOZ E & KARKABI N, Haifa City profile: emergent binationalism in a settler colonial city. C 145 104686 (2024).

  12. 69 TEAFORD J C, Indianapolis: a concise history. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2024. 232pp.

  13. 70 DHABHAI G, Sovereign dreams and bureaucratic strategies in princely Jaipur, c. 1750–1950. UH 51 1 (2024) 88–107.

  14. 71 CHITTI M & MOSER S, Jericho, Palestine: from pilgrims to gamblers, a global oasis city always ‘on the map’. C 154 105338 (2024).

  15. 72 GUTGARTS A, Frankish Jerusalem: the transformation of a medieval city in the Latin East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 277pp.

  16. 73 ADELUSI-ADELUYI A, Imagine Lagos: mapping history, place, and politics in a nineteenth-century African city. Athens OH: Ohio University Press, 2024. 216pp.

  17. 74 KNOX P L, London: a history of 300 years in 25 buildings. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2024. 448pp.

  18. 75 FAIR A, ‘The needs of new communities’: social development, the new towns, and the case of Milton Keynes, c. 1962–87. MBH 35 3 (2024) 261–77.

  19. 76 ANASTAKIS D, KIRLAND E & NERBAS D, Montreal’s square mile: the making and transformation of a colonial metropole. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2024. 450pp.

  20. 77 CUSTERS G & WILLEMS J J, Rotterdam in the 21st century: from ‘sick man’ to ‘capital of cool’. C 150 105009 (2024).

  21. 78 MALLERY J, City of vice: transience and San Francisco’s urban history, 1848–1917. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2024. 338pp.

  22. 79 NACHEV I, Post-Ottoman ‘capitality’: making Sofia and Sarajevo in the late 19th to the early 20th century. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  23. 80 WILLES M, Liberty over London Bridge: a history of the people of Southwark. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2024. 304pp.

  24. 81 MUGNAI N, Tripolitania in the Roman Empire and beyond. [S.l.]: British Institute for Libyan and North African Studies, 2024. 226pp.

  25. 82 ROMANO D, Venice: the remarkable history of the lagoon city. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 775pp.

  26. 83 BAKER, M, Pivot of China: spatial politics and inequality in modern Zhengzhou. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2024. 366pp.

II Population

General features of urban populations

  1. 84 ARSEN C, BAICS G & MEISTERLIN L, Population density in nineteenth-century American urbanism. AAAG 114 9 (2024) 2104–31.

  2. 85 CAO S, The population history of China (1368–1953). Leiden: Brill, 2024. 632pp.

  3. 86 CHASE A S Z, CHASE A F & CHASE D Z, Ancient Mesoamerican population history: urbanism, social complexity, and change. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2024. 432pp.

  4. 87 WERLIN J, Demographic history and English culture. JMEMS 54 3 (2024) 445–56.

Natality and mortality

  1. 88 BAILEY M, The Black Death, girl power, and the emergence of the European marriage pattern in England. JMEMS 54 3 (2024) 493–528.

  2. 89 CHRIST M, GUTIÉRREZ C G, Death and the city in premodern Europe. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 116pp.

  3. 90 GREENLEES J, On the margins of maternity: low-income women’s experiences of maternity care in late twentieth-century Glasgow. SHMed 37 4 (2024) 715–36.

  4. 91 MARSELLA J, ‘Better babies, better mothers, better city’: eugenic maternalism, the Babies Welfare Association, and the urban Better Baby Contest. BHM 98 3 (2024) 370–93.

  5. 92 SLAVIN P, Plague strikes back: the pestis secunda of 1361–62 and its demographic consequences in England and Wales. JMEMS 54 3 (2024) 457–91.

  6. 93 YILMAZ S, Intimate technologies of family making: birth control politics in Cold War Turkey. BHM 98 3 (2024) 428–61.

Diseases

  1. 94 ASO M, Performing national independence through medical diplomacy: tuberculosis control and socialist internationalism in Cold War Vietnam. BJHS 57 2 (2024) 205–20.

  2. 95 BIEHLER-GOMEZ L, PERA E, LUCCHETTI V, SISTO L, DEL BO B, MATTIA M, RODELLA L, MANZI G, FEDELI A M, PORRO A & CATTANEO C, Vitamin D deficiency, pregnancy, and childbirth in early medieval Milan. JASc 170 (2024) 106054.

  3. 96 DENOYELLES A D, The lung block: plagues, parks, and power in progressive era New York. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024. 264pp.

  4. 97 GOPALAKRISHNAN D R, Venereal diseases, public health and sanitary measures in the mid-nineteenth-century Madras presidency. IESHR 61 2 (2024) 149–77.

Medicine

  1. 98 ARMSTRONG M, Sunderland’s poor law nurses and the professionalisation of nursing: 1834–1900. NH 61 1 (2024) 51–69.

  2. 99 CHAN K, Commercialising everyday distress: neurasthenia and traditional Chinese medicine in colonial Hong Kong, 1950s to 1980s. MedH 68 4 (2024) 376–91.

  3. 100 CONNOR H, John Graunt F.R.S. (1620–74): the founding father of human demography, epidemiology and vital statistics. JMedBio 32 1 (2024) 57–69.

  4. 101 McCLIVE C & SMITH L W, Women at the centre: medical entrepreneurialism and ‘la grande médecine’ in eighteenth-century Lyon. FH 38 (2024) 11–27.

Urban public health

  1. 102 COLUMBUS A, ‘To be had for a pesthouse for the use of this parish’: plague pesthouses in early Stuart London, c. 1600–1650. UH 51 1 (2024) 125–45.

  2. 103 COOMANS J & MARSCHALL B, Miracles and misadventures: childhood and public health in the late Medieval Low Countries. JMH 50 2 (2024) 163–89.

  3. 104 COOMANS J, HERMENAULT L, VAN KOOTEN R & WEEDA C, Plague, religion and urban space in sixteenth-century Antwerp. SHMed 37 3 (2024) 583–610.

  4. 105 DOWNS J, Out of breath: toward a new origin story of public health. JHMAS 79 4 (2024) 316–30.

  5. 106 GUÉGAN I, Soigner les habitants malades et rétablir la salubrité en ville [Treating sick residents and restoring sanitation to the city]. HU 71 3 (2024) 75–96.

  6. 107 JACKSON R H & QUINTANA L M, Urban plan, architecture, and the geography of the sacred in colonial Morelos. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 252pp.

  7. 108 LI T & WANG C, Innovation amidst post-socialist reform: Jonas Salk and the birth of the Sabin strains-derived inactivated polio vaccine in China. BJHS 57 3 (2024) 407–23.

  8. 109 MITRA S, Interrogating ‘Parriah Arrack’: anxieties over health, race and drinking in early colonial Calcutta. SHMed 37 4 (2024) 862–82.

  9. 110 SIM T, The citizen as a public health actor: complaints as public engagement with Aedes mosquito control in Singapore, 1965–1985. BHM 98 2 (2024) 266–97.

  10. 111 TAVARES E E & FALLOW D, John Shakespeare’s Muckhill: ecologies, economies, and biographies of communal waste in Stratford-upon-Avon, circa 1550–1600. SQ 75 1 (2024) 1–25.

  11. 112 THIELMAN F, Victorian municipal waste management, VLC 52 2 (2024) 307–12.

  12. 113 TRAVERSO D B & PAVEZ R, Breakdown and reform: the Chilean road to the creation of ministries of hygiene and social welfare 1892–1931. MedH 68 3 (2024) 286–307.

Migration to, from and between towns

  1. 114 AGUILAR E, From Mexico to Chicagoland: Mexican labourers in the Caloumet region during the First World War. IM 42 3 (2024) 391–418.

  2. 115 ALLEN-KIM E, Building Little Saigon: refugee urbanism in American cities and suburbs. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024. 248pp.

  3. 116 ANDERSSON J, Moving from opportunity: Intergenerational mobility of rural–urban return migrants in Sweden, 1890s–1940s. EcHR (2024) 1–23.

  4. 117 BATUMAN B & KILINÇ K, The urban refugee: space, agency, and the new urban condition. Bristol: Intellect, 2024. 264pp.

  5. 118 BREHONY M & GARCÍA G G, Irish immigrants in colonial port cities of Cuba: Havana, Santiago, and Cienfuegos. JAEH 44 1 (2025) 11–134.

  6. 119 CAMPBELL M, ‘We’re at the door of still greater progress’: historical narratives, ethno-racial conflict, and place in Gonzales, Texas, at the turn of the twentieth century. JAEH 44 1 (2024) 89–110.

  7. 120 CERVANTES B, From absence to abundance: how Las Colonias made their place. AHR 129 3 (2024) 1067–84.

  8. 121 DE SANT’ANA T R S, State-led development and migrants’ resilience in the City of the Forest: c. 1910s–1930s. AHR 129 4 (2024) 1599–618.

  9. 122 HACKMANN J, From Stettin/Szczecin to Stecin/Szczettin? National and transnational mnemonic discourses in a (new) border city. In FRANDSEN S B, HACKMANN J & KATAJALA K eds Competing memories of European border towns. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 77–111.

  10. 123 LINDSROM L, DAY J & ROUSSEAU B, Usufruct in the city: Tanna migrants in Port Vila. C 152 105203 (2024).

  11. 124 LIPMAN J K, Black British politics, Bernie Grant, and the question of Hong Kong migration. HWJ 98 (2024) 78–100.

  12. 125 MIZUSHIMA T, The rural–urban nexus in India’s economic transformation. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 258pp.

  13. 126 MÜNCH O, Rag Fair: a different migration history of London’s East End, 1780–1850. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2024. 384pp.

  14. 127 NAQVI T H, Questioning migrants: ethnic nationalism at the limits of Pakistan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 200pp.

  15. 128 RANDOLPH G F, Does urbanization depend on in-migration? Demography, mobility, and India’s urban transition. EPA 56 1 (2024) 117–35.

  16. 129 REINKE-WILLIAMS T & FERRELL W, Apprentice migration to London from Wales, 1600–1800. SH 49 4 (2024) 466–89.

  17. 130 WILSON R J., Migration and mobilisation in New York during the First World War. IM 42 3 (2024) 361–90.

III Physical structure

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 131 BORDERIE Q & SALOMON F, Urban geoarchaeology. Paris: CNRS éditions, 2024. 456pp.

  2. 132 CAMERIN F, Investigating European cities in the modern age through the lens of the global urban history approach. CEH 33 3 (2024) 1115–22.

  3. 133 CARTA S, The physical and the digital city: invisible forces, data and manifestations. Bristol: Intellect, 2024. 304pp.

  4. 134 CHRISTIANS-BERNSEE A, Das EL-DE-Haus in Köln. Städtische Erinnerungsarbeit am Ort des Gestapo-Terrors [The EL-DE House in Cologne. Municipal remembrance work at the site of Gestapo terror]. MS 55 2 (2024).

  5. 135 COLIVICCHI F & McCALLUM M, The Routledge handbook of the archaeology of urbanism in Italy in the age of Roman expansion. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 588pp.

  6. 136 DE PERROT A & ALAII M, Transversal territory: a transdisciplinary and participatory approach in urban research. Zürich: Park Books, 2024. 160pp.

  7. 137 JIANG N, CROOKS A T, KAVAK H & WANG W, Leveraging newspapers to understand urban issues: a longitudinal analysis of urban shrinkage in Detroit. EPB 51 5 (2024) 1089–103.

  8. 138 LECAT P, Du SIG à la 3D. Méthodes et outils pour une analyse spatiale de la constitution des périphéries parisiennes au XIXe siècle [On GIS in 3D. Methods and uses for the spatial analysis of the constitution of Parisian peripheries in the nineteenth century]. HU 71 3 (2024) 33–53.

  9. 139 MARQUÉ N, Entre atlas interactif du patrimoine toulousain et instrument au service de la recherche historique: le SIG UrbanHist [Between an interactive atlas of Toulose’s heritage and an instrument for historical research: the UrbanHist GIS]. HU 71 3 (2024) 55–74.

  10. 140 MASTROCINQUE A, SORIANO F & FORTE M, The urban history of Tarquinia based on geomagnetic surveys. Oxford: BAR Publishing, 2024. 150pp.

  11. 141 MERMET E, PEIGNOT S, ROET P, CADOR H, RINNER V & VARET-VITU A, Vers un référentiel géohistorique diachronique [Towards a diachronic geohistorical reference framework]. HU 70 2 (2024) 39–64.

  12. 142 NOIZET H, BOVE B & BERNARDI P, Essai d’analyse morphologique de l’île de la Cité à Paris (1300–1754) [Attempt at a morphological analysis of the Île de la Cité, Paris (1300–1754)]. HU 70 2 (2024) 65–94.

  13. 143 STARZEC A, LITVINE A D, YOUNIS R, FAULA Y, COUSTATY M, SHAW-TAYLOR L M W & ÉGLIN V, Built up areas of nineteenth-century Britain. An integrated methodology for extracting high-resolution urban footprints from historical maps. HM 57 1 (2024) 1–19.

  14. 144 WATSON L J, Interdisciplinary working and environmental history. EnvH 30 4 (2024) 695–706.

Physical/structural characteristics of towns

  1. 145 CONDON P M, Broken city: land speculation, inequality, and urban crisis. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2024. 273pp.

  2. 146 O’KEEFFE D, Dublin city walls and defences, c. 1170–c. 1317. SIQR 113 451 (2024) 423–33.

  3. 147 RĘBKOWSKI M, RUIZ G G-C, ÁLVAREZ C M, RYNDZIEWICZ R & FILIPOWIAK W, Topography and buildings of an early Islamic Andalusi city: evidence for Madīnat Ilbīra from excavations and ground penetrating radar. JMIS 16 3 (2024) 285–319.

  4. 148 SHAW G & McLAREN D, Prehistoric and early medieval settlement features at Ravelrig Road and Newmills Road, Balerno, City of Edinburgh. SAJ 46 1 (2024) 1–28.

  5. 149 VADELORGE L, Penser le Grand Paris par l’archive. La planification urbaine au prisme des annuaires administratifs [Thinking about Greater Paris through the archive. Urban planning through the prism of administrative directories]. HU 70 2 (2024) 135–49.

Architecture

  1. 150 BRANSGROVE J W, Empire at India House, 1928–30: a home for the future dominion in London. ArchH 67 (2024) 117–46.

  2. 151 BRUMBERG-KRAUS Z, A bridge at Powell and Clay: designing Chinese American community in San Francisco’s Chinatown YWCA. B & L 31 1 (2024) 12–30.

  3. 152 BYNG G, The architecture of politics and the politics of architecture: a comparative approach to parish church building and civic government in late-medieval Europe. CSSH 66 2 (2024) 392–416.

  4. 153 DE PIERI F, Architectural history, planning history, and the environmental perspective: a report from Iceland. PLP 39 5 (2024) 1171–8.

  5. 154 GRIFFIN H & STRASIOWSKI M, Watch this space: exploring cinematic intersections between the body, architecture and the city. Bristol: Intellect, 2024. 258pp.

  6. 155 LESH J, Values in cities: urban heritage in twentieth-century Australia. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 338pp.

  7. 156 LIU Y, Confucian modernity in the architecture of Pengang’s Chinese community. JA 29 5–6 (2024) 752–70.

  8. 157 MORSHED A Z, Water as a disciplinary challenge in architectural history. WH 16 1 (2024) 1–20.

  9. 158 MOSTAFA H, Architecture of anxiety, body politics and the formation of Islamic architecture. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 180pp.

  10. 159 MYJAK-PYCIA A, The peripheral interior and people as infrastructure: adopting the sewer system for passage. JA 29 3 (2024) 235–70.

  11. 160 TOPP L, Emulation and distancing: asylum architecture and the prison in Britain and the US, 1790–1850. ArchH 67 (2024) 63–88.

  12. 161 VESIKANSA K & BERGER L, The Olympic gap: planning and politics of the Helsinki Olympics. PLP 39 3 (2024) 501–30.

  13. 162 ZUBOVICH K, Soviet architects and the Zhdanovshchina at home and abroad. SR 83 4 (2024) 794–811.

Housing

  1. 163 ELSMORE S, Navigating London: the financialisation and commodification of housing and the survival of the financially fittest. LJ 49 3 (2024) 272–89.

  2. 164 GILSON M, Behind the privet hedge: Richard Sudell, the suburban garden and the beautification of Britain. London: Reaktion, 2024. 336pp.

  3. 165 HAVARDI A M, The housing project of Well Hall Garden suburb and the production of spaces in First World War Britain. JUH 50 1 (2024) 17–31.

  4. 166 JURJEVICH J R & MAHMOUDI D, The ground rent machine: the story of race, housing inequality, and dispossession in Baltimore, Maryland. AAAG 114 7 (2024) 1505–25.

  5. 167 KRÖLL D, London’s other architects: building applications for housing in Richmond, 1886–1939. LJ 49 2 (2024) 188–205.

  6. 168 LOENGARD J S, Light, privacy, and neighbors: windows in late medieval and early modern London. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 172pp.

  7. 169 NELSON R, WARNIER M & VERMA T, Housing inequalities: the space-time geography of housing policies. C 145 104727 (2024).

  8. 170 REILLY E, Dirt, dwellings and culture: living conditions in early medieval Dublin. Oxford: Archaeopress, 2024. 154pp.

  9. 171 ROTH P, ‘It requires privacy’: sharing a house in thirteenth-century Paris. JeH 38 1–2 (2024) 1–17.

  10. 172 SEGERINK J & LOOCKX K, Lodging houses as facilitators of global and local entanglements in harbour districts: evidence from the port of Antwerp c. 1860–1910. UH 51 4 (2024) 810–26.

  11. 173 TORRÓ J, Splitting up the funduq: the selective emulation of an Andalusi institution in the Kingdom of Valencia. JMIS 16 3 (2024) 342–66.

  12. 174 WHITTEMORE A H, Origins of deed restrictions in the United States: the case of early-nineteenth century Boston. JPH 23 3 (2024) 214–33.

  13. 175 WILSON Y & FIJALKOW Y, Energy renovation and inhabitants’ health literacy: three housing buildings in Paris. UP 9 7663 (2024).

  14. 176 WRIGHT V & FAIR A, The opportunity and desire to buy: owner-occupation in Scotland’s new towns, c. 1950–80. CBH 38 2 (2024) 219–44.

  15. 177 YANG H, Homemaking in white America: the Jue Joe Ranch, 1919–1958. B & L 31 2 (2024) 5–29.

Space and place

  1. 178 ABUSHAMA H, Culture and the city: articulations of settler colonialism from Haifa to Ramalla and back. AAAG 114 10 (2024) 2317–33.

  2. 179 CHOI S H, Place of the people / people of the place: a spatial structure of vernacular practices in Hong Kong. JA 29 5–6 (2024) 664–87.

  3. 180 DONNELLAN C, British contested history: place and space. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. 93pp.

  4. 181 LOGAN J R, MINCA E, BELLMAN B, KISCH A & CARLSON H J, From side street to ghetto: understanding the rising levels and changing spatial pattern of segregation, 1900–1940. CitC 23 2 (2024) 155–79.

  5. 182 McCONVILLE C & PASCOE R, Bazaar lives: Calcutta, new urban form and spatial experience: 1890–1940. SA 47 5 (2024) 891–909.

  6. 183 MACDONALD A M, The shop at ‘the head of the town-dock, at the corner of Wing’s Lane’: commercial space in colonial Boston, 1758–1769. HRC 10 1 (2024) 83–111.

  7. 184 MILLS R, ‘The Russians are coming!’ entangled peripheries and Cold War competition in motorcycle speedway. HWJ 97 (2024) 149–73.

  8. 185 RIZOV V, A walk in Thomas Annan’s Glasgow: documentary photography, class and urban space. JUH 50 3 (2024) 583–600.

  9. 186 ŞAVK S, Doors, privacy and the public sphere: a conceptual discussion on the spatial structure of early modern Istanbul. UH 51 2 (2024) 250–371.

  10. 187 SHEKSIN I M, ‘Where’ matters: the importance of geographic factors in understanding American Jewry, Sklare address. CJ 44 (2024) 27–53.

  11. 188 SHENG J, Negotiating extra-settlement roads: boundary making, administrative disputes, and power shifts in treaty-port Shanghai, 1860–1937. MAsS 58 3 (2024) 805–39.

  12. 189 SHI T, GUO F & ZHANG Y, Transforming public spaces in post-socialist China’s Danwei neighbourhoods: the third dormitory of the party committee of Shandong Province. UP 9 7632 (2024).

  13. 190 ŠIMKOVÁ P, The urban island: connection and remoteness in the history of Gallops Island in Boston Harbor. In PROKIĆ M & ŠIMKOVÁ P eds Entire of itself? Towards an environmental history of islands. Huntingdon: White Horse Press, 2024. 215–36.

  14. 191 TRIBILLON J, The Zone: an alternative history of Paris. London: Verso, 2024. 208pp.

Heritage and the historic environment

  1. 192 ALEXANDER P, ‘The most saving slum in Glasgow, and the most abandoned’: twentieth-century materiality and twenty-first century virtuality in the Jewish Gorbals, Scotland. CJ 44 (2024) 339–67.

  2. 193 ATTEWELL W, War travels: the logistics of Vietnam War militourism. AAAG 114 4 (2024) 792–807.

  3. 194 COLIN B, ‘Ils savent pourquoi ils veulent nous briser, c’est que notre culture est subversive tout comme notre politique’: Le KuKuCK, espace ambivalent du mouvement squatteur de Berlin-Ouest (1981–1984) [‘They know why they want to break us, it’s because our culture is subversive, just like our politics’: The KuKuCK, an ambivalent space of the West Berlin squatting movement (1981–1984)]. HU 69 1 (2024) 115–35.

  4. 195 DARGAN P, Galway: city of heritage. Dublin: Eastwood Books, 2024. 96pp.

  5. 196 DAVIS C, restricted access to remembrance: problematic usages of industrial memories in Belfast’s Titanic Quarter. SEN 24 1 (2024) 55–70.

  6. 197 DEBRUYNE N & NAZARSKA G, Contentious heritage spaces in post-communist Bulgaria: contesting two monuments in Sofia. JHG 83 (2024) 176–90.

  7. 198 EREMENKO I & KRASKI T, Heritage expertise and tram closures in the World Heritage City of Toruń, Poland. JtranH 45 2 (2024) 317–36.

  8. 199 FARAH K, Set in stone: modern monuments and strategic heritage in Zaltocan, Mexico. IJHerS 30 9 (2024) 1010–25.

  9. 200 FERRERO M, FRIEL M, MENEGHIN E & LAVANGA M, Industrial heritage and citizen participation: the UNESCO world heritage site of Ivrea, Italy. UP 9 8220 (2024).

  10. 201 FINN B M & COBBINAH P B, Pandemic urbanization: colonial imprints in the urban present. C 153 105261 (2024).

  11. 202 FROST N & SHEFTEL A, ‘The people who stayed’: Back River Memorial Gardens Cemetery as a site of Jewish migrant and Montreal urban meaning-making. UHR 52 2 (2024).

  12. 203 GAJDA K A, (Non)commemoration of the heritage in Eastern Europe. Oxford and New York: Peter Lang, 2024. 374pp.

  13. 204 GENSBURGER S & WÜSTENBERG J De-commemoration removing statues and renaming places. New York and Oxford: Berghahn, 2024. 399pp.

  14. 205 GHOSH D, Moving statues: monuments to empire from London’s Waterloo Place to the Maidan in Calcutta. JHG 83 (2024) 10–22.

  15. 206 GIANNECCHINI A C & PEIXOTO E R, Neoliberal times and urban heritage: sustainable preservation in the Monumenta Program in Brazil. In BOZOĞLU G, CAMPBELL G, SMITH L & WHITEHEAD C eds The Routledge international handbook of heritage and politics. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 432–47.

  16. 207 GIBBESON C, Perceptions of professional stakeholders in the process of historic building regeneration in the UK: a relational perspective. C 151 105087 (2024).

  17. 208 HILL C, Cultural dissonance: heritage protests and their implications for heritage-making in settler colonial cities. IJHerS 30 9 (2024) 1049–67.

  18. 209 HORVATH F & WHITE R S, Breaking the dead silence: engaging with the legacies of empire and slave-ownership in Bath and Bristol’s memoryscapes. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2024. 424pp.

  19. 210 HULTMAN M & SCHLÖR J, Introducing a virtual approach to European Jewish spaces in the twenty-first century. CJ 44 (2024) 245–59.

  20. 211 HUNT A, Might a sense of place approach help the public connect to Brayford Pool’s medieval heritage? OLH 10 1 (2024).

  21. 212 HUSS M & MARGALIT T, ‘You cannot really live (or die) here’ – ongoing struggles over Muslim cemeteries in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, 1957–2020. EPD 42 5–6 (2024) 604–24.

  22. 213 IGUMAN S & GALWAY N, The battle for Belgrade’s historic riverfront: citizen resistance to radical urban changes. In BOZOĞLU G, CAMPBELL G, SMITH L & WHITEHEAD C eds The Routledge international handbook of heritage and politics. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 489–504.

  23. 214 ISMAIL N A, ADU-AMPONG E A & ACESKA A, The making of urban informal settlements: critical junctures and path dependency in governing Abuja, Nigeria. C 147 104789 (2024).

  24. 215 KORBEL S, Jewish spaces in present Vienna: a relational, hybrid approach. CJ 44 (2024) 281–98.

  25. 216 LAW L, From exotic Orient to city with heritage: heritagisation in the tourism history of Hong Kong. JTH 16 3 (2024) 71–96.

  26. 217 LI H, IKEBE K, KINOSHITA T, CHEN J, SU D & XIE J, How heritage promotes social cohesion: an urban survey from Nara City, Japan. C 149 104985 (2024).

  27. 218 LITTMANN W, ‘A different kind of hardship’: landscapes of Japanese American resettlement during World War II. B & L 31 2 (2024) 30–54.

  28. 219 LOVEGROVE S & MACHAQUEIRO R R, Contesting monuments, challenging narratives: divergent approaches to dealing with the colonial past and its legacies in Lisbon, Portugal. JHG 83 (2024) 84–95.

  29. 220 NICOLINI E, Climate change adaptation and mitigation and historic centers preservation. Underway and repeatable technological design solutions. C 152 105174 (2024).

  30. 221 OEVERMANN H, WERGELAND E S & HANIKA S, Industrial heritage and pathways for cultural-creative development in Bamberg, Germany. UP 9 8072 (2024).

  31. 222 RILLING D J, An African American burial ground in Philadelphia: ‘discovered’, protected, eradicated. PH 91 3 (2024) 247–69.

  32. 223 RUSU M S, Modelling toponymic change: a multilevel analysis of street renaming in postsocialist Romania. AAAG 114 3 (2024) 591–609.

  33. 224 SEWELL S K, Redevelopment and renewal in revolutionary places. JUH 50 3 (2024) 708–13.

  34. 225 SIERRA L M, The precinct of the dead and saints for the nation: the Bolivian national revolution and Gualberto Villarroel, 1943–1956. JUH 50 6 (2024) 1317–37.

  35. 226 SLATER L, Unforgetting: the Yarri and Jacky Jacky memorial at Gundagai. JAusS 48 4 (2024) 438–51.

  36. 227 SOLTANI Z, (Un)settled monument: Tehran’s Shahyad Square in the revolutionary crucible. JPH 23 2 (2024) 126–49.

  37. 228 STERN C, ‘To live with honor, or die’: the metamorphosis of place, national symbols, masculinities, and practices under state terrorism (1973–1990). JUH 50 2 (2024) 402–21.

  38. 229 TAN D & NGUYEN M Q, Beyond the palimpsest: traditions and modernity in urban villages of Shenzhen, China. C 151 105093 (2024).

  39. 230 VON DYDOWITZ S J & CERMEÑO H, Must Gandhi also fall? Reassembling #BlackLivesMatter’s translocal activism and urban fallist movements. In BOZOĞLU G, CAMPBELL G, SMITH L & WHITEHEAD C eds The Routledge international handbook of heritage and politics Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 292–308.

  40. 231 WATTS J, Contested statues: the Clive Memorial Fund, imperial heroes, and the reimaginings of Indian history. JBS 63 1 (2024) 6–29.

  41. 232 WOJDON J & WIŚNIEWSKA D, History in public space. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 308pp.

  42. 233 ZHONG D, HUANG P, ZIONG G & LI H, Renewal strategies of industrial heritage based on placeness theory: the case of Guangzhou, China. C 155 105407 (2024).

IV Social structure

Social organizations, clubs and societies

  1. 234 RALSTON I, MEARNS J & BROPHY K, Archaeology in Scotland after the Second World War: the Glasgow Archaeological Society and John M Davidson. SAJ 46 1 (2024).

  2. 235 SKIPPER B, A photographic history of London’s ceremonial regiments. Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2024. 160pp.

  3. 236 SMITH J J, Reading against reform: the Bristol Library Society and the intellectual culture of Bristol’s elections in 1812. ParlH 43 1 (2024) 112–28.

Urban social identity

  1. 237 BEINART K, ‘Newcomers’: reframing the relationship between migration, gentrification, and regeneration through artistic engagements with Brixton Market. LJ 49 3 (2024) 307–28.

  2. 238 FAIR A, ‘The needs of new communities’: social development, the new towns, and the case of Milton Keynes, c. 1962–87. MBH 35 3 (2024) 261–77.

  3. 239 HEERTON L, An imperial adventus into a city of warehouses: history, modernity, and urbanity in the symbolic and material construction of Hamburg’s free port. CEH 57 3 (2024) 311–37.

  4. 240 HUANG X, The transfer of foreign modernity in Beijing: the new urban space in the Legation Quarter, 1900–1928. UH 51 1 (2024) 171–97.

  5. 241 McGINNISS D, REEVES K & GOLDING F, Whose pain? Whose shame? Integrating heritage and histories in Ballarat, Australia. IJHerS 30 11 (2024) 1365–78.

  6. 242 NASASRA M & STANLEY B E, Assembling urban worlds: always-becoming urban in and through Bir al-Saba’. UH 51 2 (2024) 391–413.

  7. 243 PAJOR P, The walls make an impression: some remarks on the motif of city walls on ducal and civic seals and its meaning in 13th-century Poland. JBAA 177 1 (2024) 75–100.

  8. 244 REICHERT S, The cosmopolitanism of Karakorum, capital of the Mongol empire in Mongolia. MAsS 58 4 (2024) 1126–53.

  9. 245 SARK K, Branding Berlin: from division to the cultural capital of Europe. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 270pp.

Class structure

  1. 246 GORDON W, The girl who lived on her clothes: the people of Paisley and the new poor law, 1839–76. Oxford and New York: Peter Lang, 2024. 220pp.

  2. 247 HERITAGE T, Poverty, old age and outdoor relief in late-Victorian England. SH 49 1 (2024) 26–52.

  3. 248 HILL A, Brains, breeding, and knowingness: the politics of meritocracy in mid-twentieth-century Britain. MBH 35 3 (2024) 316–34.

  4. 249 ISSAR S, The hustler and the mooch: slavery in late eighteenth-century Bombay. SaA 45 2 (2024) 264–82.

  5. 250 LIDDY C D, The making of towns, the making of polities: towns and lords in late medieval Europe. P & P 264 1 (2024) 3–47.

  6. 251 LOWRIE C, TARULEVICZ N, WILLIAMSON F & LAM C H, Multiethnic elites and the management of tropical heat in colonial Malaya, circa 1870s–1930s. JCCH 25 1 (2024).

  7. 252 PRICE J, Baildon Street: the Blackest street in Deptford? LJ 49 2 (2024) 167–87.

  8. 253 PURDUE O & LARAGY G, Poverty, children and the poor law in industrial Belfast, 1880–1918. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2024. 320pp.

  9. 254 SITELEKI M J & FREDRIKSEN P D, Inequality or insecurity? The case of pre-colonial farming communities in southern Africa. A 98 397 (2024) 135–54.

Social life

  1. 255 ADAM A, ADÈS R, BANKS W, BENNING C, GRANT G, FORSTER-BRASS H, McGIVERON O, MILLER J, PHELAN D, RANDAZZO S, REILLY M, SCOTT M, SERBAN S, STOCKTON C & WALLIS P, Trust, guilds, and kinship in London, 1330–1680. HJ 67 5 (2024) 851–74.

  2. 256 ARCE M T, Cities and urban life in early modern Spain. In DOWLING A ed. The Routledge handbook of Spanish history. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 117–27.

  3. 257 COWAN M, Scottish in the margins of New France: Marie Hiroüin de la Conception, a nun at the Hôtel-Dieu Hospital in seventeenth-century Quebec. BW 17 2 (2024) 140–62.

Religion

  1. 258 BERQUIN S, NAPOLITANO V & RIGOTTI E, Holy infrastructures: Catholicism, Detroit borderlands, and the elements. CSSH 66 4 (2024) 786–813.

  2. 259 BOORMAN F C, The Victoria history of Middlesex: St George Hanover Square. London: University of London Press, 2024. 130pp.

  3. 260 CECI L, The International Eucharistic Congress in Chicago (1926): perceptions from the Vatican and Italian Catholics. CHR 11 4 (2024) 752–76.

  4. 261 CRUMLEY J D, MATTHEWS C & SPENCE E, Accommodated in the gallery: unfreedom in the early history of Boston’s Old North Church. RARev250 1 (2024) 14–22.

  5. 262 DRURY A, A history of Christchurch Muslims: integration and harmony. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 176pp.

  6. 263 EMMERICH A, Jewish-Muslim friendship networks: a study of intergenerational boundary work in postwar Germany. CSSH 67 1 (2024) 33–61.

  7. 264 FIELD C, A secularizing society? Case studies of English northern industrial towns in the 1950s. HR 97 278 (2024) 550–72.

  8. 265 FIELD C, Churchgoing in Edinburgh and Leith, 1836–2016: the statistical record. SCH 53 2 (2024) 79–102.

  9. 266 FIELD C, Churchgoing in Glasgow, 1836–2016: the statistical record. SCH 53 1 (2024) 1–28.

  10. 267 FORD J C, Atheism at the Agora: a history of unbelief in ancient Greek polytheism. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 218pp.

  11. 268 HARPSTER D E, The Reverend Joseph F. Berg: revivalism, the Protestant crusade, and the Mercersburg movement. PH 91 2 (2024) 127–64.

  12. 269 KARKASON T, An ambivalent coexistence: Jews and Christians in late Ottoman Edirne. JeH 38 1–2 (2024) 43–67.

  13. 270 KOSTROUN J J, The curiosity of Madeleine Hachard: Ursuline missionaries and the company of the Indies in colonial Louisiana. CHR 110 4 (2024) 682–723.

  14. 271 LOEWE R, Venta Prieta revisited: crisis, conversion and the co-construction of a new history. CJ 44 (2024) 705–25.

  15. 272 MOORE A S, Sheep, sheepdogs, and the good shepherd: gun rights and American Evangelicals in the recent past. ChH 93 3 (2024) 587–606.

  16. 273 ODEBIYI A T, Betwixt and between: non-cloistered religious women in late medieval Rome. ChH 93 3 (2024) 515–32.

  17. 274 SAWKINS J W, Church building and the 1833 bankruptcy of the City of Edinburgh. SCH 53 2 (2024) 97–102.

  18. 275 WANG J Z, From institutional church to inner-city prophet: all people’s mission and the social gospel as urban religion in Edmonton, Canada, 1908–1975. UHR 52 2 (2024).

Recreation

  1. 276 BELLANTA M & CRAMER L, A ‘Bacchanalian mardi gras’: the Melbourne Cup and the popular culture of satirical dress in 1970s Australia. JAusS 48 3 (2024) 314–34.

  2. 277 DOAN Z G, MONSEAU J, HE Y & QIU J G, From cultural import to flourishing sport: a comprehensive history of dancesport in China (1864–2023). IJHS 41 2–3 (2024) 185–209.

  3. 278 DOĞAN H, Modern life-building as a biopower strategy: developing sports spaces in urban, rural and industrial areas in Turkey. IJHS 41 7 (2024) 616–52.

  4. 279 DOUSTALY C & ZEMBRI-MARY C, Is urban planning returning to the past in search of a sustainable future? Exploring the six Paris and London Olympic Games (1900–2024). PLP 39 3 (2024) 675–700.

  5. 280 HIGHMORE B, Adventures in Lollard Street: an experimental London playground, 1955–60. HWJ 97 (2024) 174–95.

  6. 281 HUGGINS M, The rise and fall of Westmorland’s ‘County’ racecourse: Kendal races 1820–1834. NH 61 2 (2024) 242–58.

  7. 282 LANGUILLON-AUSSEL R, Tokyo as an Olympic city across modern history: planning culture as the intangible heritage from a century of hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Games. PLP 39 2 (2024) 551–73.

  8. 283 MOLL V, Standardizing play in the century of the car: the building information cards as shapers of the ideal urban childhood in Finland in the 1960s and 1970s. PLP 39 6 (2024) 1287–308.

  9. 284 SHEERAN G, Republics of leisure: inter-war bungalow towns and holiday camps on the Yorkshire coast. LocH 54 4 (2024) 291–303.

  10. 285 TOZOGLU A E, Addressing the modern regimes of urban spectacle: revisiting the Ottoman General Exhibition of 1863 in Istanbul. JUH 50 3 (2024) 629–55.

Crime and policing

  1. 286 BARRIE D G, The history of violence in Scotland reconsidered: the culture, filtering and treatment of assault in police courts, c. 1829–1900. SHR 103 2 (2024) 318–53.

  2. 287 BASTIEN P, Policing and urban society in eighteenth-century Paris. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2024. 416pp.

  3. 288 BEARDALL T R, KURWA R & LEWIS D F, Mended windows, not broken windows: a Du Boisian analysis of urban policing. CitC 23 4 (2024) 320–40.

  4. 289 BELL A H, Under cover of darkness: murders in blackout London. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2024. 273pp.

  5. 290 DE RAEDT N, Papal and municipal authority in the city: house-destruction as a legal punishment in Renaissance Rome. UH 51 2 (2024) 333–49.

  6. 291 DE REIMANN A C, Police writing and radical modernisation in the Porfiriato and the Conservative Republic (1870s–1910s). Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 234pp.

  7. 292 DOVIZIO C, Hands over the city: the Mafia, L’Ora and the sack of Palermo. UH 51 1 (2024) 257–82.

  8. 293 FIEREMANS N, Captured with malicious intent? The opportunities and limits of debt imprisonment in late medieval Bruges. UH 51 2 (2024) 293–312.

  9. 294 JACKSON L & SUTTON R, Policing women in urban Scotland c. 1890–1950. In TURNER J, JOHNSTON H & PLUSKOTA M eds Policing women: histories in the Western world, 1800 to 1950. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 23–38.

  10. 295 KNIGHTS M, The ambiguities and vagaries of popular control: trust and parochial corruption in early modern England. JSocH 58 1 (2024) 144–65.

  11. 296 LJUNGBERG J & JAKOBSEN J, The establishment of the police office in mid-eighteenth-century Altona: new opportunities for privacy in transitional times? UH 51 3 (2024) 540–59.

  12. 297 MOLLOY C, Recapturing the Bugsy Malones. IESH 51 1 (2024) 113–30.

  13. 298 OLDENBURG S, When the dead cry: crime, population, and popular literature in early modern Southwark. JMEMS 54 3 (2024) 617–35.

  14. 299 ROMERA M A M, Popular control through public accountability in Iberia (thirteenth to sixteenth centuries). JSocH 58 1 (2024) 52–80.

  15. 300 ROSE C, Homicide in early modern Bologna: a prepositional cartography. UH 51 3 (2024) 480–99.

  16. 301 ROUSSEL D, Vigilance, popular control and neighborhood surveillance in besieged Paris (1589–1591). JSocH 58 1 (2024) 81–99.

  17. 302 SAMPSON R J, Great American city: Chicago and the enduring neighborhood effect, 2nd edn. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 560pp.

  18. 303 SEACOMBE M, ‘My charges about the highways’: constables and infrastructure in seventeenth-century Yorkshire. NH 61 1 (2024) 24–50.

  19. 304 ST JOHN J, Consolidating ‘traditional methods’ of public order policing: the response of the Home Office and the Metropolitan Police to mass demonstrations in 1968. CBH 38 2 (2024) 270–98.

  20. 305 STAFFORD C, The policing of female drunkenness in two northern English boroughs, c. 1869–1875. In TURNER J, JOHNSTON H & PLUSKOTA M eds Policing women: histories in the Western world, 1800 to 1950. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 75–93.

  21. 306 TURNING P, Rege Ribaldum: participatory punishment in the pursuit of urban justice in late medieval southern France. JSocH 58 1 (2024) 10–26.

  22. 307 WILLIAMS, R Y & MURCH D, Carceral geography: black urban history and punishment in late twentieth-century Los Angeles. In HARRIS L M, LANG C, WILLIAMS R Y & TROTTER W J eds Black urban history at the crossroads: race and place in the American city. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024. 189–208.

  23. 308 WOOLNOUGH G, The policing of women in the northwest of England, 1856–1901. In TURNER J, JOHNSTON H & PLUSKOTA M eds Policing women: histories in the Western world, 1800 to 1950. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 94–109.

Minority groups

  1. 309 BERMAN-GLADSTONE B, ‘Dissension amongst the community’: transnational Jewish philanthropy, the Jewish Emergency Committee, and the failure to rebuild ‘Aden’s Jewish Quarter after the 1947 riots. JeH 38 3–4 (2024) 213–47.

  2. 310 CHANNA S M, Dhobis of Delhi: an urban ethnography from the margins, 1974–2023. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 264pp.

  3. 311 GREEFS H & WINTER A, The democratization of long-distance migration: trajectories and flows during the ‘Mobility Transition’, 1850–1910. SSH 48 3 (2024) 383–408.

  4. 312 GREENSPOON L J, Jews and urban life. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 2024. 272pp.

  5. 313 HARRIS R, How ‘neighborhood’ arose, changed, and grew: a bilingual Canadian story. JUH 50 6 (2024) 1386–402.

  6. 314 KENNEDY A D & WESTON S, Life at the margins in early modern Scotland. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2024. 242pp.

  7. 315 KONVITZ J W, Cities, citizenship and Jews in France and the United States, 1905–2022. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 412pp.

  8. 316 McSHEFFREY S, Strangers in early Tudor London: Dutch artisans and the Evil May Day Riot of 1517. In VAN HOUTS E M C, PUTTER A, ARBABZADAH M & LEVELT S eds The literature and history of Anglo-Dutch relations, medieval to modern. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 215–29.

  9. 317 PARK S, Designing deaf spaces: education, hygiene, and citizenship in nineteenth-century France. PaedH 60 4 (2024) 592–615.

  10. 318 RAWCLIFFE D, A successful transnational Cold War intervention? Revisiting the Heung Yee Kuk’s ‘goodwill’ tour of Britain’s Chinatowns, 1967–1970. CBH 38 3 (2024) 404–25.

  11. 319 SURH G S, Russian pogroms and Jewish revolution, 1905: class, ethnicity, autocracy in the first Russian Revolution. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 278pp.

  12. 320 WARCHOL A, Investing in ‘civilized’ futures: orphans and colonial caretaking in Saint-Louis, Senegal, 1930–49. JCCH 25 2 (2024).

Race

  1. 321 ALVARADO S E & COOPERSTOCK A, The echo of neighborhood disadvantage: multigenerational contextual hardship and adult income for whites, Blacks, and Latinos. CitC 23 1 (2024) 47–80.

  2. 322 ASSERAF A, Return to Orléans: racism, rumor, and social scientists in 1960s France. CSSH 66 4 (2024) 845–68.

  3. 323 BAMBERG A, Building strength in the African American community: Pittsburgh’s Centre Avenue YMCA. PH 91 3 (2024) 300–20.

  4. 324 CONNELL K, An African American anthropologist in Wales: St. Clair Drake and the transatlantic ecologies of race relations. JBS 63 1 (2024) 167–98.

  5. 325 CVORNYEK R & STARK D, Race and resistance in Boston: a contested sports history. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2024. 404pp.

  6. 326 GODFREY B J, The color of preservation: Black historic placemaking in New York City. JHG 83 (2024) 128–41.

  7. 327 GOLIO A J, Building a Du Boisian research agenda on gentrification. CitC 23 4 (2024) 280–95.

  8. 328 HARRIS L M, LANG C, WILLIAMS R Y & TROTTER W J, Black urban history at the crossroads: race and place in the American city. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2024. 344pp.

  9. 329 HOUSTON G F, VAN ROOYEN H, ANDERSON B, SMITH D, SABER T, HAROLD M & COUCH M, A social history from below: life stories from Wentworth, South Africa. Cape Town: HSRC Press, 2024. 336pp.

  10. 330 KAHRL A W, The Black tax: 150 years of theft, exploitation, and dispossession in America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 443pp.

  11. 331 LARSON J, The Black built environment of benevolence in New York’s Tenderloin District: comparative architectural approaches to race, reform, and discipline, 1865–1910. B & L 31 1 (2024) 54–74.

  12. 332 MARKLEY S N & HOLLOWAY S R, Underestimating racism? Decoupling race and redlining. AAAG 114 7 (2024) 1464–82.

  13. 333 NELSON N, Fractures within fair housing: the battle for the memory and legacy of the long fair housing movement. JUH 50 6 (2024) 1356–85.

  14. 334 PONTON D, Houston and the permanence of segregation: an Afropessimist approach to urban history. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024. 277pp.

  15. 335 POURTAVAF L, Gulistan in black and white: the racial and gendered legacies of slavery in nineteenth-century Qajar Iran. AHR 129 2 (2024) 395–428.

  16. 336 RODRIGUEZ A K & DANTZLER P A, ‘Broken home’: (de)constructing the moral standards of mobility for Atlanta’s early Black public housing families. CitC 23 4 (2024) 296–319.

  17. 337 SEN A, Landscapes of hope: anachronic histories of a single urban block in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. PubH 46 3 (2024) 38–62.

  18. 338 ZHANG A, Rethinking ‘domestic enemies’: slavery and race formation in late medieval Florence. Spec 99 2 (2024).

Family life

  1. 339 BARKE J, COHEN S, COLE T, HENRY L, HUTCHEN J, LATINWO-OLAJIDE V, McLELLAN J, PRIDGEON E & WHITMORE B, A history of survival: preserving and working with an archive of single parent activism. WomHR 33 1 (2024) 117–30.

  2. 340 KOEKKOEK B & BRAS H, Wanted: marriage partner! Partner preferences in newspaper contact adverts in the Netherlands, 1900–1955. HF 29 4 (2024) 532–57.

  3. 341 LÄMMERT S, Shameful or shameless? Anxieties about mothers and women’s autonomy on the Central African Copperbelt, 1956–1964. G & H (2024).

  4. 342 LINNE J & ANGILLETTA F, Living together, loving together: pet families in the 21st century. HF 29 1 (2024) 182–200.

  5. 343 PAGE A, ‘Help shelter mend a broken family’: homes, homelessness, and crisis in 1960s Britain. MBH 35 3 (2024) 335–53.

  6. 344 PEÑARROCHA M F, The shadows of family life: mistreated girls admitted to the Casa de Misericordia in Barcelona in the eighteenth century. JFH 49 2 (2024) 156–73.

  7. 345 ROMMELSPACHER A, What about the widows? Widowhood and households in Cape Town 1938/1939. HF 29 3 (2024) 331–49.

  8. 346 WINDER J, Designed for play: children’s playgrounds and the politics of urban space, 1840–2010. London: University of London Press, 2024. 282pp.

Gender

  1. 347 ADELEY F J, Working women in Jordan: education, migration, and aspiration. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 216pp.

  2. 348 AYERS P, Gender, locality, and culture: revisiting masculinities in the Liverpool docklands, 1900–1939. In HOULBROOK M, JONES K & MECHEN B eds Men and masculinities in modern Britain: a history for the present. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024. 189–207.

  3. 349 BELLANTA M & CRAMER L, Tropical whites: hegemonic masculinity and menswear at the crossroads of Australia and Asia, 1900–1939. G & H 36 2 (2024) 519–43.

  4. 350 CHIRIATTI M C & SAN JOSÉ M D C T, In and out of the city: female environments, relations and dynamics of space (400–1500). Leiden: Brill, 2024. 244pp.

  5. 351 DONG Y, ‘Red housekeeping’ in a socialist factory: Jiashu and transforming reproductive labor in urban China (1949–1962). IRSH 69 1 (2024) 1–24.

  6. 352 DURAND O, Streetwalking and the city: un/gendering public spaces and counter-mapping Oxford and Cambridge. In PHIPPS C ed. Histories of sex work around the world. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 82–97.

  7. 353 HAY M, Gender inequality and the Irish Revolution: the girls of Na Fianna Éireann, 1911–22. WomHR 33 7 (2024) 977–1000.

  8. 354 JOHANSEN M, Struggling ‘heroes’: everyday masculine encounters in the public library, 1890s–1920s. In HOULBROOK M, JONES K & MECHEN B eds Men and masculinities in modern Britain: a history for the present. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024. 208–27.

  9. 355 KOYAGI M, Pedalling in Pahlavi Iran: cycle mobility and competing masculinities. JtranH 45 1 (2024) 41–61.

  10. 356 MASON S, Community nostalgia and transgenerational trauma: reconciling dichotomies from women’s oral history of West Belfast, 1975–1995. ISR 32 4 (2024) 523–39.

  11. 357 MOTYL K, Embodied histories: new womanhood in Vienna, 1894–1934. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024.

  12. 358 PATTENDEN M, Priests and their wigs in eighteenth-century Rome. ChH 93 2 (2024) 272–91.

  13. 359 REIMANN C, Manoeuvring urban spaces in-between public and private: female agency in early-twentieth-century Gothenburg. IM 42 1 (2024) 83–110.

  14. 360 TANVIR M T I & MOSTOFA S M, Why women get divorced in Bangladesh: exploring individualism and other factors. JFH 49 4 (2024) 417–31.

  15. 361 THEINOVÁ D, Masculinities in transition: Ciaran Carson, Alan Gillis and Padraig Regan in and out of Belfast. ÉI 49 1 (2024) 131–46.

  16. 362 WYNTER R & EWEN S, Choreographing urban ambulance in Britain, c. 1870–1920: movement, gender, biological time and the city. SH 49 1 (2024) 78–105.

Sexualities

  1. 363 MBAH N L, Sex in Lagos from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century. In WIESNER-HANKS M E & KUEFLER M eds The Cambridge world history of sexualities Vol. III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 379–401.

  2. 364 PEAKMAN J, Libertine London: sex in the eighteenth-century metropolis. London: Reaktion, 2024. 360pp.

  3. 365 ROELENS J, Citizens and sodomites: persecution and perception of sodomy in the Southern Low Countries (1400–1700). Leiden: Brill, 2024. 438pp.

V Economic activity

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 366 BREATHNACH C & MURPHY R, Fine lines: locating commercial sex work in official data, Dublin 1901 and 1911. UH 51 2 (2024) 435–56.

  2. 367 DANTAS M L R & HART E, Early modern Atlantic cities. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 104pp.

  3. 368 GOLDBERT J, Exploring peasant and bourgeois identity: haggards, masers, sheep and spoons in later fifteenth-century County Dublin. IHS 48 174 (2024) 199–225.

  4. 369 LEECH D, A ward level economic topography of sixteenth-century Coventry. MidH 49 1 (2024) 76–96.

  5. 370 TAYLOR C, Women, gender and the ancient economy: towards a feminist economic history of the ancient Greek world. JHelS 144 (2024) 1–28.

  6. 371 WILLNESS H, WATSON A & MACFAYDEN J, Downtown Toronto’s emergent properties: exploring new methods for using port records to disaggregate urban metabolism in Toronto, Ontaria, 1850–1926. HM 57 4 (2024) 267–82.

Urban economic activity

  1. 372 GODDARD R & SMALLEY G, Economics and the cult of death in late medieval England: the Guild of St. George in Nottingham, 1459–1546. MidH 49 1 (2024) 53–75.

  2. 373 HASSEN-DAKHLI I, Medium-sized cities in the age of globalisation. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 162pp.

  3. 374 HESTER Y & BARNETT T, Community and commerce: oral histories of Black business in Los Angeles. PubH 46 3 (2024) 7–37.

  4. 375 JARZOMBEK M, The long millennium: affluence, architecture and its dark matter economy. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 334pp.

  5. 376 KALMRING S, Towns and commerce in Viking-Age Scandinavia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 282pp.

  6. 377 KIRKLAND J S, The 1444 Sunday law of London. HR 97 277 (2024) 295–306.

  7. 378 MOCARELLI L, ONGARO G & PROSPERI L, The cost of living in early modern cities: a study on eighteenth-century northern Italy. UH 51 3 (2024) 560–80.

  8. 379 OLSON S, Time is money: the challenges of immigrant enterprise in mid-nineteenth century Montreal. UHR 52 2 (2024).

  9. 380 RAUN D, A contentious empire: Pan Am, Intercontinental, and Hotel Phoenicia in Beirut. JTH 16 2 (2024) 191–206.

  10. 381 ROANE J T, Dark agoras: insurgent Black social life and the politics of place. New York: New York University Press, 2024. 312pp.

  11. 382 SÁNCHEZ-FUARROS I, PAIVA D & CALVO D M, Ambiance, tourism and the city. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 284pp.

Industry

  1. 383 ALEXANDER N & DOHERTY A M, Interinstitutional shaping of retail innovation: the nineteenth century retail arcade. BH 66 6 (2024) 1313–44.

  2. 384 BANERJEE D, Caste, gig-economy, and youth: the resurgence of a new age caste politics in urban Gujarat. SAHC 15 2 (2024) 231–46.

  3. 385 CARRIERE M & SCHALLIOL D, There grows the city: a long history of urban agriculture in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. JUH 50 4 (2024) 882–901.

  4. 386 CHANG J-H, Thermal governance, urban metabolism and carbonised comfort: air-conditioning and urbanisation in the Gulf and Doha. US 61 15 (2024) 2928–44.

  5. 387 COHEN I T, Parsi capital and imperial infrastructure: shipping and shopping in the port of Aden, 1840–1888. JGH 19 2 (2024) 133–69.

  6. 388 COPPINI C, The late Bronze and early Iron Age ceramic sequence at Tell Fekheriye (Syria). Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2024. 1140pp.

  7. 389 DEGRAEVE M, The business of city-building. Long-term change and continuity in the construction sector (Brussels, 1830–1970). ES (2024) 1–32.

  8. 390 DEMETS L, Bruges as a multilingual contact zone: book production and multilingual literary networks in fifteenth-century Bruges. UH 51 2 (2024) 313–32.

  9. 391 DRIBE M, NILSSON T & TEGUNIMATAKA A, Urban lives: an industrial city and its people during the twentieth century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 384pp.

  10. 392 LEE J S, Weaving in late fourteenth-century Yorkshire: an early example of proto-industrialisation? YAJ 96 1 (2024) 179–200.

  11. 393 MISKELL L, ORANGE H & ALMOND-BROWN G, Art as industrial heritage: deindustrialisation and public sculpture in Britain’s steel-making regions, 1976–2020. SH 49 4 (2024) 510–42.

  12. 394 PATEL D, To revive India’s industries: the global and imperial roots of swadeshi in the nineteenth century. MAsS 58 3 (2024) 686–716.

  13. 395 PEI X, CAO Y, YANG Y, LIEW C M, ZHANG C, QIN L, DENG Z, ZHU S, CHEN Y, ZHAO H, NING C, HUDSON M J, ZHANG Y & ZHANG H, Bone-artefact production in late Neolithic central China: evidence from Pingliangtai. A 98 399 (2024) 688–708.

  14. 396 SAELENS W, Industrial energy consumption in the urban Low Countries: Ghent and Leiden compared (c. 1650–1850). UH 51 3 (2024) 519–39.

  15. 397 SAVOLDI F, Contested port cities: logistical frictions and civic mobilization in Genoa and Venice. EPC 42 8 (2024) 1352–69.

  16. 398 SOFIA P N, The maritime consequences of peace: the impact of treaties with the Barbary states on Venetian shipping in the eighteenth century. IJMH 36 2 (2024) 213–35.

  17. 399 SOLAR P M, DUNN O B & KANE A, Shipping in the London coal trade, 1700–1860. EcHR 77 3 (2024) 1105–34.

  18. 400 TRAVIESO E & WESTLAND T, What happened to the workshop of West Africa? Resilience and decline of handicraft textiles in colonial northern Nigeria, 1911–52. EcHR 77 4 (2024) 1314–35.

  19. 401 WILLIAMS J K, Targeting reform: Superfund, Industri-Plex, and pollution remediation in the United States. EnH 29 2 (2024) 307–33.

Food supply

  1. 402 ARIAS L M & FLORES-PEREGRINA D, Colonial agricultural estates and rural development in twentieth-century Mexico. EcHDR 39 2 (2024) 105–44.

  2. 403 COMLEY S M, Collaborative famine relief: Chinese and British responses to the north China famine from Melbourne, Victoria. HA 21 1 (2024) 34–53.

  3. 404 GUPTA C, Kitchen Hinduism: food politics and Hindi cookbooks in colonial north India. MAsS 58 3 (2024) 739–63.

  4. 405 HARDON A & TAN L M, Packaged plants: seductive supplements and metabolic precarity in the Philippines. London: UCL Press, 2024. 270pp.

  5. 406 JOSHIPURA T, Feeding African cities: hinterland suitability and urban growth in twentieth-century sub-Saharan Africa. EcHDR 39 3 (2024) 251–78.

  6. 407 KEN C Y, ‘Jostling for right of way’: hawker discourse, legitimation, and politics in post-independence Malay(si)a, 1957–1969. MAsS 58 6 (2024) 1664–84.

  7. 408 LEGEAR R, An urban ice well at Gravesend. AC 145 (2024) 346–9.

  8. 409 MILES D, Claigmar Vineyard in Finchley: commercial grape-growing in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. LocH 54 1 (2024) 26–39.

  9. 410 WALTON S, ‘Botha cake’ and ‘Belgian onion soup’: gendered patriotism through three South African, First World War, community cookbooks. JICH 52 3 (2024) 441–63.

Finance, banking and services

  1. 411 BALABAN I A, The establishment of the eurodollar market in Paris and the failure of regulation and reform, 1959–1964. BuH 66 7 (2024) 1735–57.

  2. 412 BORDO M D & ROBERDS W, Central bank digital currencies: an old tale with a new chapter. FHR 31 1 (2024) 94–122.

  3. 413 CALE M, Trust betrayed: the failure of the Birmingham Penny Bank, 1865. MidH 49 2 (2024) 189–206.

  4. 414 GONZAGA E, Monsoon marketplace capitalism, media, and modernity in Manila and Singapore. New York: Fordham University Press, 2024. 272pp.

  5. 415 HARDY E F, A bank for the people: the People’s Savings Bank and community building in Philadelphia, 1907–1917. PH 91 3 (2024) 270–99.

  6. 416 KARAK A, The politics of commerce in eighteenth-century Bengal: a reappraisal. IESHR 61 1 (2024) 33–66.

  7. 417 KEFFORD A, The global rise of the British property development sector, 1945–1975. P & P 264 1 (2024) 199–235.

  8. 418 O’SULLIVAN M, The Indian Muslim salariat and the moral and political economies of usury laws in colonial India, 1855–1914. P & P 264 1 (2024) 119–61.

  9. 419 OLSON S & POUTANEN M A, From conversation to contract: the notary’s role in nineteenth-century Montreal. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  10. 420 PIVARAVA A V, The formation and cross-border connectivity of bank branch networks across the Canadian provinces: regional internationalization via interbank networks and foreign trade (1879–1900). EcHR (2024) 1–64.

  11. 421 ROTH R, Memoria dolet. Der schwierige Umgang mit der Erinnerung an den Holocaust in der Bankenstadt Frankfurt [Memoria dolet. The difficult dealing with the memory of the Holocaust in the Banking City of Frankfurt]. MS 55 2 (2024).

  12. 422 SHARMA P, Frontiersman in imperial Delhi: regulating Afghans and their moneylending, 1912–49. IESHR 61 2 (2024) 203–29.

  13. 423 VON WROCHEM O, Hamburg als Handelsmetropole und sein Gedenken an die NS-Verbrechen [Hamburg as a trading metropolis and its commemoration of Nazi crimes]. MS 55 2 (2024).

  14. 424 WAKEMAN R, The worlds of Victor Sassoon: Bombay, London, Shanghai, 1918–1941. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2024. 272pp.

  15. 425 WINTER M, Public services and the urban middling sort: the provision of water in Bristol, Chester and Ipswich, 1540–1640. UH 51 3 (2024) 500–18.

Consumption

  1. 426 COLLINS M P, The emergence of a shopping centre hierarchy in South London during the nineteenth century. HRC 10 3 (2024) 242–73.

  2. 427 EVERED K T & EVERED E Ö, Of hovels and homes: consumption, class, and domestic space in early republican Turkey. MES 60 6 (2024) 929–47.

  3. 428 GREEN C, Nineteenth-century Nottingham drinking behaviour, 1800–1900. FCH 27 2 (2024) 133–69.

  4. 429 HATTON-PROULX C, The role of forecasts in planning for energy infrastructure: a historical look at past futures in postwar Quebec. ES (2024) 1–44.

  5. 430 LECLERCQ R, Eau-de-vie de Cognac contre tabac virginien: les échanges commerciaux et culturels du port franc de Dunkurque avec Londres au XVIIIe siècle [Cognac brandy for Virginian tobacco: commercial and cultural exchanges between the free port of Dunkirk and London in the 18th century] RN 49 (2024) 11–42.

  6. 431 LEMIRE B, Empire and the fashioning of whiteness: im/material culture in the British Atlantic world, c. 1660–1820. JIH 55 1 (2024) 57–87.

  7. 432 McCULLA T, Insatiable city: food and race in New Orleans. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 352pp.

  8. 433 MACKENZIE N G, GORDON J & GANNON M J, Local patriots: Dewar’s Scotch whisky, prosociality, politics, and place – 1846–1930. ES (2024) 1–24.

  9. 434 MOSS T, Navigating electricity dependencies in Cold War Berlin: an instructive history of urban infrastructure security. UH 51 3 (2024) 616–32.

  10. 435 PATTISON J S, Wine, taxation, and the state in Ḥafṣid Tunis: ethical consumption and public finance in a medieval Muslim city. Spec 99 3 (2024).

  11. 436 SPERO E F & McCANTS A E C, Consumer goods or store of value? Textile evidence and standards of living in eighteenth-century Amsterdam. JIH 55 1 (2024) 31–55.

  12. 437 SULLIVAN M, A new colony and an old Spanish city: ceramic consumption in British St. Augustine, Florida. IJHA 28 2 (2024) 359–94.

Working conditions

  1. 438 HAWKINS M B, Guns, goons, and the waterfront priest: remaking Manila’s anti-communist docks in 1950. JHG 84 (2024) 162–72.

  2. 439 SARGEANT J D, Fishing, freedom, and the market in early modern London. HWJ 97 (2024) 77–101.

  3. 440 WARREN C, Starved for light: the long shadow of rickets and vitamin D deficiency. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 288pp.

  4. 441 WEICKSEL S J, Mining charity: material culture and philanthropy on the Comstock Lode. PubH 46 2 (2024) 37–61.

Labour organization

  1. 442 JOU-BADAL X, Gender conflicts on the shopfloor: Barcelona women at Chocolates Amatller, 1890–1914. IRSH 69 2 (2024) 230–57.

  2. 443 KOVÁCS É & FROJIMOVICS K, ‘A miraculous sign!’ Vienna through the eyes of Hungarian-Jewish slave labourers. CJ 44 2 (2024) 319–38.

  3. 444 RAMIREZ-LOPEZ J, ‘Our dark hands and sore backs’: the Comité Cívico popular mixteco and the new grassroots activism by Indigenous Mexican migrants. JAEH 43 2 (2024) 5–33.

  4. 445 SINHA A, In the valley of historical time. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 420pp.

  5. 446 TIVEN R B, ‘We were put out of good jobs’: women night workers in New York and the origins of the Women’s Equal Opportunity League. ILWCH 107 (2024) 151–67.

VI Urban networks

Urban networks

  1. 447 AL-HABIB M E, Kuwait’s ‘Ajam merchants: a transnational community (1896–1950). MES 60 5 (2024) 700–18.

  2. 448 BURNARD T G & HAGGERTY S, Commerce and credit: female credit networks in eighteenth-century Kingston, Jamaica. ES 25 2 (2024) 536–61.

  3. 449 DEMSHUK A, East Germany and the lost German East: Dresden–Wrocław ‘socialist friendship’ after Nazism and forced migration. UH 51 4 (2024) 744–62.

  4. 450 HO V K, How deep is your love? Patriotism, money and the people in Canton in the early phase of the Sino-Japanese War, 1937–1938. UH 51 1 (2024) 233–56.

  5. 451 JACOME V, ‘Killing complaints with courtesy’: the role of relationship building in the success of the early U.S. central power stations (1890–1938). ES (2024) 1–24.

  6. 452 KEO B Z, Colonial city, global entanglements: intra-and trans-imperial networks in George Town, 1786–1937. JWorH 35 1 (2024) 1–32.

  7. 453 KLABJAN B, Twinning across the Adriatic: history, memory and municipal co-operation between Italy and Yugoslavia during the Cold War. UH 51 4 (2024) 763–76.

  8. 454 LANGENOHL A, From post-war reconciliation to European integration? Competing historicities of ‘exchange’ in European small-town twinning. UH 51 4 (2024) 777–92.

  9. 455 LEON J K, World cities in history: urban networks from ancient Mesopotamia to the Dutch Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 334pp.

  10. 456 McKELLAR L, Elite attitudes to the ‘public sphere’ in fifteenth-century Castile. JMH 50 3 (2024) 353–74.

  11. 457 MONTEMEZZO S, Networks in the early history of capitalism: merchant practices in Renaissance Venice. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 226pp.

  12. 458 RAU C, Ambiguities of urban détente: East German town twinning and the struggle with globalization in the 1960s. UH 51 4 (2024) 725–43.

  13. 459 SAUL J, A network of contacts: metropolitan influences in the delivery of poor relief in the London hinterland (1778–1785). LJ 49 2 (2024) 147–66.

  14. 460 TAYLOR A, ROBERTSON E & DRIVER J, A Global North: transfers, exchanges and transnational links between Victoria and South Yorkshire, 1880–1914. NH 61 2 (2024) 259–20.

  15. 461 WARWICK T, ‘A firm foundation for future understanding, respect and friendship’: the ideals and reality of post-war town twinning, 1945–2020. UH 51 4 (2024) 709–24.

Knowledge networks

  1. 462 BOURRIER K, JACOBSON D & BROSZ J, The ‘wilds of Brompton’: mapping nineteenth-century women writers’ early careers in the sociable London suburbs. JVC 29 3 (2024) 363–82.

  2. 463 CREYGHTON C, Transfer of ideas and exile sociability in Paris, 1830–1848: a localized intellectual history. JMEH 22 2 (2024) 265–84.

  3. 464 DEGRAEVE M, DENEWETH H & VAN DE VOORDE S, Artisans’ chase for urban space. Clusters of construction entrepreneurs in Brussels, c. 1830–1930. UH 51 3 (2024) 581–99.

  4. 465 GARAU R, Patronage, cultural politics and the marginalization of astrology in seventeenth-century France: the case of J.B. Morin and of his polemics with Pierre Gassendi and his circle. NJHS 57 4 (2024) 603–22.

  5. 466 HANSEN A & DER WEDUWEN A eds Publishers, censors and collectors in the European book trade, 1650–1750. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 342pp.

  6. 467 HIGGITT R, KILBURN-TOPPIN J & MOXHAM N, Metropolitan science: London sites and cultures of knowledge and practice, c. 1600–1800. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024. 240pp.

  7. 468 JONES S, Manchester minds: a university history of ideas. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024. 392pp.

  8. 469 MAZUELA-ANGUITA A, Women in convent spaces and the music networks of early modern Barcelona. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 316pp.

  9. 470 MITTELMEIER M, Naples 1925, transl. by FRISCH S. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2024. 192pp.

  10. 471 MURRAY H & SCHERMERHORN C, Jacob D. Green and Britain’s nineteenth-century Black abolitionist network. SaA 45 3 (2024) 606–28.

  11. 472 NENZI L, Globality without mobility: ephemera, 1830s–1860s. JWorH 35 4 (2024) 547–77.

  12. 473 SÖRLIN S & PAGLIA E, Stockholm and the rise of global environmental governance: the human environment. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 346pp.

  13. 474 WELTMAN S A, Victorian London’s Black playwrights. NCC 46 1 (2024) 89–97.

  14. 475 YEH E, Colonial actors in dualities: Japanese research on colonial era Philippine forestry. JCCH 25 3 (2024).

Transport

  1. 476 ALFF D, The Northeast corridor: the trains, the people, the history, the region. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 280pp.

  2. 477 AMMERMANN F N & SITHOLE N E N, Working around exclusive infrastructure – African workers and their families navigating race and gender on Rhodesia Railways, 1945–1964. JtranH 45 3 (2024) 671–91.

  3. 478 BLACK J, A history of the railroad in 100 maps. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 288pp.

  4. 479 BORCH A, A nostalgic trip? Klaus Rifbjerg’s ‘På Sporet af den Tabte Vogn’ and the Copenhagen tramway. JtranH 45 2 (2024) 294–316.

  5. 480 CHOI T Y, Urban transportation and London’s imagined infrastructure. VLC 52 2 (2024) 425–431.

  6. 481 DRAPER G, A Tudor shipwreck on Dungeness: shipping and wrecks around Lydd in the medieval and early modern periods. AC 145 (2024) 55–77.

  7. 482 FINCH J, Tramway closure representations as tools in critical urbanism: London and Glasgow on film, 1953–62. JtranH 45 2 (2024) 337–64.

  8. 483 FROST S L & FROST A K, Taxi Shanghai: entrepreneurship and semi-colonial context. BuH 66 2 (2024) 407–36.

  9. 484 LAINE S, The closure of the Turku tramway in visual memory. JtranH 45 2 (2024) 272–93.

  10. 485 MULEEV E, Skotovoz, pripiski and the ‘law of labour settlement’: transportation planning and management in the USSR. JtranH 45 1 (2024) 62–82.

  11. 486 REDWOOD S D, The River Ythan navigation, Aberdeenshire: the only natural inland waterway in northern Scotland. PSocAS 153 (2024) 281–97.

  12. 487 SCHIPPER D, ‘Neighborhoods kept divided’: race, roads and rupture in a Baltimore neighbourhood-park corridor. JtranH 45 3 (2024) 712–34.

  13. 488 SMITH L S, ‘Travel inter-city like the men do’: marketing British Rail’s Inter-City in Britain 1964–1979. ES (2024) 1–40.

  14. 489 TELFER D J & HASHIMOTO A, Looking forward via historic travel and looking back via heritage tourism: an analysis of roads, mobility and imagination of place along the Tōkaidō Road in Edo Period, Japan. JTH 16 1 (2024) 1–31.

  15. 490 TURNER-O’KEEFFE S, Exchanging rail for roads and rubber tyres: how rail declined in Auckland. NZJH 58 2 (2024) 77–98.

VII Politics and administration

Aspects of urban administration

  1. 491 BERNHARDT C, On municipal governance, urban housing and building in National Socialist Germany. MS 55 2 (2024).

  2. 492 BOSTON H, Lordship and locality in the long twelfth century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 260pp.

  3. 493 BROWN A T, Oaths of fidelity: loyalty and officeholding in late medieval Durham. H 109 384–5 (2025) 34–58.

  4. 494 CHATELLAIN C, Les commandes de peinture de l’échevinage d’Amiens (1385–1515) [Painting orders from the aldermen of Amiens (1385–1515)]. RN 448 (2024) 235–80.

  5. 495 DEMOEN R, Signer sa fidélité [Signing his loyalty]. HU 71 3 (2024) 97–117.

  6. 496 FRENCH H, The farce of the commons? Corporate rights, political wrongs and common-pool resources in English towns, 1835–1870. SH 49 2 (2024) 143–67.

  7. 497 GABB G, The burgesses of Swansea: some reinterpretation. WHR 32 1 (2024) 41–67.

  8. 498 HARTRICH E, The boundaries of popular control in late medieval English towns, JSocH 58 1 (2024) 27–51.

  9. 499 HEALEY J, Social discipline and the refusal of poor relief under the English old poor law, c. 1650–1730. HJ 67 5 (2024) 920–42.

  10. 500 LIDDY C D, The household, the citizen and the city: towards a social history of urban politics in the late Middle Ages. SH 49 3 (2024) 261–93.

  11. 501 MACDONALD G S, Sailors, spies, and sovereignty: Greenock’s revolutionary turmoil, 1688–1691. BW 17 1 (2024) 23–41.

  12. 502 McTOMINEY A, Waterworks, municipal government and the environment in twentieth-century Britain. UH 51 3 (2024) 600–15.

  13. 503 NODA K, Farmland to sea: the contemporary policy history of night soil management in Tokyo. WH 16 2–3 (2024) 291–306.

  14. 504 POULET F, SUIRE É & TSIMBIDY M, Civilités et incivilités urbaines urbanité, rituels et cérémonies dans la ville du Xviie siècle [Urban civilities and incivilities: urbanity, rituals, and ceremonies in the seventeenth-century city]. Turnhout: Brepols, 2024.

  15. 505 SHENG J, Negotiating extra-settlement roads: boundary making, administrative disputes, and power shifts in treaty-port Shanghai, 1860–1937. MAsS 58 3 (2024) 805–39.

  16. 506 SOLIS M, Lessons in legacies: treatment plant expansion under the Clean Water Act. JPH 23 3 (2024) 197–213.

  17. 507 TEMYBY A, Governance and public space in the Australian city: negotiating public order in Brisbane, 1875–1914. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 200pp.

Voting and electoral history

  1. 508 MILLER J, Suffrage and the secret ballot in eighteenth-century London parishes. HJ 67 1 (2024) 42–61.

  2. 509 RAWLINSON S, Boundary review and the organization and identity of the Peterborough divisional Labour Party. LHR 89 2 (2024) 127–53.

  3. 510 SPYCHAL M, Mapping the state: English boundaries and the 1832 Reform Act. London: University of London Press, 2024. 368pp.

  4. 511 TREE R D, Controverted elections, electoral controversy and the Scottish Privy Council, 1689–1708. ParlH 43 1 (2024) 53–71.

  5. 512 TUFFNELL K, A tale of two poll books – Wareham 1702 and Dorchester 1705. ParlH 43 1 (2024) 36–52.

  6. 513 WADDELL B, The popular politics of local petitioning in early modern England. JBS 63 3 (2024) 568–87.

Political activism

  1. 514 BEHERA A, Manufacturing threat: reality and rhetoric of urban Maoism in India. In BEHERA A ed. Maoist insurgency, state and people: overlooked issues and unaddressed grievances. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 36–47.

  2. 515 CHEN M, ‘Held from the mainland’: political deportation, detention, and immigrants’ rights during the Cold War. JAEH 43 4 (2024) 69–98.

  3. 516 COWAN D, Politics of the past: inter-war memories and the making of British popular politics, 1939–2009. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 288pp.

  4. 517 DUMOLYN J, HAEMERS J, MURRAY A & VAN DEN MAAGDENBERG Y, Communes and conflict: urban rebellion in late medieval Flanders. Leiden: Brill, 2024. 486pp.

  5. 518 EBEL J, Risking Reform. ChH 93 2 (2024) 263–71.

  6. 519 FUNG A, MOSS D & WESTAD O A, When democracy breaks: studies in democratic erosion and collapse, from ancient Athens to the present day. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 367pp.

  7. 520 GARCÍA-PONCE O & WANTCHEKON L, Critical junctures: independence movements and democracy in Africa. AJPolSci 68 4 (2024), 1266–85.

  8. 521 HART J, One British archive: archives of dissent: complicating anti-colonial histories through the Watson Commission (Gold Coast/Ghana). JBS 63 3 (2024) 517–20.

  9. 522 HAYNES A, The other women’s rights movement: ‘streetwalkers’, habeas corpus and anticarceral activism in New York City, 1830–1860. G & H 36 3 (2024) 840–58.

  10. 523 JENKINS W, Locating Irishness in the ‘Belfast of this Great Dominion’: Toronto, 1841–1926. JAEH 44 1 (2024) 135–58.

  11. 524 LEGON E, Conspiracy, congregation, company, and commerce in England, 1680–1688: the narratives of Edward Massey of Braintree. H 109 386–7 (2024) 226–52.

  12. 525 MARREC A, Du biogaz en héritage. Mobilisations autour d’un ‘gisement’ d’énergie dans une décharge urbaine (Montréal, 1986–2009) [Biogas as a legacy. Mobilizations around an energy ‘deposit’ in an urban landfill (Montreal, 1986-2009)]. UHR 52 2 (2024).

  13. 526 MULLGARDT B, Wear some armor in your hair: urban renewal and the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Lincoln Park. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2024. 274pp.

  14. 527 PERTUZ O D, Neither revolutionary nor co-opted: the everyday making of popular politics in Cartagena, Columbia, during the National Front. In LÓPEZ-PEDREROS A R & BRITTO L eds Histories of solitude: Colombia, 1820s–1970s. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024.

  15. 528 ROBILLIARD G, Novel, popular, fashionable and partisan: making coffeehouses ‘burgherly’ spaces in early modern Hamburg. UH 51 1 (2024) 146–70.

  16. 529 SATTER B, ‘The right to define the question’: the Center for Urban Affairs and neighborhood activism in 1970s Chicago. JUH 50 2 (2024) 369–401.

  17. 530 VAN DER STEEN B, Travelling barricades: transnational networks, diffusion and the dynamics of 1980s squatter conflicts in Western Europe. CEH 33 2 (2024) 599–614.

  18. 531 WEBER M, Zwischen organisierter Wachsamkeit und Chaos. Massenveranstaltungen, ephemere Räume und Herstellung von Sicherheit im 18. Jahrhundert [Between organized vigilance and chaos. Mass events, ephemeral spaces and the creation of security in the 18th century]. HZ 318 1 (2024) 35–63.

  19. 532 WILSON R J, Violent peace: effigies and the marking of the armistice in Britain. CBH 39 1 (2025) 1–22.

VIII Shaping the urban environment

Town planning

  1. 533 ALAL F B & CHÉRIF N, Oran’s Front de Mer projects 1891–1961: premises of a modern urbanism. JPH 23 1 (2024) 3–22.

  2. 534 ALEXANDER A, Liberty’s grid: a founding father, a mathematical dreamland, and the shaping of America. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 376pp.

  3. 535 BEVERLEY E L, Beyond colonial urbanism: state power, global connections and fragmented land regimes in twentieth-century Hyderabad city. UH 51 1 (2024) 11–31.

  4. 536 BURGHARDT K, UHL J H, LERMAN K & LEYK S, Analyzing urban scaling laws in the United States over 115 years. EPB 51 9 (2024) 2249–63.

  5. 537 CHESNEAU I, Lecture textométrique des rapports entre ville et culture en planification urbaine [Textometric reading of the relationships between city and culture in urban planning]. HU 69 1 (2024) 137–58.

  6. 538 CLEMENT W, Paternalism, petitions and the politics of church construction in Alsace, c. 1850–1885. UH 51 4 (2024) 793–809.

  7. 539 COHEN B B, ‘This has not been done because it was not made any one’s business to do it.’ Conserving Hyderabad city’s Hussain Sagar tank in the late nineteenth century. UH 51 1 (2024) 32–47.

  8. 540 DA’ADLI T, Ludd and Lydda: a tale of two plans. JUH 50 3 (2024) 656–73.

  9. 541 EKMAN, P, Timing the future metropolis: foresight, knowledge, and doubt in America’s postwar urbanism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2024. 384pp.

  10. 542 GHEITASI M, MADDAHI A & SALARI N, Unplanned rapid urban growth in Birjand, Iran (1986–2022). PLP 39 2 (2024) 441–57.

  11. 543 HASEGAWA J, The plans for Tokyo Bay: the challenge of urban policy, 1950s–1990s. UH 51 2 (2024) 414–34.

  12. 544 HECKMANN-UMHAU P, The Protestant origins of the German Garden City, 1848–1910. GeH 42 3 (2024) 356–78.

  13. 545 HUDANI S E, Master plans and minor acts: repairing the city in post-genocide Rwanda. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 258pp.

  14. 546 KASSAB R Y, Unveiling the neo-Moroccan city: a historical exploration of Casablanca’s Habous district (1917–1926). PLP 39 5 (2024) 1115–43.

  15. 547 KIDAMBI P & BOEHME K, Princely cities in South Asia, c. 1850–1950: themes and perspectives. UH 51 1 (2024) 2–10.

  16. 548 KUCINA I, The continuous reproduction of contradictions in the urban development of New Belgrade’s central area. UP 9 7629 (2024).

  17. 549 LAMBERG E, Garden city planning and Nordic (de)colonial ambivalence in Tanga, Mbeya and Moshi master plans (1973–1975). JA 29 1–2 (2024) 5–35.

  18. 550 MARJANOVIĆ M, BETTER M S, LERO N, NEDOVIĆ-BUDIĆ Z, ‘Capitality’ beyond the capital city? Brasília and its satellite towns. UP 9 6904 (2024).

  19. 551 MOFRAD F & IGNATIEVA M, From a grassland to a bush capital: a historic review of Canberra’s green infrastructure development. EnvH 30 3 (2024) 419–47.

  20. 552 MONTI A & EXSS U, The Ford Foundation and the Community Facilities Program in Chile: a proposal between local needs and foreign technical assistance (1964–1969). UH 51 4 (2024) 879–98.

  21. 553 MORLEY I, Remodelling to prepare for independence: the Philippine Commonwealth, decolonisation, cities and public works, c. 1935–46. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 290pp.

  22. 554 MORLEY I, Undertows and evolutions. PP 39 4 (2024) 757–9.

  23. 555 NAIR J, ‘Monarchical modern’: the making of Mysore city, 1880–1940. UH 51 1 (2024) 61–87.

  24. 556 PAGE A, Emigration, war and reconstruction: imagining the international dispersal of Britain in the 1940s. JICH 52 3 (2024) 496–523.

  25. 557 POSTIGLIOLA M & SALVATI L, There’s no time like the present: path-dependent urban growth, agglomeration economies and congestion externalities in contemporary Athens. UH 51 3 (2024) 633–53.

  26. 558 RAYNSFORD A, The limits of counterculture urbanism: utopian planning and practical politics in Berkeley, 1969–73. JPH 23 1 (2024) 49–70.

  27. 559 ROAST A, Towards weird verticality: the spectacle of vertical spaces in Chongqing. US 61 4 (2024) 636–53.

  28. 560 RODDY S & DOYLE P, The Catholic church and investor capitalism in late-nineteenth century Ireland. ISR 32 1 (2024) 46–63.

  29. 561 ROUET P, La genèse du Grand Plan de Paris (1775–1799) d’Edme Verniquet [The genesis of Edme Verniquet’s Grand Plan of Paris (1775–1799)]. HU 70 2 (2024) 15–37.

  30. 562 RYAN M P, Taking the land to make the city: a bicoastal history of North America. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2024. 448pp.

  31. 563 SCHENTAG A, ‘Designs for people who do not readily intermingle’: Olmsted Jr.’s use of race-restrictive covenants, ca. 1900–1930. JPH 23 2 (2024) 87–109.

  32. 564 SHEPHERD E & WARGENT M, Embedding the land market: Polanyi, urban planning and regulation. EPA 56 3 (2024) 905–26.

  33. 565 SIMCOCK D, Auckland infrastructure in the fifties – triumphs ‘for the pertinacity of men of vision’: (New Zealand Herald, 30 May 1959, p. 16). NZJH 58 2 (2024) 56–76.

  34. 566 THEOCHAROUS S, Street naming and the politics of Greek-Cypriot identity: the case of Nicosia (Lefkosia), 1878–1975. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. 344pp.

  35. 567 WHITE R, The Beaches: creation of a Toronto neighbourhood. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2024. 245pp.

  36. 568 WOLF-POWERS L, Dilemmas of 21st century land value capture: examining Henry George’s legacy in a new Gilded Age. EPA 56 6 (2024) 1738–52.

Environment and the city

  1. 569 AULD-THOMAS L, CANUTO M A, MORLET A V, ESTRADA-BELLI F, CHATELAIN D, MATADAMAS D, PIGOTT M & DÍAZ J C F, Running out of empty space: environmental lidar and the crowded ancient landscape of Campeche, Mexico. A 98 401 (2024) 1340–58.

  2. 570 BORGIAS S L, Denaturalizing dispossession in the political ecology of the American west: reassessing the history of the Los Angeles aqueduct and its implications for Indigenous land and water rights. AAAG 114 6 (2024) 1232–50.

  3. 571 BREWER C, HAMMOND H & MARKEY S, Nature-first cities: restoring relationships with ecosystems and with each other. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2024.

  4. 572 ÇELIK S, LUKE C & ROOSEVELT C H, Ottoman lakes and fluid landscapes: environing, wetlands and conservation in the Marmara Lake Basin, circa 1550–1900. EnvH 30 1 (2024) 53–76.

  5. 573 D’CRUZ E, Public gardens, British station and landscape perception in Bangalore City (1881–1934). LH 45 1 (2024) 57–70.

  6. 574 DE PIERI F, Architectural history, planning history, and the environmental perspective: a report from Iceland. PLP 39 5 (2024) 1171–8.

  7. 575 DENBY J, Gardeners and the democratisation of urban parks. LH 45 1 (2024) 71–96.

  8. 576 DEVIENNE E, Sand rush: the revival of the beach in twentieth-century Los Angeles. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 303pp.

  9. 577 KOBI M, Urban energy landscape in practice: architecture, infrastructure and the material culture of cooling in post-reform Chongqing, China. US 61 15 (2024) 2979–94.

  10. 578 LIMA N, Conflits environnementaux dans l’arrière-pays madrilène [Environmental conflicts in the Madrid hinterland]. HU 70 2 (2024) 95–111.

  11. 579 LITTLE J I, ‘Impractical, frivolous and visionary’: Quebec City’s push for an annual ice bridge, 1811–1853. UHR 52 2 (2024).

  12. 580 LONGSTAFFE-GOWAN T, Lost gardens of London. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2024. 272pp.

  13. 581 McCOLL R, Of people and plants in West Chester, Pennsylvania: the localisms of William Darlington’s Florula Cestrica (1826). ANH 51 1 (2024).

  14. 582 MILLER I M, COGGINS C, Lines of fate: fengshui forests and the moral ecology of resilience in subtropical southern China. AHR 129 4 (2024) 1451–73.

  15. 583 MOLINA D, Planting a city in the tropical Andes: plants and people in Bogotá, 1880 to 1920. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 206pp.

  16. 584 NYGAARD C A, Green infrastructure and socioeconomic dynamics in London low-income neighbourhoods: a 120-year perspective. C 144 104616 (2024).

  17. 585 PASQUIER M, Remembering and forgetting the past on the Mississippi River: toward an environmental history of Catholicism. CHR 110 2 (2024) 241–61.

  18. 586 PEI G, Environmental practices in a colonial context: the mitigation of soot pollution in the Shanghai international settlement, 1863–1943. EnH 29 1 (2024) 150–73.

  19. 587 PIERIK B, An assemblage of urban water access: the geography of water marginalization in Amsterdam, 1690–1840. JHG 86 (2024) 231–45.

  20. 588 RÖNNLUND R, ‘Princely seats’ and Thessalian hillforts: pre-urban Greece and the diffusion of urbanism in Early Iron Age Europe. A 98 399 (2024) 743–57.

  21. 589 SHANKAR D, An encroaching sea: nature, sovereignty and development at the edge of British India 1860–1950. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 276pp.

  22. 590 SOLL D, Pollution, pipes, and progress: Chicago’s environment and the question of scale. JUH 50 2 (2024) 464–9.

Environmental disaster and climate change

  1. 591 AHMANN C, Futures after progress: hope and doubt in late industrial Baltimore. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 336pp.

  2. 592 COURTNEY C, The birth of cool: heat and air-conditioning in the history of Wuhan, 1950–2020. US 61 15 (2024) 2963–78.

  3. 593 GUTGARTS A & ELLENBLUM R, History and archaeology of urban decline: Rome during the medieval climate anomaly. JUH 50 4 (2024) 809–28.

  4. 594 JANIA A, Between the emergency and the everyday: the problems of time, memory, and resilience in the tsunami memorial halls of Miyagi Prefecture. AHR 129 4 (2024) 1474–500.

  5. 595 JUNG Y, Urban heat islands and the transformation of Singapore. US 61 15 (2024) 1908–2927.

  6. 596 MALANÍKOVÁ M A, MOŻEJKO B & NODL M, Pre-modern towns at the times of catastrophes: East Central Europe in a comparative perspective. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 216pp.

  7. 597 NAKAJIMA N, Layers of reconstruction: the planning history of disaster-prone Kamaishi. PP 39 1 109–29.

  8. 598 NASCIMENTO S P, Space invaders? Slavery, gender, and the remapping of eighteenth-century Portuguese imperial geographies. IM 42 1 (2024) 23–53.

  9. 599 PETERSON B J, Drought, revolution, and the Cold War politics of aid: responding to climate change and mass vulnerability in the African Sahel. EnH 29 4 (2024) 645–72.

  10. 600 QUESADA-AVENAÑO F, Boulevards, festivities, and earthquakes: the making of Guatemala City, 1880–1920. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  11. 601 TARR J A & STRADLING D, Cities and the mobility of nature: landslide hazards in Cincinnati and Pittsburgh. EnH 29 1 (2024) 118–249.

War and the urban environment

  1. 602 BRANDON‐SALMON A, Wastelands: East End bombsites in postwar photography. OAJ 47 2 (2024) 197–221.

  2. 603 BRECCIAROL G, Mapping post-war Italian literature: boom and aftermath (1956–1979). London: University of London Press, 2024. 244pp.

  3. 604 CASINO J J, Civilian-military relations in the ‘Camp Philadelphia’ incident, 1863. PH 91 4 (2024) 453–88.

  4. 605 COWAN D, Politics of the past. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 288pp.

  5. 606 DIEHL C, Shadows of Nagasaki: trauma, religion, and memory after the atomic bombing. New York: Fordham University Press, 2024. 368pp.

  6. 607 GALEOTTI M, Russia’s wars in Chechnya: 1994–2009. London: Bloomsbury, 2024. 144pp.

  7. 608 GOLDA-PONGRATZ K & URBAN F, Beyond formal and informal: mid-twentieth-century residential architecture in Barcelona’s El Carmel neighbourhood. UH 51 4 (2024) 827–57.

  8. 609 HANSEN T B, Expelled from public memory: Cato Manor and the segregation of memory in South Africa. H & A 35 5 (2024) 1117–36.

  9. 610 HARDI-KOVÁCS G, Dark skies over Budapest: Raoul Wallenberg, resistance and rescue of the Hungarian Jews, 1944–1945, transl. by DAVIS J. Oxford and New York: Peter Lang, 2024.

  10. 611 IPLIKCI M & AYKAÇ G, The establishment process of Türk Traktör between 1948 and 1963: a critique of ‘modernization’ as development in early Cold War Turkey. PP 39 4 (2024) 853–80.

  11. 612 ISAKHAN B & MESKELL L, Local perspectives on heritage reconstruction after conflict: a public opinion survey of Aleppo. IJHerS 30 7 (2024) 821–39.

  12. 613 KAAR A, Conflict escalation done wrong? The free city of Regensburg seizes Ehrenfels Castle, 13 April 1417. AHY 55 (2024) 591–604.

  13. 614 KATAYANAGI M & KAWANO N, Reconstructing Hiroshima as a peace memorial city: local agency and identity-making in peacebuilding. WaS 43 1 (2024) 7–25.

  14. 615 KISIEL P, Recovering the past for the future: Racibórz after World War II. UH 51 4 (2024) 858–78.

  15. 616 KRAMMER H, How to get away with treachery, or: actor-centered perspectives on entangled conflicts and their urban protagonists in the Austrian duchy, 1462/63. AHY 55 (2024) 578–90.

  16. 617 KUCHARSKI W, The position of the Holy See on the stabilization of Polish church structures after World War II in the so-called recovered territories (former German territories), 1945–72. CHR 110 1 (2024) 72–101.

  17. 618 LAUCHT C & ALLBESON T, Urban internationalism: Coventry, Kiel, reconstruction and the role of cities in British–German reconciliation, 1945–1949. UH 51 4 (2024) 683–708.

  18. 619 LUTTER C, Who took the fall in 1408, and why? Vienna’s elites in alliances and conflicts with Habsburg dukes. AHY 55 (2024) 565–77.

  19. 620 McCOMBS J, From liberation to freedom: governing the ‘ghetto’ in post-war Hungary. EPD 42 5–6 (2024) 625–44.

  20. 621 MOORE S, The Bethnal Green shelter disaster. WaS 43 2 (2024) 187–99.

  21. 622 MORELON C, Streetscapes of war and revolution: Prague, 1914–1920. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 340pp.

  22. 623 MOSS T, Navigating electricity dependencies in Cold War Berlin: an instructive history of urban infrastructure security. UH 51 3 (2024) 616–32.

  23. 624 REMIZOVA O & DIDENKO K, The traumas of Ukrainian modernist architecture and the challenges of its rehabilitation: a case study of the Tabachnyk Residential Complex in Karkiv. JA 29 7–8 (2024) 1015–35.

  24. 625 REYNAUD D, Preaching in Melbourne 1913–1918: what a difference a war makes. ChH 93 1 (2024) 85–103.

  25. 626 SASSANOWSKY R & ARENS K, Interwar Salzburg: Austrian culture beyond Vienna. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2024. 360pp.

  26. 627 SIMANGAN D, Agencies, temporalities, and spatialities in Hiroshima’s post-war reconstruction: a case of reflexive peacebuilding in the anthropocene? WaS 43 1 (2024) 81–99.

  27. 628 SZÍVÓS E, Reinventing Budapest in a post-imperial era: symbolic landscapes of the city between the two World Wars. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  28. 629 TATO M I, PIRES A P & SCHMIDT J, At the periphery of a world war? Urban experiences of the First World War in Africa, East Asia, Latin America and South Europe. Frankfurt and New York: Campus, 2024. 340pp.

  29. 630 VAN DER DOES L, Turning a disaster into regenerative strength: Hiroshima’s strategy for societal peace in the anthropocene. WaS 43 1 (2024) 100–25.

  30. 631 WALTON S, 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 environment, B & TW 17 1 (2024) 1–22.

Animals and the city

  1. 632 BARNARD T, Singaporean creatures: histories of humans and other animals in the Garden City. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press, 2024. 288pp.

  2. 633 BIEHLER D & SUTTER P S, Animating Central Park: a multispecies history. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2024. 354pp.

  3. 634 GAASTRA J S, LAWRENCE D & TUMOLO V, Provisioning urbanism: a comparative urban-rural zooarchaeology of ancient Southwest Asia. A 98 398 (2024) 363–79.

  4. 635 RIGUELLE W, ‘Il s’en tuë jusques dans les jardins de Québec’. La place des animaux sauvages dans la ville (Québec et Montréal, 1663–1763) [‘There were even some killed in the gardens of Quebec.’ The place of wild animals in the city (Quebec and Montreal, 1663–1763)]. UHR 52 1 (2024).

  5. 636 WARD N, Horses, power and place: a more-than-human geography of equine Britain. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 206pp.

Urban renewal

  1. 637 BRANCO R, CANELAS P & ALVES S, The governance of urban regeneration in Lisbon: drivers of continuity and change. C 154 105324 (2024).

  2. 638 GREGG K, Placing the North American post-war pedestrian mall within the legacy of downtown urban renewal. JPH 23 3 (2024) 167–96.

  3. 639 HERSEE K, Urban green space and the Blitz: constructing new parks and gardens in post-war Southwark. LJ 49 3 (2024) 229–62.

  4. 640 McLEAY N, Slum ideology and the Freemans Bay redevelopment. NZJH 58 2 (2024) 36–55.

  5. 641 MITCHELSON N, God save the queen: an interrogation of Auckland’s Queen Street as a dying space 1950s–1980s. NZJH 58 2 (2024) 15–35.

  6. 642 SHRESTHA S K, Rise and fall: downtown Eugene’s pedestrian mall experience and retail core transformation. JPH 23 1 (2024) 23–48.

  7. 643 XU W, New methods for old questions: predicting historical urban renewal areas in the United States. EPB 51 7 (2024) 1689–705.

  8. 644 YANG Y, Cultural policy formation and state–society relations: culture-led urban redevelopment of Enninglu in Guangzhou. CitC 23 2 (2024) 135–54.

IX Urban culture

Research methods, aims and materials

  1. 645 BARTON C P & WESTON G O, Self, service, and social activism: community archaeology at Timbuctoo, New Jersey. IJHA 28 3 (2024) 237–50.

  2. 646 CORKIN S, Boston mass-mediated: urban space and culture in the digital age. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2024. 280pp.

  3. 647 HIBBARD M & FRANK K I, What happened to rural community and regional development? The evolution of a planning idea. JPH 23 4 (2024) 257–78.

  4. 648 ÓGÁIN R U, ‘A systematic and intensive trawl’: Élís Ní Dhuibhne’s audio recordings for the Urban Folklore Project. IUR 54 1 (2024) 80–9.

  5. 649 SHEPHERD R C, A finer resolution for historical residential segregation: geocoding and analyzing the population of 1860 Washington, D.C. JHG 86 (2024) 246–59.

Folklore, storytelling and art

  1. 650 RIZZO M, Black arts cities. JUH 50 1 (2024) 216–22.

  2. 651 ZHENG J, ZHANG S P Y, FAN Z, LIN H & LEUNG Y, Rediscovering Shanghai modern: Chinese cosmopolitanism and the urban art scene, 1912–1948. UH 51 1 (2024) 198–232.

  3. 652 ALLAN K D, Senga Nengudi, the fetish, and the urban growth machine in 1970s Los Angeles. OAJ 47 2 (2024) 251–75.

  4. 653 MEER M, Heraldry in urban society: visual culture and communication in late medieval England and Germany. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 224pp.

  5. 654 SHKUDA A, The lofts of SoHo: gentrification, art, and industry in New York, 1950–1980. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2024. 295pp.

Urban culture and entertainment

  1. 655 BASU S, The bi-musical subject: Dwarkanath Tagore and European music in early-nineteenth century Calcutta. SAHC 15 4 (2024) 374–88.

  2. 656 BEAVEN B, The Devil’s Highway: urban anxieties and subaltern cultures in London’s Sailortown, c.1850–1900. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2024. 216pp.

  3. 657 BECK H & VANKEERNERGHEN G, Place and performance in ancient Greece, Rome, and China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 472pp.

  4. 658 DE BRUYN G, Du temple au musée? Les œuvres d’art grec et leur contexte d’exposition dans l’espace public de Rome [From temple to museum? Greek works of art and their exhibition context in the public space of Rome]. HU 69 1 (2024) 17–33.

  5. 659 DIETZE A & VARI A, Urban popular culture and entertainment experiences from northern, east-central, and southern Europe, 1870s–1930s. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 336pp.

  6. 660 DILLEN K, Honour, harmony and the King of Outspokenness: the use of stage plays and festive culture in fifteenth-century Flemish coastal communities. CSH 21 5 (2024) 613–30.

  7. 661 GRIFFITHS T, Campbeltown speaks: small-town cinema and the coming of sound. HJFRT 44 1 (2024) 1–21.

  8. 662 HASLÉ L, Le Théâtre du Gymnase sous la direction d’Adolphe Lemoine-Montigny (1844–1880) [The Gymnase Theatre under the direction of Adolphe Lemoine-Montigny (1844–1880)]. HU 69 1 (2024) 53–71.

  9. 663 HATCHWELL S, Civic art galleries and interwar exhibition cultures in Britain. MuHJ 17 1 (2024) 60–75.

  10. 664 KRISHNA C Y, Going to the cinema: princely urbanism in Hyderabad and Secunderabad. UH 51 1 (2024) 48–60.

  11. 665 LASHUA B, SPRACKLEN K, ROSS K & THOMPSON P, Popular music in Leeds: histories, heritage, people and laces. Bristol: Intellect, 2024. 320pp.

  12. 666 LITTLER J, A song of fallen flowers: Miyazaki Tōten and the making of naniwabushi as a mode of popular dissent in transwar Japan, 1902–1909. MAsS 58 2 (2024) 512–35.

  13. 667 McVEIGH S, Music in Edwardian London. Woodbridge: Boydell & Brewer, 2024. 344pp.

  14. 668 MAGALDI C, Music and cosmopolitanism: Rio de Janeiro at the turn of the 20th century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 424pp.

  15. 669 POTAMIANOS N, Carnival and urban space in Athens, 1834–1940. UH 51 2 (2024) 372–90.

  16. 670 RIDGWELL S, ‘A kind of republic’: the City of London Theatre, 1837–1870. LJ 49 1 (2024) 20–43.

  17. 671 ROCHEFORT S, La scène et la ville: les comédiens, des acteurs de l’actualité urbaine [The stage and the city: actors, players in urban news]. HU 69 1 (2024) 35–51.

  18. 672 SATHE N R, The neoliberal self in Bollywood: cinema, popular culture, and identity. Bristol: Intellect, 2024. 134pp.

  19. 673 SEN M, Rocking in Kasba: ‘band’ music, contemporary Bengali cinema, and Anjan Dutta’s lost Kolkatas. SAHC 15 4 (2024).

  20. 674 SIBANDA N, Sound arrives at the Tudor, 1927–1931: programming, attendance and the business of cinema exhibition. EPVC 22 1 (2024) 80–99.

  21. 675 WAGNER-COUBÈS A, Théâtre municipal, théâtre populaire [Municipal theatre, popular theatre]. HU 69 1 (2024) 73–92.

  22. 676 WORLEY M, Past! Future! In extreme!: looking for meaning in the ‘New Romantics’, 1978–82. JBS 63 3 (2024) 542–67.

Education

  1. 677 ALVAREZ R L, The problems and potential of higher education in nineteenth- and twentieth-century urban America. JUH 50 4 (2024) 951–62.

  2. 678 COOPER M J F, FERNANDES C & WHISTON B, ‘Disciples of Aesclepius’: glimpses into lives of the ‘gentlemen of the faculty’ of medicine in Brighton, England 1800–1809, JMedBio 32 3 (2024) 285–96.

  3. 679 ELKIND S S, Teaching as scholarship; or, looking at the global history of energy transitions in a classroom in San Diego. EnH 29 1 (2024) 5–28.

  4. 680 ILOVAN O, Education, propaganda, and visual discourse in socialist Romania (1948–1989). PaedH (2024) 1–29.

  5. 681 KINGMAN M, The Dutch Church Library in London, 1550–1600. In VAN HOUTS E, PUTTER A, ARBABZADAH M & LEVELT S eds The literature and history of Anglo-Dutch relations, medieval to modern. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 230–48.

  6. 682 ROBERT M, Crafting British medicine in the empire: the establishment of medical schools in India and Canada, 1763–1837. MedH 68 2 (2024) 128–45.

  7. 683 XIE Y, Towards a Chinese Christian University: the University of Nanking, 1912–31. ArchH 67 (2024) 89–116.

Emotions and the senses

  1. 684 FAIRE L & McHUGH D, Sensory streetscapes: people and urban environments 1930–1975. H 162 (2024) 24–31.

  2. 685 FRANZ M K, The decay-life of things. CSSH 66 4 (2024) 760–785.

  3. 686 KALCHER M, The self in the shadow of the guillotine: revolution, terror and trauma in a Parisian diary. HWJ 98 (2024) 155–80.

  4. 687 KOOLE S, Intimate subjects: touch and tangibility in Britain’s cerebral age. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2024. 328pp.

  5. 688 LENARZ M, Das Jüdische Museum Frankfurt und die Erinnerung an die Vertreibung und Ermordung der Frankfurter Jüdinnen und Juden [The Jewish Museum Frankfurt and the memory of the expulsion and murder of Frankfurt’s Jews]. MS 55 2 (2024).

  6. 689 PACKHAM J, Weird waterways: blue humanities and eerie canals in the Midlands. MidH 49 3 (2024) 320–38.

  7. 690 SBRARAINI E & FALK P F, Communicating beyond death: examining suicide letters from England (1757–1849) and Brazil (1920–1929). CulSH 21 3 (2024) 377–96.

Attitudes towards cities

  1. 691 BINNER J, Der Umgang der Stadt Hannover mit der nationalsozialistischen Vergangenheit [The city of Hanover’s handling of the National Socialist past]. MS 55 2 (2024).

  2. 692 GIUGNI A, Charity, neighbors, and gender in London godly sermons: John Downham and William Gouge. JMEMS 54 3 (2024) 593–615.

  3. 693 LI X & JONES D S, Shanghai and the smoke fiend: obstacles to the control of urban smoke, 1869–1943. EnvH 30 4 (2024) 615–40.

  4. 694 SEN A, Landscapes of hope: anachronic histories of a single urban block in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. PubH 46 3 (2024) 38–62.

Views of the city in literature/art/drama/music

  1. 695 ANDERSON C L, Imagining residential segregation before the ghetto: representations of black urban space and mobility in the ‘Darktown’ comics, 1877–1900. JUH 50 6 (2024) 1246–75.

  2. 696 BEEBEE T O, All the news that is fit to steal: Charles Gildon, Ferrante Pallavicino, and the geopolitics of rifled mailbag fiction. ECS 47 1 (2024) 31–44.

  3. 697 BESSAC B, Silent theatres: dramatising furniture in the fictional interiors of fin-de-siècle exhibitions, stages, and the commercial world. NCTF 51 2 (2024).

  4. 698 BIEBER S, American artists engage the built environment, 1960–1979. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 270pp.

  5. 699 BONNARDEL-MIRA R, Les ‘nuits russes’ de Montmartre dans les années 1920 [The ‘Russian Nights’ of Montmatre in the 1920s]. HU 69 1 (2024), 93–113.

  6. 700 CALVILLO J E, In the time of sky-rhyming: how hip hop resonated in Brown Los Angeles. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. 272pp.

  7. 701 COCKS H G, The Sporting Paper and the culture of popular conservatism in Edwardian Britain. ParlH 43 2 (2024) 207–25.

  8. 702 ELLIS P, ‘Maps to the homes of the stars’: California, celebrity, and cartography in the twentieth century. IM 76 2 (2024) 167–89.

  9. 703 FLETCHER P, The Victorian painting of modern life. Abingdon: Routledge: 2024. 264pp.

  10. 704 GOULD W, Sociology and the vagrant: beggars, welfare and tradition in writing about the new citizen in 1950s India. SA 47 1 (2024) 98–116.

  11. 705 GRIG L, Popular culture and the end of antiquity in southern Gaul, c. 400–550. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 280pp.

  12. 706 GRUNWALD-HOPE K, Remembering the horsemen of Smithfield: chivalric nostalgia in John Stow’s Survey of London. LJ 49 1 (2024) 1–19.

  13. 707 GYÖRKE Á & JUHÁSZ T, Urban culture and the modern city: Hungarian case studies. Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2024. 330pp.

  14. 708 HADDAD V, The Detroit genre: race, dispossession, and resilience in American literature and film, 1967–2023. Amherst: Lever Press, 2024. 269pp.

  15. 709 HAGER L, ‘Commonplace cohesion’ and ‘tesselated’ networks: John Davidson’s ‘Fleet Street’, etheric chemistry, and fin-de-siècle aestheticism. NCC 46 2 (2024) 317–30.

  16. 710 JONES R, Places they remember: Penny Lane and Strawberry Fields. FCH 27 2 (2024) 106–32.

  17. 711 LOMASK L, Survival of the Malandro. NCC 46 3 (2024) 393–401.

  18. 712 McDONALD D, Setting history in motion: social movements and popular art in urban Brazil, 1970s–1990s. AHR 129 4 (2024) 1703–31.

  19. 713 MAI B L, ‘The helpless French girl’: seduction narratives in a nineteenth-century abortion trial. G & H 36 2 (2024) 313–26.

  20. 714 MARTURANO J, Fictions of the new urban subjects. In UNRUGH V & LOSS J eds Cambridge history of Cuban literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 276–89.

  21. 715 MOORE B, Invisible architecture in nineteenth-century literature: rethinking urban modernity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2024. 267pp.

  22. 716 NASASRA M & STANLEY B E, Assembling urban worlds: always-becoming urban in and through Bir al-Saba’. UH 51 2 (2024) 391–413.

  23. 717 NATARAJAN U, The urban familiar essay of the romantic era. In GIGANTE D & CHILDS J eds The Cambridge history of the British essay. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 275–88.

  24. 718 OEUR F B & RUCKS-AHIDANA Z, The Philadelphia Negro at 125 years: a critical commemoration. CitC 23 4 (2024) 269–79.

  25. 719 PETROCELLI R M, Transactional culture in colonial Dakar, 1902–44. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2024. 212pp.

  26. 720 PETROVSKAIA N, The way to Rome in the medieval Welsh imagination. In ROSE E, FLIERMAN R & DE BRUIN-VAN DE BEEK M eds City, citizen, citizenship, 400–1500: a comparative approach. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. 433–57.

  27. 721 RANKIN C, Decline and reimagination in cinematic New York. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024.

  28. 722 ROSE C, Concepts of place in British womenswear advertising, 1880–1914. HRC 10 1 (2024) 1–20.

  29. 723 ROSE E, FLIERMAN R & DE BRUIN-VAN DE BEEK M, City, citizen, citizenship, 400-1500: a comparative approach. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2024. 500pp.

  30. 724 ROULO N, ‘A fool upon record’: the redefinition of the Caroline stage fool. TSC 39 4 (2024) 539–58.

  31. 725 STEVENSON E, British Indian picture postcards in Bengaluru: ephemeral entanglements. Abingdon: Routledge, 2024. 178pp.

  32. 726 SUDA I, Issei Suda. London: Thames & Hudson, 2024. 144pp.

  33. 727 WEIGHT A, Topography of a painting: Carel Weight’s Holborn Circus, 1947. LJ 49 2 (2024) 206–12.