References
- Adams, Geraldine Kendall. 2021. “Concerns Raised over National Army Museum Restructure.” Museums Association, May 18, 2021. https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2021/05/concerns-raised-over-national-army-museum-restructure/#.
- Aldrich, Richard. 2004. “Policing the Past: Official History, Secrecy and British Intelligence since 1945.” The English Historical Review 119 (483): 922–953.
- Amin, Lucas. 2021. Access Denied: The UK Government Attack on Freedom of Information. London: openDemocracy. https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/21091086-opendemocracy_acessdenied_report2021.
- Anderson, David M. 2015. “Guilty Secrets: Deceit, Denial, and the Discovery of Kenya’s ‘Migrated Archive.” History Workshop Journal 80 (1): 142–160.
- Antrobus, Sophy, and Hannah West. 2022. “This is All Very Academic’: Critical Thinking in Professional Military Education.” The RUSI Journal 167 (3): 78–86.
- Armed Forces Day website. https://www.armedforcesday.org.uk/about/
- Armitage, David. 2023. “In Defense of Presentism.” In History and Human Flourishing, edited by Darrin M. McMahon, 44–69. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Auchter, Jessica. 2014. The Politics of Haunting and Memory in International Relations. London: Routledge.
- Barkawi, Tarak. 2016. “Decolonising War.” European Journal of International Security 1 (2): 199–214.
- Barkawi, Tarak, and Shane Brighton. 2011. “Powers of War: Fighting, Knowledge, and Critique.” International Political Sociology 5 (2): 126–143.
- Barkawi, Tarak, and Shane Brighton. 2013. “Brown Britain: Post-Colonial Politics and Grand Strategy.” International Affairs 89 (5): 1109–1123.
- Basham, Victoria. 2016. “Gender, Race, Militarism and Remembrance: The Everyday Geopolitics of the Poppy.” Gender, Place and Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 23 (6): 883–896.
- Basham, Victoria. 2018. “Liberal Militarism as Insecurity, Desire and Ambivalence: Gender, Race and the Everyday Geopolitics of War.” Security Dialogue 49 (1-2): 32–43.
- Bennett, Huw. 2012. Fighting the Mau Mau: The British Army and Counter-Insurgency in the Kenya Emergency. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Bennett, Huw. 2014. “The Baha Mousa Tragedy: British Army Detention and Interrogation from Iraq to Afghanistan.” The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 16 (2): 211–229.
- Blagden, David. 2019. “Two Visions of Greatness: Roleplay and Realpolitik in UK Strategic Posture.” Foreign Policy Analysis 15 (4): 470–491.
- Blagden, David. 2021. “Roleplay, Realpolitik and ‘Great Powerness’: The Logical Distinction between Survival and Social Performance in Grand Strategy.” European Journal of International Relations 27 (4): 1162–1192.
- Bousquet, Antoine. 2009. The Scientific Way of Warfare: Order and Chaos on the Battlefields of Modernity. London: Hurst.
- Bouton, Christophe. 2019. “Hartog’s account of Historical Times and the Rise of Presentism.” History 104 (360): 309–330.
- British Army. n.d. “Army Heritage Strategy.” September 5, 2022. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1130533/FOI2022-09370.pdf.
- Brooke-Holland, Louisa. 2021. “Defence Command Paper 2021: Summary.” March 23, 2021. https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-9181/
- Brown, Larisa. 2022. “British Army Chief Criticises Tory Spending Cuts to Military.” The Times, April 13, 2022.
- Bruce-Lockhart, Katherine. 2014. “Unsound’ Minds and Broken Bodies: The Detention of ‘Hardcore’ Mau Mau Women at Kamiti and Gitamayu Detention Camps in Kenya, 1954-1960.” Journal of Eastern African Studies 8 (4): 590–608.
- Burke, Edward. 2022. “50 Years on, It Is Time for the British Army to Learn from Bloody Sunday.” RUSI Commentary, January 28, 2022. https://rusi.org/explore-our-research/publications/commentary/50-years-it-time-british-army-learn-bloody-sunday.
- Bury, Patrick. 2017. “Barossa Night: Cohesion in the British Army Officer Corps.” The British Journal of Sociology 68 (2): 314–335.
- Bury, Patrick, and Sergio Catignani. 2019. “Future Reserves 2020, the British Army and the Politics of Military Innovation during the Cameron Era.” International Affairs 95 (3): 681–701.
- Cain, Sian. 2021. “A Terrifying Precedent’: Author Describes Struggle to Publish British Army History.” The Guardian, July 23, 2021.
- Carter, General Sir Nick. 2019. “Chief of the Defence Staff Speech at the Royal United Services Institute.” Ministry of Defence, December 5. https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/chief-of-the-defence-staff-general-sir-nick-carters-annual-rusi-speech.
- Catignani, Sergio, and Victoria Basham. 2021. “The Gendered Politics of Researching Military Policy in the Age of the ‘Knowledge Economy.” Review of International Studies 47 (2): 211–230.
- Caves, Ben., Rebecca Lucas, Livia Dewaele, Julia Muravska, Chris Wragg, Tom Spence, Zudik Hernandez, Anna Knack, and James Black. 2021. “Enhancing Defence’s Contribution to Societal Resilience in the UK.” Cambridge: RAND. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1027912/RAND_RRA1113-1.pdf.
- Centre for Historical Analysis and Conflict Research. 2020. “Historical Insights Series: Threshold, Sub-Threshold … We Have Been Here Before or ‘New Wine in old Bottles’.” April 2020. https://chacr.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/HAP-Briefing-Threshold-1.pdf.
- Chakrabarty, Dipesh. 2007. “History and the Politics of Recognition.” In Manifestoes for History, edited by Keith Jenkins, Sue Morgan, and Alun Munslow, 77–86. New York: Routledge.
- Christoyannopoulos, Alexandre. 2023. “A Pacifist Critique of the Red Poppy: reflections on British War Commemorations’ Increasingly Hegemonic Militarism.” Critical Military Studies 9 (3): 324–345.
- Clarke, David. 2023. “The Rhetoric of Civil-Military Relations in Contemporary Armed Forces Museums.” Journal of War & Culture Studies 16 (1): 80–99.
- Cobain, Ian. 2013. “Ministry of Defence Holds 66,000 Files in Breach of 30-Year Rule.” The Guardian, October 6, 2013.
- Colley, Thomas. 2019. Always at War: British Public Narratives of War. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
- Confederation of Service Charities. 2022. “Royal British Legion Says Government Announcement on Visa Fees for Commonwealth Veterans Still Leaves Many Families Facing Hardship.” Confederation of Service Charities, February 24. https://www.cobseo.org.uk/royal-british-legion-says-government-announcement-on-visa-fees-for-commonwealth-veterans-still-leaves-many-families-facing-hardship/
- Dalsjö, Robert, Michael Jonsson, and Johan Norberg. 2022. “A Brutal Examination: Russian Military Capability in Light of the Ukraine War.” Survival 64 (3): 7–28.
- Danilova, Nataliya. 2015. The Politics of War Commemoration in the UK and Russia. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
- Danilova, Nataliya, and Emma Dolan. 2020. “Scottish Soldier-Heroes and Patriotic War Heroines: The Gendered Politics of World War I Commemoration.” Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography 27 (2): 239–260.
- Danilova, Nataliya, and Emma Dolan. 2020. “The Politics and Pedagogy of War Remembrance.” Childhood 27 (4): 498–513.
- Danilova, Nataliya, and Kandida Purnell. 2020. “The ‘Museumification’ of the Scottish Soldier and the Meaning-Making of Britain’s Wars.” Critical Military Studies 6 (3-4): 287–305.
- Defence Committee. 2021. “Oral Evidence: Work of the Chief of the Defence Staff, HC 842”. House of Commons, November 9, 2021. https://committees.parliament.uk/oralevidence/2978/pdf/
- Defence Sub-Committee on Women in the Armed Forces. 2023. "Damning Whistle-Blower Evidence Reveals Ongoing Sexual Abuse within the Armed Services." House of Commons, May 18, 2023. https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/24/defence-committee/news/195323/damning-whistleblower-evidence-reveals-ongoing-sexual-abuse-within-the-armed-services/
- Derrida, Jacques. 1994. Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, & the New International. Translated by Peggy Kamuf. New York: Routledge.
- Dixon, Paul. 2020. “Frock Coats against Brass Hats? Politicians, the Military and the War in Afghanistan, 2001-2014.” Parliamentary Affairs 73 (3): 651–691.
- Duell, Mark, and Larisa Brown. 2018. “Revealed: The Achingly Trendy Agency behind £1.6m Touchy-Feely Army Recruitment Ads Which Believes in ‘Good Karma’ but is Owned by £26bn-a-Year Global Giant (and Came up with Those Annoying James Corden Ads).” Daily Mail, January 11, 2018.
- Edgerton, David. 1991. “Liberal Militarism and the British State.” New Left Review 1 (185): 138–169.
- Edgerton, David. 1998. “Tony Blair’s Warfare State.” New Left Review 50 (230): 123–130.
- Edgerton, David. 2021. “The Nationalisation of British History: Historians, Nationalism and the Myths of 1940.” The English Historical Review 136 (581): 950–985.
- Falvey, Dan. 2021. “Snowflake Soldiers! UK Army Accused of Capitulating as New Advert Says ‘It’s Ok to FAIL.” Express, January 7, 2021.
- Freeden, Michael. 2011. “The Politics of Ceremony: The Wootton Bassett Phenomenon.” Journal of Political Ideologies 16 (1): 1–10.
- Freedman, Lawrence. 2019. Ukraine and the Art of Strategy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Freedman, Lawrence. 2022. Command: The Politics of Military Operations from Korea to Ukraine. London: Allen Lane.
- French, David. 2011. The British Way in Counter-Insurgency, 1945-1967. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- French, David. 2015. Fighting EOKA: The British Counter-Insurgency Campaign on Cyprus, 1955-1959. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Galeotti, Mark. 2019. “The Mythical ‘Gerasimov Doctrine’ and the Language of Threat.” Critical Studies on Security 7 (2): 157–161.
- Gildea, Robert. 2019. Empires of the Mind: The Colonial Past and the Politics of the Present. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Goddard, Stacie E., and Ronald R. Krebs. 2015. “Rhetoric, Legitimation, and Grand Strategy.” Security Studies 24 (1): 5–36.
- Gordon, Avery F. 1997. Ghostly Matters: Haunting and the Sociological Imagination. London: University of Minnesota Press.
- Gray, Colin. 2014. Strategy and Politics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Grayson, Kyle, Matt Davies, and Simon Philpott. 2009. “Pop Goes IR? Researching the Popular Culture-World Politics Continuum.” Politics 29 (3): 155–163.
- Guldi, Jo., and David Armitage. 2014. The History Manifesto. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Hadjiathanasiou, Maria. 2020. Propaganda and the Cyprus Revolt: Rebellion, Counter-Insurgency, and the Media, 1955-59. London: I.B. Tauris.
- Hall, Stuart. 1999. “Un-Settling ‘the Heritage’, Re-Imagining the Post-Nation: Whose Heritage?” Third Text 13 (49): 3–13.
- Hargreaves, Christopher. 2022. “Wars can be won by Evacuations.” June 1. https://wavellroom.com/2022/06/01/wars-can-be-won-by-evacuations-afghanistan/
- Hartog, François. 2015. Regimes of Historicity: Presentism and Experiences of Time. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Hartog, François. 2021. “The Museum and Temporalization.” Time & Society 30 (4): 462–476.
- Hoskins, Andrew, and Matthew Ford. 2017. “Flawed, yet Authoritative? Organisational Memory and the Future of Official Military History after Chilcot.” British Journal for Military History 3 (2): 119–132.
- Hughes, Chris. 2017. “Tories Have Left Britain Defenceless as Huge Cuts in Forces Highlight Their Breathtaking Hypocrisy.” Mirror, May 7, 2017.
- Jester, Natalie. 2021. “Army Recruitment Video Advertisements in the US and UK since 2002: Challenging Ideal of Hegemonic Military Masculinity?” Media, War & Conflict 14 (1): 57–74.
- Joana, Jean, and Frédéric Mérand. 2014. “The Varieties of Liberal Militarism: A Typology.” French Politics 12 (2): 177–191.
- Jones, Murray. 2022. “From Mercenaries to Trade Envoys. What Is Britain’s Modern Military Role?” Byline Times, June 22. https://bylinetimes.com/2022/06/14/from-mercenaries-to-trade-envoys-what-is-britains-modern-military-role/
- Kayß, Sarah Katharina. 2019. Identity, Motivation and Memory: The Role of History in the British and German Forces. Abingdon: Routledge.
- King, Anthony. 2021. “Decolonizing the British Army: A Preliminary Response.” International Affairs 97 (2): 443–461.
- Kirkwood, Steve. 2019. “History in the Service of Politics: Constructing Narratives of History during the European Refugee ‘Crisis.” Political Psychology 40 (2): 297–313.
- Krebs, Ronald R. 2015. “Tell Me a Story: FDR, Narrative, and the Making of the Second World War.” Security Studies 24 (1): 131–170.
- Lake, Marilyn, and Henry Reynolds. 2010. What’s Wrong with Anzac? The Militarisation of Australian History. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press.
- Lawson, Sean. 2011. “Articulation, Antagonism, and Intercalation in Western Military Imaginaries.” Security Dialogue 42 (1): 39–56.
- Liaison Committee. 2021. “Oral Evidence from the Prime Minister, HC 835.” November 17, 2021. https://committees.parliament.uk/oralevidence/3007/default/
- Lorenz, Chris. 2010. “Unstuck in Time. Or the Sudden Presence of the past.” In Performing the past. Memory, History and Identity in Modern Europe, edited by Karin Tilmans, Frank van Vree, and Jay Winter, 67–105. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
- Mabee, Bryan, and Srdjan Vucetic. 2018. “Varieties of Militarism: Towards a Typology.” Security Dialogue 49 (1-2): 96–108.
- Massie, Alastair. 2022. “Community Consultation and the Shaping of the National Army Museum’s Insight Gallery.” In Dividing the Spoils: Perspectives on Military Collections and the British Empire, edited by Henrietta Lidchi and Stuart Allan, 229–246. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- McCartney, Helen. 2010. “The Military Covenant and the Civil-Military Contract in Britain.” International Affairs 86 (2): 411–428.
- McCormack, Matthew. 2017. “Criticks Reviews: National Army Museum.” September 19. https://www.bsecs.org.uk/criticks-reviews/national-army-museum/
- McGarry, Ross. 2022. “Visualizing Liminal Military Landscape: A Small Scale Study of Armed Forces Day in the United Kingdom.” Critical Military Studies 8 (3): 273–298.
- Miller, Phil. 2020. “‘A lot of people share my opinion within the military’, Says Soldier Who Protested against UK Arms Exports to Saudi Arabia.” Declassified UK, December 18. https://declassifieduk.org/a-lot-of-people-share-my-opinion-within-the-military-says-soldier-who-protested-against-uk-arms-exports-to-saudi-arabia/
- Ministry of Defence Press Office. 2022. [Twitter] July 11, 2022. https://twitter.com/DefenceHQPress/status/1546521612018765827 (Accessed 14 October 2022)
- Ministry of Defence. 2011. “Armed Forces Covenant: Interim Report (2011).” November 1, 2011. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/armed-forces-covenant-interim-report-2011.
- Ministry of Defence. 2012. “Joint Concept Note 2/12: Future Land Operating Concept.” May 2012. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/630974/20120829jcn2_12_floc_archive.pdf.
- Ministry of Defence. 2017. “Review of the Service Museums: National Museum of the Royal Navy, National Army Museum, and Royal Air Force Museum.” January 24, 2017. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/review-of-the-armed-forces-service-museums.
- Ministry of Defence. 2020a. “Guidance. MOD Information Management Report: 2020.” December 24, 2020. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/transfer-of-mod-records-to-the-national-archives-reports-2020/mod-information-management-report-2020.
- Ministry of Defence. 2020b. “Integrated Operating Concept (First Edition).” September 30, 2020. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-integrated-operating-concept-2025.
- Ministry of Defence. 2022. “Terms of Reference. Independent Inquiry into Alleged Unlawful Activity by British Armed FORCES during Deliberate Detention Operations in Afghanistan.” December 15, 2022. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-inquiry-into-alleged-unlawful-activity-by-british-armed-forces-during-deliberate-detention-operations-in-afghanistan/terms-of-reference.
- Moran, Jon. 2016. “Time to Move out of the Shadows: Special Operations Forces and Accountability in Counter-Terrorism and Counter-Insurgency Operations.” Unswlj 39 (3): 1239–1260.
- Morgan-Owen, David, and Alex Gould. 2022. “The Politics of Future War: Civil-Military Relations and Military Doctrine in Britain.” European Journal of International Security 7 (4): 551–571.
- Nash, K. T. 1972. “Policy for Official Histories on Defence since World War II”, Draft Dated 22 September 1972, Attached to Minute from K.T. Nash, AUS (Defence Staff), to ACNS(P), AUS(Man S), AUS(O)(Air); National Archives of the United Kingdom, DEFE 24/2591.”
- National Army Museum. 2019. “Trustees Report and Report of Council.” Year Ended, March 31 2019. https://www.nam.ac.uk/sites/default/files/attachments/accounts-2018-19_opt.pdf.
- National Army Museum. 2021. “Trustees Report and Report of Council.” Year Ended, March 31, 2021. https://www.nam.ac.uk/sites/default/files/attachments/accounts-2020-21_0.pdf.
- National Army Museum. 2022. Consolidated Financial Statements. March 31, 2022. https://www.nam.ac.uk/sites/default/files/attachments/accounts-2021-22.pdf.
- Newson, Nicola. 2015. “The UK Government’s Official History Programme.” House of Lords: In Focus. https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/LIF-2015-0056/LIF-2015-0056.pdf.
- Öberg, Dan. 2016. “War, Transparency and Control: The Military Architecture of Operational Warfare.” Cambridge Review of International Affairs 29 (3): 1132–1149.
- Oxford Research Group. 2020. “Written Evidence (INR0016) to Foreign Affairs Select Committee: The FCDO and the Integrated Review.” May 2020. https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/1337/pdf/
- Palmer, R. William. 2017. “Twenty-First Century Celebrations of the British Armed Forces: The Rise of the Biopolitical Military Professional.” PhD diss., University of Manchester.
- Pears, Louise. 2022. “Military Masculinities on Television: Who Dares Wins.” Norma 17 (1): 67–82.
- Phythian, Mark. 1997. “Battling for Britain’: British Arms Sales in the Thatcher Years.” Crime, Law and Social Change 26 (3): 271–300.
- Porter, Patrick. 2010. “Last Charge of the Knights? Iraq, Afghanistan and the Special Relationship.” International Affairs 86 (2): 355–375.
- Pringle, Yolana. 2017. “Humanitarianism, Race and Denial: The International Committee of the Red Cross and Kenya’s Mau Mau Rebellion, 1952-60.” History Workshop Journal 84: 89–107.
- Roberts, Andrew. 2017. “National Army Museum.” The Spectator, June 3, 2017. https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/national-army-museum.
- Roberts, Andrew. 2022. “The triumph of the National Army Museum.” The Spectator, June 25, 2022. https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-triumph-of-the-national-army-museum.
- Rowe, Peter. 2016. Legal Accountability and Britain’s Wars 2000-2015. London: Routledge.
- Royal British Legion. 2019. “How much do you know about the Armed Forces?” https://www.britishlegion.org.uk/stories/how-much-do-you-know-about-the-armed-forces.
- Royal British Legion. https://www.britishlegion.org.uk/get-involved/remembrance.
- Saferworld. 2022. “Written Submission: International Relations and Defence Committee Enquiry: Defence Concepts and Capabilities.” June 2022. https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/109302/html/
- Sanders, Andrew. 2021. “Attempting to Deal with the Past’: historical Inquiries, Legacy Prosecutions, and Operation Banner.” Small Wars & Insurgencies 32 (4-5): 789–811.
- Sanders, General Sir Patrick. 2022. “Chief of the General Staff Speech at RUSI Land Warfare Conference.” Ministry of Defence, June 28. https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/chief-the-general-staff-speech-at-rusi-land-warfare-conference.
- Scott, James. 2015. “Objects and the Representation of War in Military Museums.” Museum and Society 13 (4): 489–502.
- Shaw, Martin. 1991. Post-Military Society: Militarism, Demilitarization and War at the End of the Twentieth Century. London: Polity Press.
- Shaw, Martin. 2012. “Twenty-First Century Militarism: A Historical-Sociological Framework.” in Militarism and International Relations: Political Economy, Security and Theory, edited by Anna Stavrianakis and Jan Selby, 19–32. London: Routledge.
- Sheridan, Danielle. 2022. “Troop Cuts Will Leave The Army at Breaking Point, Says Lord Dannatt.” The Telegraph, July 3m 2022.
- Sibley, Chris, and James Liu. 2012. “Social Representations of History and the Legitimation of Social Inequality: The Causes and Consequences of Historical Negation.” Journal of Applied Social Psychology 42 (3): 598–623.
- Smyth, Hanna. 2017. “The New National Army Museum: A Review.” June 16. https://defenceindepth.co/2017/06/16/the-new-national-army-museum-a-review/
- Stavrianakis, Anna. 2017. “Playing with Words While Yemen Burns: Managing Criticism of UK Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia.” Global Policy 8 (4): 563–568.
- Stavrianakis, Anna. 2018. “When ‘Anxious Scrutiny’ of Arms Exports Facilitates Humanitarian Disaster.” The Political Quarterly 89 (1): 92–99.
- Steinmetz-Jenkins, Daniel. 2023. “Introduction: Whose Present? Which History?” Modern Intellectual History 20 (2): 559–570.
- Stoker, Donald, and Craig Whiteside. 2020. “Blurred Lines: Gray-Zone Conflict and Hybrid War - Two Failures of American Strategic Thinking.” Naval War College Review 73 (1): 19–54.
- Strachan, Hew, and Ruth Harris. 2020. The Utility of Military Force and Public Understanding in Today’s Britain. Cambridge: RAND.
- Strachan, Hew. 2003. “The Civil-Military ‘Gap’ in Britain.” Journal of Strategic Studies 26 (2): 43–63.
- Strachan, Hew. 2020. “Strategy and Democracy.” Survival 62 (2): 51–82.
- Sylvester, Christine. 2009. Art/Museums: International Relations Where We Least Expect It. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Press.
- Sylvester, Christine. 2012. War as Experience: Contributions from International Relations and Feminist Analysis. London: Routledge.
- Sylvester, Christine. 2018. “Curating and Re-Curating the American War in Vietnam.” Security Dialogue 49 (3): 151–164.
- Szitanyi, Stephanie. 2015. “Semiotic Readings of the USS Midway Museum.” International Feminist Journal of Politics 17 (2): 253–270.
- Taber, Nancy. 2022. “Lt. Col Smith with Unknown Bomb Girl’: Problematizing Narratives of Male Battlefield Heroism in Canadian Military Museums.” Critical Military Studies 8 (1): 99–117.
- Thomas, Martin, and Richard Toye. 2017. Arguing about Empire: Imperial Rhetoric in Britain and France, 1882–1956. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Todorov, Tzvetan. 2001. “The Uses and Abuses of Memory.” In What Happens to History: The Renewal of Ethics in Contemporary Thought, edited by Howard Marchitello, 11–39. New York: Routledge.
- Ubayasiri, Kasun. 2015. “The Anzac Myth and the Shaping of Contemporary Australian War Reportage.” Media, War & Conflict 8 (2): 213–228.
- Vucetic, Srdjan. 2022. “Elite-Mass Agreement in British Foreign Policy.” International Affairs 98 (1): 245–262.
- Wagner, Kim. 2017. “Seeing like a Soldier: The Amritsar Massacre and the Politics of Military History.” In Decolonization and Conflict: Colonial Comparisons and Legacies, edited by Martin Thomas and Gareth Curliss, 23–38. London: Bloomsbury.
- Wallace, Brian. 2022. “All England Was Present at That Siege’: Imperial Defences and Island Stories in British Culture.” History Workshop Journal 93 (1): 159–185.
- Walpole, Liam, and Megan Karlshoej-Pedersen. 2018. “Britain’s Shadow Army: Policy Options for External Oversight of UK Special Forces.” https://www.saferworld.org.uk/downloads/britains-shadow-army-org.pdf.
- Wendt, Maria. 2023. “Gendered Frames of Violence in Military Heritagization: The Case of Swedish Cold War History.” Journal of War & Culture Studies 16 (1): 21–40.
- Whetham, David. 2017. “Neither Victors nor Victims: Royal Wootton Bassett and Civil Military Relations in the Twenty-First Century.” In Moral Victories: The Ethics of Winning Wars, edited by Andrew R. Hom, Cian O’Driscoll and Kurt Mills, 175–197. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Whitehall Histories. https://www.routledge.com/Whitehall-Histories/book-series/FCOP.
- YouGov. 2019. “Would you support of oppose a law that prevented the investigation or prosecution of armed forces troops and veterans over actions that took place during military action more than ten years ago?” May 16. https://yougov.co.uk/topics/politics/survey-results/daily/2019/05/16/b8219/2.