Hugh R. Pemberton, FRHistS, is an academic historian specialising in the late twentieth-century British politics and British social and economic policy. As of 2018, he is Professor of Contemporary British History at the University of Bristol.

Career

Pemberton spent a decade working in financial services as an analyst before moving into academia. He graduated from the Open University with a Bachelor of Arts degree, before completing a Master of Arts degree in contemporary history at the University of Bristol, here he also carried out doctoral studies; his PhD was awarded in 2001 for his thesis "The Keynesian-plus experiment: a study of social learning in the UK core executive, 1960โ€“1966". He stayed on at Bristol as an Economic and Social Research Council postdoctoral fellow, before spending two years at the London School of Economics as a British Academy postdoctoral fellow. In 2004, he took up a lectureship at Bristol, where he is Professor of Contemporary British History as of 2018. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.[1][2]

Pemberton's research has focused on British economic and social policy since the Second World War. He has studied pensions, administration and the Civil Service, and party politics.[1]

Publications

  • Policy Learning and British Governance in the 1960s, Transforming Government series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
  • (Co-editor with Lawrence Black) An Affluent Society?: Britain's Post-War "Golden Age" Revisited (Ashgate, 2004).
  • (Co-editor with Pat Thane and Noel Whiteside) Britain's Pensions Crisis: History and Policy (Oxford University Press, 2006).
  • (Co-editor with Lawrence Black and Pat Thane) Reassessing 1970s Britain (Manchester University Press, 2013).

References

  1. 1 2 "Professor Hugh Pemberton", University of Bristol. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  2. โ†‘ "The Keynesian-plus experiment : a study of social learning in the UK core executive, 1960โ€“1966", EThOS (British Library). Retrieved 11 September 2018.
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