User:Martin Wyatt: Difference between revisions

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imported>Martin Wyatt
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{{Image|Mw portrait.jpg|right|120 px}}
{{Image|Mw portrait.jpg|right|120 px}}
Brought up mainly in West and East Africa.  B A in modern history (Oxford 1964), Diploma in Public and Social Administration (Oxford 1966).  Career running voluntary organisations.  M A in Policy and Social Studies (Sheffield Hallam 2001).  My main area of expertise is in running voluntary organisations, and my one article in a refereed academic journal <ref>Policy & Politics vol 30 no 2</ref> was on government policy towards them.  My interests now lie in literature, history (especially Quaker history), biography, social studies (inc geography), and social policy. 
Brought up mainly in West and East Africa.  B A in modern history (Oxford 1964), Diploma in Public and Social Administration (Oxford 1966).  Career running voluntary organisations.  M A in Policy and Social Studies (Sheffield Hallam 2001).  My main area of expertise was in running voluntary organisations, and my one article in a refereed academic journal <ref>Policy & Politics vol 30 no 2</ref> was on government policy towards them.   
 
I find that using the Userplan is just too difficult.  What comes up does not correspond to the instructions.   


The subjects I contribute on are Quaker history, British literature, social policy (less of this recently as I am getting out of date), Dartmoor, and topics which connect with these, which actually makes quite a large field.  My article on the Uganda Railway is an aberration, due to the fact that I used to travel on it.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 13:26, 5 July 2016

Mw portrait.jpg

Brought up mainly in West and East Africa. B A in modern history (Oxford 1964), Diploma in Public and Social Administration (Oxford 1966). Career running voluntary organisations. M A in Policy and Social Studies (Sheffield Hallam 2001). My main area of expertise was in running voluntary organisations, and my one article in a refereed academic journal [1] was on government policy towards them.

The subjects I contribute on are Quaker history, British literature, social policy (less of this recently as I am getting out of date), Dartmoor, and topics which connect with these, which actually makes quite a large field. My article on the Uganda Railway is an aberration, due to the fact that I used to travel on it.

References

  1. Policy & Politics vol 30 no 2