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Tom Kelsey

@tomkelsey

Postdoctoral Research Associate, National Institute of Economic and Social Research. PhD from King’s College London. Writes on industrial strategy, British politics, and the history of technology.

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29.12.2023
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Latest posts by Tom Kelsey @tomkelsey

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Next in our seminar series: we will discuss @mrweatherburn.bsky.social’s paper which explores the concept of “Taylorism”, its multiple changes in meaning, and how this reflects generational conflict, particularly from the 1960s.

🗓️ Wed 11 March 15.30-17.00
📍 Strand Building, KCL

#histstm

06.03.2026 11:06 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0

Studying for an MA and PhD at
@kingschostm.bsky.social was an incredibly rewarding experience. I was privileged to have a Hans Rausing Scholarship. I recommend this route to anyone interested in studying the history of science, technology, and medicine.

04.03.2026 16:50 👍 4 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
This two-day workshop will explore several questions. How can environmental history complement or offer alternatives to existing historiographical narratives and periodisations in British history? What new actors, events, or phenomena might come to the fore? How should it foster engagements with places beyond its national borders or with other disciplines? Is environmental history different from longstanding traditions of ‘landscape’ or ‘urban’ histories of Britain? What contributions can historians make to environmental advocacy and policymaking? And how might a focus on the environment reshape teaching in British history?

To take part, participants should submit a 300 word proposal for a short ‘position paper’ (approx. 2500 words) that will be pre-circulated at the workshop. These position papers will address the place of environmental approaches and themes within modern British history (1800 to the present) from the perspective of the participant’s own research. Participants will orally summarise their papers at the workshop. The event is free to attend and includes lunch and refreshments.

Submissions are welcomed across a range of perspectives and topics, including but not limited to: energy, extraction, non-human actors, pollution, toxicity, rural and urban landscapes, everyday  environmental histories (including how they are shaped by class, gender, and race), imperialism and decolonisation, ‘green’ policy, activism, and the political economy of the natural world.

Please send proposals and a one-paragraph biography in a single PDF to andrew.seaton@manchester.ac.uk by 15 May 2026. Please also direct enquiries to this address.

This event is organised by Dr. Max Long (Oxford) and Dr. Andrew Seaton (Manchester).

This two-day workshop will explore several questions. How can environmental history complement or offer alternatives to existing historiographical narratives and periodisations in British history? What new actors, events, or phenomena might come to the fore? How should it foster engagements with places beyond its national borders or with other disciplines? Is environmental history different from longstanding traditions of ‘landscape’ or ‘urban’ histories of Britain? What contributions can historians make to environmental advocacy and policymaking? And how might a focus on the environment reshape teaching in British history? To take part, participants should submit a 300 word proposal for a short ‘position paper’ (approx. 2500 words) that will be pre-circulated at the workshop. These position papers will address the place of environmental approaches and themes within modern British history (1800 to the present) from the perspective of the participant’s own research. Participants will orally summarise their papers at the workshop. The event is free to attend and includes lunch and refreshments. Submissions are welcomed across a range of perspectives and topics, including but not limited to: energy, extraction, non-human actors, pollution, toxicity, rural and urban landscapes, everyday environmental histories (including how they are shaped by class, gender, and race), imperialism and decolonisation, ‘green’ policy, activism, and the political economy of the natural world. Please send proposals and a one-paragraph biography in a single PDF to andrew.seaton@manchester.ac.uk by 15 May 2026. Please also direct enquiries to this address. This event is organised by Dr. Max Long (Oxford) and Dr. Andrew Seaton (Manchester).

CALL FOR PAPERS - Modern British History and the 'Environmental Turn'.

A two-day workshop organised by @maxlong.bsky.social and myself at Lincoln College, Oxford, 16-17 September. Deadline for abstracts is 15 May.

Details in poster below, please share.

05.02.2026 14:09 👍 52 🔁 48 💬 1 📌 3
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Britain tried to build the future once, though it did not exactly end well. It was great to be on BBC Breakfast this morning to talk about Concorde. It is fifty years since its first commercial… | Tom... Britain tried to build the future once, though it did not exactly end well. It was great to be on BBC Breakfast this morning to talk about Concorde. It is fifty years since its first commercial flight...

Delighted to appear on
BBC Breakfast this morning to talk about Concorde. I pointed out that Britain and France managed to do something the rest of the world could not do: put a supersonic airliner into regular service. It was also, however, a commercial disaster. www.linkedin.com/feed/update/...

21.01.2026 13:35 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Concorde was the flying Brexit: a different era but the same mistakes Nationalistic fantasies about future export strengths, an ill-informed public debate and political deceit all masked the economic disaster that was Concorde

It is fifty years today since the first commercial Concorde flight. In light of this, I thought I'd re-up an old piece from me. Most insiders knew Concorde would damage British industry, but ministers pretended otherwise. www.theguardian.com/science/poli...

21.01.2026 09:31 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Good afternoon, #SHOT2025! I just had a chance to catch up w/@sigcisconf.bsky.social friends over lunch, and now I'm in Atelier 4.520 for a session on Critiques of Technology Since WWII.

Our first speaker is Eric Schatzberg, who is presenting a typology of postwar critiques of technology.

11.10.2025 12:19 👍 14 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
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The UK Industrial Strategy: A Contemporary Analysis - NIESR Last week, the Government unveiled its Industrial Strategy White Paper. What are the implications of the industrial strategy for UK economic policy & growth

'The Government’s Modern Industrial Strategy demonstrates why posing a dichotomy between free-markets and industrial strategy is a false one'

Our latest #MondayInterview by Tom Kelsey and @adrianpabst.bsky.social is out now - Read it here🔓⬇️

@productivity.bsky.social

niesr.ac.uk/blog/uk-indu...

30.06.2025 08:42 👍 3 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
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Historical Research and Policy Making

#Skystorians! Join me & the @historylabplus.bsky.social‬ team online on 19 June @12:30 to explore how historical researchers (across all periods) can make themselves more visible to UK policy makers. For details👉 www.history.ac.uk/events/historical-research-and-policy-making & 🧵

23.05.2025 12:22 👍 42 🔁 40 💬 1 📌 2
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Big thank you to Dr @tomkelsey.bsky.social of @ox.ac.uk for expert teaching on how Concorde was green-lit by Macmillan - & escaped culling again and again by Wilson & Heath!

Join us this Autumn for our ‘Prime Ministerial Decision-Making’ case study module: thestrandgroup.kcl.ac.uk/module/makin...

05.02.2025 16:46 👍 7 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Great line up of events this term at the Environmental Humanities Research Hub. Come join us!

17.01.2025 13:06 👍 7 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 1

We Brits understand our own history as badly as anyone. This looks like a great way to get a more solid handle on our arc since WWII.

13.12.2024 10:53 👍 2 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

Thanks! I think through how similar today’s state-backed tech push is to that of the post-war period in this Research Fortnight piece. My key point is that despite the rhetoric, the UK is far less ambitious today, which I argue is a good thing. www.researchprofessionalnews.com/rr-news-uk-v...

13.12.2024 15:35 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Taking Stock of Official History, past, present and future: Reflections of an Official Historian by Sir Lawrence Freedman, followed by a panel discussion

Join us in Senate House on 29 January for a special @ihr.bsky.social lecture 'Reflections of an Official Historian' by Sir Lawrence Freedman followed by a round table discussion with panellists including @historianhelen.bsky.social Register below: www.history.ac.uk/events/takin...

13.12.2024 10:54 👍 5 🔁 6 💬 0 📌 0
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Have you heard about our Peer Mentoring Scheme in partnership with the UK Civil Service? We're welcoming applications from policy professionals & eligible @ox.ac.uk researchers to join our next cohort.

Apply by 16 December!

t.co/yMCYRqwmuY

28.11.2024 16:44 👍 6 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 1
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Want to learn a bit more about the team behind @oxpolicyengaged.bsky.social? This is us!

Find out about how we can help policy professionals and academic researchers connect and engage more effectively: t.co/IYP1DmIEs9

25.11.2024 15:46 👍 6 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 1

This paper also challenges the narrative that the ‘technological disillusion’ of the 1970s came via the New Left and environmentalists, demonstrating the importance of an expert critique focused on economic and industrial arguments that emerged from inside the state itself.

30.12.2023 10:50 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

As I show, Whitehall radically reduced Britain's technological ambitions during the 1970s, ushering in a more liberal and less interventionist state before Thatcher even took power. This reckoning between officialdom and techno-nationalist enthusiasm transformed British politics.

30.12.2023 10:50 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

It examines the post-war politics of 'high technology' in Britain, suggesting that the abandonment of a deeply embedded strategy of trying to be *the* Science and Tech Superpower was more about an internal battle within the British state than one between the parties.

30.12.2023 10:50 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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The Retreat from ‘High Technology’ in Post-War Britain* Abstract. This article argues that the 1970s saw an important change in the attitude of the British state to civil technological projects. It focuses on superso

I am thrilled to publish my first journal article in the English Historical Review 🎉

It tells a new story of political change in post-war Britain: rather than a 'neo-liberalism' from without, I argue for an economic liberalism from within 👇

academic.oup.com/ehr/advance-...

29.12.2023 21:36 👍 20 🔁 9 💬 1 📌 2