WCC-UK |

WCC Publications

Publications by the WCC UK

1. Victoria Leonard and Liz Gloyn (2016) ‘The Women’s Classical Committee: Origins and Visions,’ Classical Association blog.

2. Victoria Leonard and Liz Gloyn (2016) ‘The Women’s Classical Committee: Origins and Visions,’ republication for CUCD Bulletin. [Link to publication] [Opens PDF]

3. Victoria Leonard and Irene Salvo (2016) with contributions from Emma Bridges, Kate Cook, Lisa Eberle, Katherine McDonald and Amy Russell, ‘Women in Classics in the UK: Numbers and Issues.’ [Link to publication]

4. Victoria Leonard and Irene Salvo (2016) with contributions from Emma Bridges, Kate Cook, Lisa Eberle, Katherine McDonald and Amy Russell, ‘Women in Classics in the UK: Numbers and Issues,’ republished by CUCD Bulletin. [Link to publication] [Opens PDF]

5. Lucy Jackson and Victoria Leonard (2016) ‘Launching the Women’s Classical Committee,’ CUCD Bulletin. [Opens PDF]

6. Lucy Jackson and Victoria Leonard (2016) ‘Launching the Women’s Classical Committee, UK,’ VIDA (Blog of the Australian Women’s History Network) [Link to publication]

7. Emma Bridges, Victoria Leonard, and Claire Millington, ‘Editing a Fairer Wikipedia: The Women’s Classical Committee Editathon,’ Classics and Social Justice blog [Link to publication]

8. Victoria Leonard, ‘How We Doubled the Representation of Female Classical Scholars on Wikipedia,’ Times Higher Education, 11 June 2017 [Link to publication]

9. Ellie Mackin, Kate Cook and Rebecca Fallas, ‘Classics and Feminist Pedagogy: Practical Tips for Teaching,’ CUCD Bulletin 2017. [Link to publication]

10. Ellie Mackin, Kate Cook and Rebecca Fallas, ‘Practical Tips for Feminist Pedagogy in Classics,’ CUCD Bulletin 2017. [Link to publication]

11. Victoria Leonard, ‘Raising women up: visibility, foremothers, and role models in UK higher education,’ London Connection, April 2018 [Link to publication]

12. Victoria Leonard, ‘Women in UK Higher Education: Visibility, Foremothers, and Role Models (II)’, The Bedford Centre Blog. For Women’s & Gender History. [Link to publication]

13. Victoria Leonard, ‘Female scholars are marginalised on Wikipedia because it’s written by men,’ Guardian 12.12.2018. [Link to publication]