Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search


Welcome to Durham Research Online (DRO)

Durham Research Online (DRO) is the University’s Open Access repository for publications. The primary purpose of DRO is to provide open access to publications authored by staff and students affiliated with Durham University.

See our Policies page for further information.



Latest Additions

The critical posthumanities and postqualitative inquiry in psychology (2024)
Journal Article
Monforte, J., & Smith, B. (online). The critical posthumanities and postqualitative inquiry in psychology. Qualitative Research in Psychology, https://doi.org/10.1080/14780887.2024.2338899

This article inaugurates a special issue on the critical posthumanities and postqualitative inquiry. Within psychology, more of us agree we dislike these ‘post’ approaches than can agree what they are about. The purpose of this article is not to make... Read More about The critical posthumanities and postqualitative inquiry in psychology.

The Classical Association: a Brand New Branch! (2023)
Digital Artefact
Barrett, G. (2023). The Classical Association: a Brand New Branch!. [The Classical Association]. Rickmansworth

On 11 May 2023 the Classical Studies programme at the University of Lincoln was delighted to host Professor Thomas Harrison, recently appointed Keeper of the Department of Greece and Rome at the British Museum. Tom’s riveting presentation – on his vi... Read More about The Classical Association: a Brand New Branch!.

Why Hegel Matters (2024)
Book Chapter
Brooks, T. Why Hegel Matters. In A. Alexander Davis, & S. Rand (Eds.), New Perspectives on Hegel's Philosophy of Right. Bloomsbury

Dress pins, bosses and pegged playing pieces: changing identities of some Early Medieval glass artefacts (2024)
Journal Article
Hall, M. A., Graham-Campbell, J., & Petts, D. (online). Dress pins, bosses and pegged playing pieces: changing identities of some Early Medieval glass artefacts. Archaeological Journal, https://doi.org/10.1080/00665983.2024.2412406

This paper discusses, without fixing, the meaning and identity of two glass bosses from Northern British archaeological contexts of the late first millennium AD, both power-centres in a socio-cultural network encompassing Pictland and Northumbria. Th... Read More about Dress pins, bosses and pegged playing pieces: changing identities of some Early Medieval glass artefacts.