Overview
Dr Marc Collinson teaches contemporary history and politics. An active political historian of post-war Britain, Dr Collinson is interested in electoral phenomena (including by-elections), political parties, and policymaking. He is currently writing a study of Smethwick in electoral politics, c. 1955-1970.
Dr Collinson currently acts as Programme Lead for BA Politics. He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and an Associate Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.
Qualifications
- PhD: Commonwealth Immigration, Policymaking, and the Labour party, c. 1960-1980
2013–2019 - PGCertHE (part 1 & 2)
2014–2018
Teaching and Supervision
Dr Collinson was appointed Teaching Associate in 2020 after several years as a part-time Tutor in the School. He teaches modern history and contemporary politics.
Current modules:
- HPH-4007: 'Documents and Sources for Modern Historians' [Convenor; contributor]
- HGH-2138/3138: 'Europe, 1945-1992' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HGH-2142/3141: 'Twentieth Century Dictatorships' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HPS-2004: 'Twentieth Century Ideas and Movements' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HPS-1002: 'Principles of Politics' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HXH-1012: 'Britain: Blitz to Brexit' [Convenor; Lecturer]
Past modules include:
- HPS-1006: 'Essential Skills for Academic Success' [Co-convenor; Lecturer]
- HPH-4005: 'Themes and Issues in History' [Contributor]
- HPS-4004: 'Research Skills' [Contributor]
- HPS-1001: 'From Cradle to Grave' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HCH-1050: 'Past Unwrapped' [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HWH-2133/3133: 'Global Wales' [Contributor; Seminar convenor]
- HXH-1012: Modern Politics in Action [Convenor; Lecturer]
- HCH-2050: 'Debating History' [Contributor; Seminar convenor]
A Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, Dr Collinson is a published practioner-researcher (Innovative Practice in Higher Education, 2021) with an interest in employability, and has graded on the University's internal PGCertHE.
Research Interests
Building on his PhD research, Dr Collinson's scholarly interests focus on how post-war socio-economic change interacted with perceptions of locality to affect political parties and Government. He is also interested in political leadership and policy history, together with the significance of agency, ideas, and myth in electoral politics. These interests are divided into three main themes:
Locality, change, and representative politics
This examines how political parties and political actors interpreted and interacted with localised processes, such as deindustrialisation and social change, in the construction and articulation of their political appeals to voters. The role of the Member of Parliament as an actor within this context remains a particular focus of this theme. Initial outputs have been published with Contemporary British History (2020); Midland History, Parliamentary History,Transactions of the HSLC & Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society (all 2022).
Forthcoming
The major output from this theme will be a monograph (under contract for the Routledge 'Studies in British History' series) re-examining the 1964 election contest at Smethwick.
Power and agency in institutional policymaking
The second focuses on understanding the role of political parties within the policymaking process within their historical contexts. This examines how the policymaking process developed within political parties, the relationship between parties and government through the agency of party leaders, ministers, and policy networks, and the role of ideas and their champions within a dissaggregated party structure. His PhD examined this process with regard to post war Commonwealth Immigration. In collaboration with Dr Anna Olsson-Rost (MMU) this approach has been applied to debates within the Labour party about the comprehensivisation of secondary education in post-war Britain. This has been published in the British Journal of Education Studies (2022).
National Government policy and local responses
This research theme considers how various communities and groups active at the local level understand, conceptualise, and react to national policy decisions and plans. So far, this project has focused on the UK Government's post-war construction of nuclear power stations in north Wales. It consideres the reponse of local actors, campaign groups (like the CPRW), and resident communities to these major state-backed interventions into local societies. Outputs have appeared in: Transactions of AAS (2018); Journal of Energy History (2021); The Local Historian (2022).
Forthcoming:
First, further work on nuclear policy and north Wales [in collaboration with Dr Mari Wiliam]. Second, a project on how the Local Government Act (1972) affected politics in Manchester [in collaboration with Dr Bertie Dockerill (UoM) and Prof. Peter Shapely].
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Dr Collinson has also published a half-centenary reflective article on the significance of P.F. Clarke's Lancashire and the New Liberalism in the Transactions of the HSLC. He has contributed entries to the Dictionary of Labour Biography (2020) and the Dictionary of Welsh Biography (2022).
Publications
2024
- PublishedA southern 'Smethwick'? The Eton and Slough constituency and the 1964 General Election
Collinson, M., 4 May 2024, In: Southern History. 45, p. 84-104
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedCo-production and collaboration: Academic practitioner reflections on undergraduate internship schemes in History
Rees, L. A. & Collinson, M., 2024, In: Journal of Teaching and Learning for Graduate Employability. 15, 1, p. 249-254 6 p., 14.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Conference article › peer-review - PublishedHow the 1984 miners’ strike paved the way for devolution in Wales
Wiliam, M. & Collinson, M., 6 Mar 2024, The Conversation.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article - E-pub ahead of print“The most astonishing election result since the war”? Re-examining the Leyton By-election of 1965
Collinson, M., 3 Jan 2024, (E-pub ahead of print) In: The Historian.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
2023
- Accepted/In pressHalifax's Political Pioneer: Dame Sara Barker, 1904-1973
Collinson, M., 12 May 2023, (Accepted/In press) In: Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society. 32
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article - PublishedJENKINS, ROY HARRIS Baron Jenkins of Hillhead (1920 - 2003), politician and author
Collinson, M., 10 Jul 2023, Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales (NLW)
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary - PublishedRees, Merlyn (Later Lord Merlyn-Rees) (1920-2006): politician
Collinson, M., 4 Apr 2023, Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales (NLW)
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary - PublishedRoute of Change on Angleysey
Collinson, M., Wiliam, M., Evans, S., Williams, C. & Rowland, M., 27 Jan 2023, Rural History Today, 44, p. 5-6.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article
2022
- PublishedDeveloping the Labour Party’s comprehensive secondary education policy, 1950-1965: Party activists as public intellectuals and policy entrepreneurs
Olsson-Rost, A. & Collinson, M., Oct 2022, In: British Journal of Educational Studies. 70, 5, p. 1-17
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedInevitable results and political myths? Ilford North’s 1978 by-election
Collinson, M., 2 Jun 2022, In: Parliamentary History. 41, 2, p. 323-341
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedLiverpool’s renewed Liberalism: Britain’s third party in post-war Merseyside politics
Collinson, M., Sept 2022, In: Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 171, 1, p. 9-21
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedORMSBY-GORE, WILLIAM DAVID (1918-1985), 5th BARON HARLECH: politician, diplomat, media impresario
Collinson, M., 5 Dec 2022, Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Aberystwyth: National Library of Wales (NLW), 2 p. (Online).
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary - PublishedResponding to a Developing Industrial Tragedy: Douglas Houghton MP and Acre Mill, 1971-1974
Collinson, M., 30 Nov 2022, In: Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society. 30 (New Series)
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article - PublishedThe Loughborough ‘Mansfield Hosiery’ Strike, 1972: Deindustrialisation, Post-war Migration, and Press Interpretation
Collinson, M., Apr 2022, In: Midland HIstory. 47, 1, p. 77-95 19 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - Published‘More than an industrial boon’: Press coverage of Trawsfynydd power station’s construction, 1955-1965
Collinson, M., Oct 2022, In: The Local Historian. 52, 4, p. 359-363 5 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article
2021
- PublishedEmploying history: Enhancing ‘employability’ in BA history degrees with recorded video presentation assessments
Collinson, M. & Wiliam, M., 2021, In: Innovative Practice in Higher Education. 4, 2, p. 239-262 8.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedJ. Moher, Walter Citrine: Forgotten Statesman of the Trades Union Congress, (2021): Review
Collinson, M., 17 May 2021, Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire Newsletter, 77, p. 3-4 1 p.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Book/Film/Article review - PublishedLancashire and the New Liberalism: A half-century retrospective
Collinson, M., Aug 2021, In: Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 170, 1, p. 7-14
Research output: Contribution to journal › Literature review › peer-review - PublishedLocal perspectives of national energy projects: Reconstructing the impact of post war nuclear power stations in north Wales from archival sources
Collinson, M., 30 Jun 2021, In: Journal of Energy History/Revue d’histoire de l’énergie . 6, p. 1-11 11 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review - PublishedReview: Stephen Catterall and Keith Gildart, Keeping the Faith: A History of Northern Soul
Collinson, M., 30 Aug 2021, In: Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 170, p. 179-181
Research output: Contribution to journal › Book/Film/Article review
2020
- PublishedA ‘fertile ground for poisonous doctrines’? Understanding far-right electoral appeal in the south Pennine textile belt, c.1967-19791
Collinson, M., 2 Apr 2020, In: Contemporary British History. 34, 2, p. 273-298 26 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review - PublishedBarker, Sara Elizabeth (Dame)(1904-1973): Labour party official
Collinson, M., 5 Feb 2020, Dictionary of Labour Biography. Gildart, K. & Howell, D. (eds.). London, Vol. XV. p. 4-14 10 p.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary - PublishedReview of 'Otto Saumarez Smith, Boom Cities'
Collinson, M., 1 Oct 2020, Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire Newsletter.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Book/Film/Article review - PublishedReview of Samantha Wolstencroft, The Progressive Alliance and the Rise of Labour, 1903-1922: Political Change in Industrial Britain (Cham, 2018).
Collinson, M., 1 Aug 2020, In: Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 169
Research output: Contribution to journal › Book/Film/Article review - PublishedRogers, George Henry Roland (1906-1983): Labour MP and Spiritualist
Professor Keith Gildart & Collinson, M., 5 Feb 2020, Dictionary of Labour Biography. Gildart, K. & Howell, D. (eds.). London, Vol. XV. p. 209-220 11 p.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary - PublishedThe perils of integration policies: migration to Britain and Germany since 1949
Papadogiannis, N. & Collinson, M., 16 Apr 2020, History and Policy.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article
2019
- PublishedReview of Simon Peplow, Race and Riots in Thatcher's Britain
Collinson, M., 2019, In: Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire. 168, p. 166-167
Research output: Contribution to journal › Book/Film/Article review
2018
- Published'Nuclear Communities': Feasibility study report
Collinson, M., 30 Apr 2018, 50 p.
Research output: Book/Report › Other report - PublishedA Great Possibility Artist? Harold Wilson’s redefinition of Labour immigration policy, 1963-1966’
Collinson, M., 27 Mar 2018.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper - PublishedNuclear power and historical Change: Wylfa
Collinson, M., 30 Sept 2018, In: Transactions of the Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club. 2018, p. 97-104
Research output: Contribution to journal › Short survey - PublishedReframing immigration policy before Powell: Changing ideas and the Labour party
Collinson, M., 13 Feb 2018.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper - PublishedTrouble at t’mill’: East African immigration, latent problems, and the Mansfield Hosiery Strike’
Collinson, M., 30 Apr 2018.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper
2017
- PublishedImmigrants or the Old Folks: The assumption of nationalized politics, the ‘Smethwick effect’, and the reality of demographic and local concerns during the Leyton by-election of 1965
Collinson, M., 31 Mar 2017.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper - PublishedPrinciple vs. Purchase: Deliberating immigration control within the British Labour party, 1962-1965'
Collinson, M., 7 Dec 2017.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper
2016
- Published'Carefully packed with liberal opinion'? Political tension, agenda politics, and developing an immigration policy in 1960s Britain’
Collinson, M., 4 Apr 2016.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper - PublishedProjecting the past: transitioning to audiovisual assessment in History
Collinson, M. & Wiliam, M., 14 Sept 2016.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper - PublishedRoy Jenkins, the tolerant tradition, and the campaign for racial equality
Collinson, M., 22 Jul 2016.
Research output: Contribution to conference › Paper
Activities
2024
- The Road to Wylfa: A Nuclear North Wales?
Presentation on a history of nuclear energy production in north Wales. Delivered to the Telford Centre Winter Lecture series.
13 Nov 2024
Activity: Invited talk (Speaker) - Darlith Hanes bore Dydd Sadwrn: ‘Pa lanast yw peilonau?’ Tir, iaith ac atomfeydd ym Mhen Llŷn c.1936-1969 // 'What a mess are pylons?' Land, language and nuclear power plants in Pen Llŷn c.1936-1969.
Bydd y ddarlith hon yn bwrw golwg ar arwyddocâd Pen Llŷn a’i thirlun i ddelfrydau o Gymreictod a gwledigrwydd yn ystod canol yr 20fed ganrif, gan ganolbwyntio’n arbennig ar y trafodaethau yn ystod y 1950au a’r 1960au ynghylch gosod atomfa niwclear ger Edern. Bydd hyn yn cael ei gyferbynnu gydag enghreifftiau eraill cynhennus o ‘foderneiddio’ golygfeydd Pen Llŷn, megis yr Ysgol Fomio ac ymlediad twristiaeth yn y fro. Holodd Baner ac Amserau Cymru yn 1957 ‘Pa lanast yw peilonau’, gyda’r cwestiwn yna’n greiddiol i drafodaethau ingol am enaid Pen Llŷn, diboblogi gwledig a’r frwydr am ‘fara’ neu ‘harddwch’
This lecture will take a look at the significance of Pen Llŷn and its landscape to ideals of Welshness and rurality during the middle of the 20th century, focusing particularly on the discussions during the 1950s and 1960s regarding the installation of a nuclear power station near Edern . This will be contrasted with other controversial examples of 'modernisation' of Pen Llŷn scenery, such as the Bombing School and the spread of tourism in the area. Baner and Amserau Cymru asked in 1957 'What a mess pylons are', with that question at the core of poignant discussions about the soul of Pen Llŷn, rural depopulation and the battle for 'bread' or 'beauty'.
6 Jul 2024
Activity: Invited talk (Speaker) - ‘Atomic structures: how nuclear power stations in North Wales impacted people and places’
The future of relatively ‘clean’ nuclear energy is of the greatest importance to our national economy and our path toward ‘net zero’. The rate of development of nuclear energy in Britain since the 1960s has been significantly affected by societal attitudes. This talk will consider the history and local impacts of three nuclear power stations in North Wales: Trawsfynydd, Wylfa and Edern (a station proposed for the Llŷn Peninsula that was never built, but was a notable feature of the nuclear discourse). Based on recent research at Bangor University, the talk will examine the repercussions of the industry on landscape, language and local politics from the 1950s to the 1980s.
21 Mar 2024
Links:
Activity: Invited talk (Speaker) - Thomas Telford Centre (Menai Bridge Community Heritage Trust) (External organisation)
Trustee
2024 →
Activity: Membership of board (Director)
2023
- Scholarly methods as employable skills: reimagining undergraduate research assistance as a mutually beneficial process
Reflection on teaching/employability initiative
25 Jul 2023
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker) - Organise! Organise! Organise!
This two-day conference explored why, how, to what ends, and with what effects people in Britain and Ireland organised and were organised for political purposes during the long nineteenth century, one that has been seen as an age of association.
The event was hybrid and organised by Durham University
20 Jul 2023 – 21 Jul 2023
Activity: Participation in Academic conference (Participant) - The Llanfeirian Experiment: Transforming the Bodorgan estate landscape in the mid-20th century.
Presentation to Anglesey Antiquarian Society and Field Club about the project (Audience - c. 70)
20 Jan 2023
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker)
2022
- Bodorgan Estate Heritage Route
The Bodorgan Estate (https://www.bodorgan.com/) located in south-west Anglesey has received a Welsh Government grant to construct a new public footpath through part of the estate, linking to the existing Wales Coast Path. The development of the footpath infrastructure will proceed alongside a programme of habitat restoration. The route will embrace several important landscape features, linked to the social, cultural and economic history of Anglesey. The project is committed to sharing this landscape history with future users of the footpath through the installation of appropriate heritage interpretation along the route. The Bodorgan Estate is collaborating with Bangor University’s Institute for the Study of Welsh Estates (http://iswe.bangor.ac.uk/) to deliver these objectives.
The Project Team (Shaun Evans, Marc Collinson, and Mari Wiliam) advised and supervised the work of two paid postgraduate interns (Matthew Rowland and Catrin Williams). They undertook archival work at Bodorgan and interviewed members of the local community to provide historical information and oral testimony to aid the creation of heritage interpretation along the path and online. Members of the team intend to produce academic-level publications in due course.
1 Aug 2022 – 31 Dec 2022
Activity: Types of External academic engagement - Research and Teaching at External Organisation (Advisor) - 'Reimagining political communities: encouraging interaction between local history and political history'
(Audience: c. 30)
The Does British Political History have a Future CfP argued that political history was ‘outdated, static’ and that ‘political historian’ was a rarely used description. As an academic subdiscipline, local history arguably suffers from comparable reputation problems. Yet, rarely asked questions remain. First, if ‘all politics local’, why have so few political historians engaged with local case studies? Second, why do so few local historians engage more clearly with twentieth century politics? After reflecting on these apparent problems, this paper will suggest that a deliberate and critical interaction between these two areas may actually aid the historical study of place, belonging, and political representation. Addressing issues of local governance and popular politics, together with ideas of community and collectiveness, this paper argues that these issues have laid at the heart of political concerns in recent decades.
Originating from research considering local electoral contests affected by debates over migration and far-right politics, and how national energy policy affected local communities, economies, and politics, the paper will reflect on whether a renewed focus on the local might help in the conference’s outlined endeavour. It suggests that interactions between local reactions to larger socio-economic processes, like deindustrialisation, cultural change, and political fragmentation, can be better mapped and understood through localised case studies. Responding to concerns, raised by adherents to ‘new political history’, about an assumed ‘nationalisation of politics’ obfuscating localised political cultures and socio-economic factors, this paper advocates moving beyond merely incorporating the local, by making it a fundamental significant area of political activity. After all, In British politics, where the only election that decides national governance is when constituents vote for their Member of Parliament, how localities interpret global, national, and local issues is crucial to our understanding of British politics.
12 Jul 2022
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker) - Consultant Research Assistant: deprivation, riots, and Conservatism
Research assistance work for Peter Shapely funded by College of Arts and Humanities and Business Seed Fund
4 Jul 2022 – 8 Jul 2022
Activity: Consultancy (Consultant) - Patrick Gordon Walker: A ‘Commonwealth man’ in Smethwick politics?
(Audience: c.40)
How politicians consider, define, and respond to issues shape their actions. This paper explores Smethwick’s long-term Labour MP Patrick Gordon Walker, a politician with a complicated legacy in post-war decolonisation. A former Commonwealth Relations Secretary, Gordon Walker had a complicated relationship with racial issues, including the banishment of Seretse Khama, opposition against the restrictive Commonwealth Immigration Bill in late 1961, with his failed re-election at Smethwick in 1964 often linked to this stance. This paper examines Gordon Walker’s social origins and political career to consider whether he was to blame for the disconnection between his candidacy and voters, or whether a ‘connect’ ever existed in the first place.
11 Jun 2022
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker) - Wales and the World: Cynefin, Colonialism and Global Interconnections
Attended.
6 Jun 2022 – 7 Jun 2022
Activity: Participation in Academic conference (Participant) - Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (External organisation)
Publications Secretary, HSLC
23 Mar 2022 →
Activity: Types of External academic engagement - Contribution to the work of national or international committees and working groups (Contributor)
2021
- SOCIETY FOR EDUCATIONAL STUDIES ANNUAL COLLOQUIUM
Co-authored paper (delivered by Dr Anna Olsson-Rost) - Associational public intellectuals and party education policy: The Fabian Society and the shaping of Labour's comprehensivisation policy, c.1960–1979
24 Sep 2021
Activity: Participation in Academic conference (Participant) - Patrick Gordon Walker: A ‘Commonwealth man’ in Smethwick politics?
How politicians consider, define, and respond to issues shape their actions. This paper explores Smethwick’s long-term Labour MP Patrick Gordon Walker, a politician with a complicated legacy in post-war decolonisation. A former Commonwealth Relations Secretary, Gordon Walker had a complicated relationship with racial issues, including the banishment of Seretse Khama, opposition against the restrictive Commonwealth Immigration Bill in late 1961, with his failed re-election at Smethwick in 1964 often linked to this stance. This paper examines Gordon Walker’s social origins and political career to consider whether he was to blame for the disconnection between his candidacy and voters, or whether a ‘connect’ ever existed in the first place.
18 Jun 2021
Activity: Oral presentation (Speaker)
2020
- Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (External organisation)
Member of Grants and Prizes Committee
30 Nov 2020
Activity: Membership of committee (Member) - PSA Politics and History Group Annual Conference
All politics is local? The 1965 Leyton by-election as a negotiation between electors and the elected
16 Oct 2020
Activity: Participation in Academic conference (Speaker) - Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (Journal)
Associate Editor (inc. Book Reviews) of the Transactions
1 Jul 2020
Activity: Editorial activity (Editor) - HistoryLab+ (External organisation)
Early Career Researcher advocacy organisation (committee member).
Jan 2020 – 15 May 2023
Activity: Membership of committee (Member)
2019
- Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (External organisation)
Member of Council
30 Aug 2019 – 23 Mar 2022
Activity: Types of External academic engagement - Contribution to the work of national or international committees and working groups (Member) - Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (Journal)
Editorial board member
30 Aug 2019
Activity: Editorial activity (Editorial board member) - Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire (Journal)
Editorial Assistant
30 Aug 2019 – 1 Jul 2020
Activity: Editorial activity (Editor)
2018
- Nuclear Communities: North Wales, landscapes, and the impact of nuclear power: A feasibility study
Discussion of initial results of a feasibility study funded by the conference organiser
12 Feb 2018
Activity: Invited talk (Speaker)
Projects
-
The Welsh Secretaries 1964-1999
01/10/2023 – 10/08/2024 (Finished)
Other Grants and Projects
Postwar local government reform and Manchester politics
This builds on unarchived material collected in an earlier project in the School, seeking to publish an edition of these documents which evidence political change in post-war Manchester. Dr Collinson's team secured a research assistant through a University-funded, paid internship program to aid project development.
Collaborators: Prof. Peter Shapely; Dr Bertie Dockerill
Partner: Bangor University Employability and Skills Service