Books
Editor, Work and Unemployment, 1834-1911. 4 volumes, Routledge, 2022.
Unemployment, Welfare, and Masculine Citizenship: "So Much Honest Poverty" in Britain, 1870-1920. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
Beyond the Reproductive Body: The Politics of Women's Health and Work in Early Victorian England. Ohio State University Press, 2004.
Articles and Chapters
"'It is Sometimes Soul-Destroying': Doctors' Reflections on Unemployment and Health in Thatcher's Britain," Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (2022): 233-245.
"‘Fish and Chips Is an Excellent Food': Newspapers, Nutrition, and Government Neglect in 1930s Britain." In The Routledge Handbook of Health and Media. Ed. Lester Friedman and Therese Jones, Routledge, 2022.
"Work and Society," in A Cultural History of Work. Vol. 5. Ed. Victoria Thompson. Bloomsbury, 2018.
"‘The Entombment of Thomas Shaw': Mining Accidents and the Politics of Workers' Bodies," Victorian Review 40:2 (2014): 22-26.
"Gendered Roles, Gendered Welfare: Health and the English Poor Law, 1971-1911." In Bodily Subjects: Essays on Gender and Health, 1800-2000. Eds. Tracy Penny Light, Barbara Brookes, and Wendy Mitchinson. McGill-Queen's University Press, 2014.
"'I always prefer the scissors': Isaac Baker Brown and Feminist Histories of Medicine." In Health Humanities Reader, eds. Tess Jones, Les Friedman, and Delise Wear. Rutgers University Press, 2014.
"The Politics of Preference: Masculinity, Marital Status, and Unemployment Relief in Post-First World War Britain," Cultural and Social History 7:3 (2010): 233-252.
"From ‘Relief' to ‘Justice and Protection': The Maintenance of Deserted Wives, British Masculinity, and Imperial Citizenship, 1870-1920," Gender and History 22:2 (2010): 302-321.
"The Gendered Economy of Family Liability: Intergenerational Relationships and Poor Law Relief in England's Black Country, 1871-1911." Journal of British Studies 45:1 (January 2006): 72-89.
"'Embarrassed Circumstances': Gender, Poverty, and Insanity in the West Riding of England in the Mid Victorian Years," in Sex and Seclusion. Class and Custody. Perspectives on Gender and Class in the History of British and Irish Psychiatry, eds. Jonathan Andrews and Anne Digby. Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2004.
"Testing the Reproductive Hypothesis; or what made working-class women sick in early Victorian London." Women's History Review 11:2 (2002): 175-200.
"Engendering Relief: Women, Ablebodiedness, and the New Poor Law in Early Victorian England." Journal of Women's History 11:4 (2000): 107-130.
"Dysfunctional Domesticity: Female Insanity and Family Relationships among the West Riding Poor in the Mid Nineteenth Century," Journal of Family History 25:3 (2000): 341-361.