'Who takes the eye takes all'<sup>1</sup>: visual culture in the Women's Library collections.Published in:Art Libraries Journal, 2007, v. 32, n. 1, p. 20, doi. 10.1017/S0307472200014814By:Cameron, Gail;Doherty, TeresaPublication type:Article
Engendering city politics and educational thought: elite women and the London Labour Party, 1914-1965.Published in:Paedagogica Historica, 2008, v. 44, n. 4, p. 397, doi. 10.1080/00309230802218223By:Martin, JanePublication type:Article
Fawcett Saga: Remembering the Women’s Library across Four Decades.Published in:2013By:Liddington, JillPublication type:Essay
The Women's Library.Published in:History Today, 2002, v. 52, n. 2, p. 2By:Byatt, AntoniaPublication type:Article
The fall and rise of home economics education: newly available home economics archives at The Women's Library.Published in:International Journal of Consumer Studies, 2011, v. 35, n. 5, p. 595, doi. 10.1111/j.1470-6431.2011.01021.xBy:Murphy, GillianPublication type:Article
The Official Opening of The Women's Library@LSE, 12 March 2014.Published in:2014By:Purvis, JunePublication type:Editorial