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  1. Liberal conduct.Duncan Ivison - 1993 - History of the Human Sciences 6 (3):25-59.
    A philosophical genealogy of the development of liberal 'arts of government' through the work of John Locke and Michel Foucault.
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  • The De-Eroticization of Women's Liberation: Social Purity Movements and the Revolutionary Feminism of Sheila Jeffreys.Margaret Hunt - 1990 - Feminist Review 34 (1):23-46.
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  • The religious field and the path-dependent transformation of popular politics in the Anglo-American world, 1770–1840.Peter Stamatov - 2011 - Theory and Society 40 (4):437-473.
    This article examines the formative influence of the organizational field of religion on emerging modern forms of popular political mobilization in Britain and the United States in the early nineteenth century when a transition towards enduring campaigns of extended geographical scale occurred. The temporal ordering of mobilization activities reveals the strong presence of religious constituencies and religious organizational models in the mobilizatory sequences that first instituted a mass-produced popular politics. Two related yet analytically distinct generative effects of the religious field (...)
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  • "Religion's Safe, with Priestcraft is the War": Augustan Anticlericalism and the Legacy of the English Revolution, 1660-1720.Justin Champion - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (4):547-561.
    (2000). 'Religion's Safe, with Priestcraft is the War': Augustan Anticlericalism and the Legacy of the English Revolution, 1660-1720. The European Legacy: Vol. 5, No. 4, pp. 547-561.
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