UK Film Policy 1985-2003: An Annotated Bibliography : Copyright and Acknowledgements
This bibliography may be freely reproduced as long as the source is acknowledged.
This annotated bibliography was produced as part of a research project examining British film policy in the period 1985-2003. The work was undertaken at the University of Lincoln during 2003-2004 as a contribution to the 'Public Policy and National Identity' strand of research developed by the former AHRB Centre for British Film and Television Studies. The project director, Professor Sylvia Harvey, worked with senior research fellow Margaret Dickinson and junior research fellow Kathrein Guenther.
The bibliography of some 700 items contains material on British, German, European and international film and cultural policy. We would like to thank the Arts and Humanities Research Council for supporting the project as well as all the institutions and individuals who have generously provided us with reports, data and documentation.
For further information on the project please contact either Professor Sylvia Harvey (sharvey@lincoln.ac.uk) or the Project Administrator at:
Centre for Media Policy, Regulation and Ethics (CEMPRE)
University of Lincoln
Department of Media Production
Faculty of Media & Humanities
Brayford Pool
Lincoln LN6 7TS
United Kingdom
T. +44 (0) 1522 882000 (University Switchboard)
F. +44 (0) 1522 886021 (Faculty of Media and Humanities)
The AHRB Centre for British Film and Television Studies was funded by the UK's Arts and Humanities Research Board for a period of five years (2000-2005) under the Board's Research Centres Scheme. The Centre was a partnership of eight institutions including the British Film Institute, hosted by Birkbeck, University of London.
Further details are available at: http://www.bftv.ac.uk
In 2005, under Act of Parliament, the Arts and Humanities Research Board (AHRB) changed its title and status to the Arts and Humanities Research Council
The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) funds postgraduate and advanced research within the UK's higher education institutions and provides funding for museums, galleries and collections that are based in, or attached to, HEIs within England. The AHRC supports research within a huge subject domain – from traditional humanities subjects, such as history, modern languages and English literature, to music and the creative and performing arts. The AHRC makes awards on the basis of academic excellence and is not responsible for the views or the research outcomes reached by its award holders.
