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Clare Market Review

Clare Market Review  
The Clare Market Review logo, as of October 2014.jpg
The new logo of the Clare Market Review as of the relaunch in academic year 2014-15, first officially used in Issue CX 'Tribute'.
Discipline Interdisciplinary
Language English
Edited by Rachel Alexandra Chua
Publication details
Publisher
Publication history
1905-1973, 2008-present
Indexing
OCLC no. 4075139

The Clare Market Review (CMR) was established in 1905 and is the oldest student-run journal in the UK. It is based at the London School of Economics and published by the university's Students' Union.

Throughout its early years Beatrice and Sidney Webb, Fabian founders of the LSE and the New Statesman magazine, maintained a close writing relationship with the CMR, publishing many articles and essays, some of which later formed the backbone of their influential ten volume study, English Local Government. Playwright and fellow Fabian George Bernard Shaw contributed arts reviews. Marxist historian Ralph Miliband had numerous essays published and William Beveridge developed his notions of taxation in the journal's pages. In 1966 Bertrand Russell contributed a fierce polemic on the Vietnam war, entitled An Appeal to the American Conscience. Other contributors include the political and economic theorist Harold Laski, post-Keynsian economist Joan Robinson, Prime Minister of South Africa and soldier Jan Smuts, Liberal politician and peer David Steel, the noted anthropologist Edmund Leach, the humourist Alan Coren, the comedian and writer Spike Milligan, the critic Bernard Matthews, Roger McGough, Ray Connolly, Bernard Levin, the music theorist and pop musician Brian Eno, and the Liverpudlian Beat Poets Brian Patten and Jamie Carragher.


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