Dr Michael Lambert

Research Fellow

Profile

I am a historian of the welfare state in twentieth-century Britain and its Empire, using sociological approaches to understand social and health policy-making and implementation, along with the impacts of these upon people, organisations, and society. My research uses qualitative and quantitative approaches, with considerable experience in using archival, documentary and organisation records, combined with elite and popular oral interviews. I have a particular interest in place, and have primarily focused upon Liverpool, Merseyside and the North West of England in my work.

I am a co-investigator on the National Institute for Health Research funded project ‘Mapping underdoctored areas: the impact of medical training pathways on NHS workforce distribution’. My work package contributes health policy, history and spatial analysis. My research also underpins my responsibility and commitment in leading Widening Participation within Lancaster Medical School student admissions.

Why access to records matters to seeking justice over historic forced adoption in Britain
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Historic adoption: experiences and reflections
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Despite the welfare state: child poverty in the nine historic townships of Tameside, 1945-74
Invited talk

"She seems to have lost the power of looking after her husband and family and her home”: family poverty and the welfare state in Cheshire, 1945-74
Invited talk

Healthcare in place (ESRC Festival of Social Sciences)
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

“Careful fact-finding, reforming zeal, and intellectual curiosity”: the Social Survey of Merseyside, 1929-34
Invited talk

Eugenics and the hidden history of forcible birth control by Britain's welfare state
Invited talk

Joint Parliamentary Committee on Human Rights Inquiry into the Right to Family Life: Adoption of Children of Unmarried Women, 1949-1976
Expert Opinion

‘“Problem families” and the welfare state in North West England, 1945-74
Invited talk

Using archives and historical research in government inquiries: pitfalls and prospects
Invited talk

First as tragedy then as farce: building the old new Royal Liverpool Hospital, 1935-78
Invited talk

Managing decline: a history of Liverpool, the NHS, and the pandemic
Invited talk

War and the healthcare revolution: the birth of the National Health Service on Merseyside
Invited talk

In conversation: learning from the archives
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Using the past to understand the future dynamics of medical care
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Violent playground? A view from rebellious youth growing up in post-war Liverpool
Invited talk

By reason of their fecklessness, ignorance, irresponsibility”: Managing “problem families” in the town and country of the Solent, 1945-74
Invited talk

The Big 100 Debate
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Liverpool in the time of suffrage
Invited talk

Too much welfare and not enough state: Historicising bureaucracy, less eligibility and marginality in the post-war welfare settlement, 1945-79
Invited talk

NHS archives on Merseyside: reflections and directions on the state of the region’s health services heritage, 1948-2018
Public Lecture/ Debate/Seminar

Using history to examine experiences of poverty and welfare by large families in Bradford and West Yorkshire
Invited talk

The early history of Frimhurst, 1957-77
Invited talk

“The dragons’ harvest”? “Problem families” in post-war Sheffield, 1945-74
Invited talk

Merseybeaten? Poverty, policy and the “problem family” in post-war Liverpool
Invited talk

The long history of the “troubled family”
Invited talk

‘“Problem families” on Merseyside, 1943-74
Invited talk

Brentwood Recuperative Centre, 1937-70
Invited talk

An expensive and tragic problem to the community”: “problem families” in post-war Manchester, 1945-74
Invited talk

Brentwood Recuperation Centre for Mothers and Children, 1935-70
Invited talk

  • Interdisciplinary network in culture, health, ethics and society