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The Parliament Magazine was founded in 1995. [1] The magazine is owned by Dods, a British company that provides contact and biographical information about the Houses of Parliament and the Civil Service since 1832. It is one of the oldest political publishing houses in the world, and has produced essential publications for over 174 years.
The Stationery Office (TSO) is a British publishing company created in 1996 when the publishing arm of His Majesty's Stationery Office was privatised. [1] It is the official publisher and the distributor for legislation, command and house papers, select committee reports, Hansard, and the London, Edinburgh and Belfast Gazettes, the UK government's three official journals of record. [2]
HMSO also took over as official publisher for both houses of Parliament from Hansard in 1882. [1] [3] In 1889, HMSO was granted letters patent under which it was appointed as Queen's Printer of Acts of Parliament ("printer to Her Majesty of all Acts of Parliament"). These letters patent also appointed the Controller of HMSO as administrator of ...
In subsequent years he worked in publishing, building up Pergamon Press to a major academic publisher. After six years as a Labour Member of Parliament (MP) during the 1960s, Maxwell again put all his energy into business, successively buying the British Printing Corporation , Mirror Group Newspapers and Macmillan Publishers , among other ...
Essex House is a Los Angeles publishing imprint, a subsidiary of Milton Luros's Parliament News, Inc, which between 1968 and 1969, published 37 erotica novels. About half the 37 titles published by Essex House were sci-fi/fantasy; the authors published include Philip José Farmer, David Meltzer, Michael Perkins, Jean Marie Stine, Charles Bukowski.
Before 1771, the British Parliament had long been a highly secretive body. The official record of the actions of the House was publicly available but there was no record of the debates. The publication of remarks made in the House became a breach of parliamentary privilege, punishable by the two Houses of Parliament. As the populace became ...