Noakes, L. 2019

‘Valuing the dead: death, burial, and the body in Second World War Britain’, Critical Military Studies, 6:2, 224-242.

Noakes, L. 2018

‘The “worth” of grief and the “value” of bodies. Managing the civilian coprse in Second World War Britain’, in R.E. Toulson & Z. Newby (eds) The Materality of Mourning, London: Routledge, 175-190.

Noakes, L. 2023

‘The “People’s War” in concrete and stone: death and the negotiation of collective identity in Second World War Britain’, English Historical Review, 138: 594-595, 1118-1142.

Nolin, C. 2017

‘Framing children’s sections in cemeteries’, in M. Frihammar & H. Silverman (eds) Heritage of Death: Landscapes of Emotion, Memory and Practice, London: Routledge, 38-49.

Nolin, C. 2006

‘Kyrkogardsestetik och ceremonier’, Bebyggelsehistorisk Tidskrift, 52, 80–96.

Nonestied, M. 2023

‘Uncovering history at Washington Memorial Cemetery: ground-penetrating radar and victims of the 1918 influenza pandemic’, in H. Mytum & R. Veit (eds) Innovation and Implementation: Critical Reflections and New Approaches to Historic Mortuary Data Collection, Analysis and Dissemination, New York, NY: Berghahn Books, 30-62.

Nonnis-Vigilante, S. 2016

‘L’impact de l’édit de Saint-Cloud. Permanences et nouveautés dans l’administration de la mort en Italie (XVIIIe –XIXe siècles)’, in R. Bertrand & A. Carol (eds) Aux Origines des Cimetières Contemporains: Les Réformes Funéraires de L’Europe Occidentale XVIIe-XIXe siècle, Aix-en-Provence: Presses Universitaires de Province, 299-312.

Noor, N., Sabir, N., Ibrahim, I. & 2 others 2023

‘Geospatial technologies approach for cemetery management solutions: a review’, Jurnal Planologi, 20:2, 105-118.

Nordh, H. & Evensen, K. 2018

‘Qualities and functions ascribed to urban cemeteries across the capital cities of Scandanavia’, Urban Forestry and Urban Greening, 33: 80-91.

Keywords

Nordh, H. & Windgren, C. 2023

“It’s the greenness, the nature, it looks as it someone has taken care of the place very well”. Experiences from St Eskil cemetery in Sweden’, Approaching Religion, 13:1, 105-122.

Nordh, H., Evensen, K.H. & Skår, M. 2017

‘A peaceful place in the city – a qualitative study of restorative components of the cemetery’, Landscape and Planning, 80: 108-117.

Keywords

Nordh, H., House, D., Weterndorp, M. & 8 others 2021

‘Rules, norms and practices – a comparative study exploring disposal practices and facilities in Northern Europe’, OMEGA – Journal of Death and Dying, 88:1, 171-199.

Nordh, H., Knapskog, M., Uteng, T.P. & Wingren, C. 2023

‘Co-creating and co-producing multicultural cemeteries in Norway and Sweden: a comparative study with insights from Drammen, Eskilstuna and Umeå’ in A. Maddrell, S. Kmec, T. Uteng, & M. Westendorp, (eds) Mobilities in Life and Death: Negotiating Room for Migrants and Minorities in European Cemeteries, Cham: Springer, 169-190.

Nordh, H., Olafsson, A., Kajosaari, A. & 4 others 2022

‘Similar spaces, different usage: a comparative study on how residents in the capitals of Finland and Denmark use cemeteries as recreational landscapes’, Urban Forestry & Urban Greening73, 127598.

Keywords

Nordh, H., Wingren, C., Uteng, T. & Knapskog M. 2023

Disrespectful or socially acceptable? – A nordic case study of cemeteries as recreational landscapes’, Landscape and Urban Planning, 231, 104645.

Keywords

Noret, J. 2012

Grief as social fact: notes from southern Benin’, African Studies, 71:2, 273-286

Norman, N. 2003

‘Death and burial of Roman children: the case of Yasmina cemetery at Carthage – Part II: the archaeological evidence’, Mortality, 8:1, 36-47.

Nosi, C., D’Agostini, A, Piccioni, N. & Bartoli, C. 2023

‘Becoming a tree when I will be dead? Why not! Generation X, Y and Z, and innovative green death practices’, Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services, 75, p.103449.

Nosonovsky, M. 2009

‘Folk beliefs, mystic and superstitions in Ashkenazi and Karaite tombstone inscriptions from Ukraine’, Markers, 26, 120-147.

Novotný, L. 2025

‘What to do with abandoned German graves? The case of the Czech Republic’, Mortality, 30:4, 1224-1240.
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Events

The Cemetery Research Group runs two events a year: in May and in November. Follow the links and send in an abstract