Information on Fellows has been gathered since foundation of the Society, although this has always been for administrative/financial reasons. Membership lists do not include any further biographical information. Subscribers to the Society were originally termed 'members'. From 1914, members were referred to as 'Fellows'.\n\nFellowship lists exist in various formats:\nSubscription lists (manuscript) from 1754 to 1986: early volumes are bound, late 20th century ledgers are loose leaf. There are gaps.\nPrinted lists of Members/Fellows also appear bound into the volumes of Transactions, later the Journal, for most years. In the 1970s and 80s, separate printed lists were published.\nInformation contained in lists includes name and usually address, date of election and year of resignation ('declined') or death, if specifically noted. early lists include details of proposer and some also include Member's area of interest or profession.\n\n
Letters of complaint; subscription rates; correspondence to and from Sidney Loweth about membership and bye-laws (1960s); correspondence from Fellows about honours. Includes a letter from the office of Nelson Mandela accepting Fellowship of the Society (dated 31 May 1999).
Development and administration of regional committees, including Yorkshire, South West, North West, East Anglia and West Midlands. Management of West Midlands region including correspondence with Antoinette Gordon
A group was set up by Sir James Taylor to increase European membership of the Society, to promote closer association with similar societies in Europe and to stimulate activity by Honorary Corresponding Members (HCMs)\nFile of correspondence with various organisations in Europe, minutes of a committee and general papers
Papers from the New Zealand Chapter between 1989-1997
Correspondence, Notes from meetings, Minutes of Meetings, Committee Nominations, Guidelines for International Committees and Honorary Corresponding Members (Aims, Responsibilities and Structure), Booklets
The current work of the Chapter is focused around the Regenerative Futures programme, which aims to create a future where humans thrive as part of the Earth’s ecology.
This work has three pillars: climate change, inclusive economies, and indigenous wisdom.
Sin títuloNovember 1988 - June 1994.\nThis file also contains the minutes of the Fellowship Engagement and Network Taskforce, 24 January 1994 and the agenda of the Fellowship Drive Working Party, 4 March 1994.
Includes booklets published at intervals giving general information about the Society and the Fellowship; including 'The Art of Change; the RSA at work' and 'Ideas Across Frontiers'
Includes name, address, amount of subscription, by whom proposed, when elected; in alphabetical order