Occurrences of the search term 'drought' in articles published in editions of The Times between 1900 and 1999, with surrounding context of 10 words on each side of the search term. The inventory provides information regarding publication date and instances of place-names within the UK that co-occur with the search term. Historic Droughts was a four year (2014 – 2018), £1.5m project funded by the UK Research Councils, aiming to develop a cross-disciplinary understanding of past drought episodes that have affected the United Kingdom (UK), with a view to developing improved tools for managing droughts in future. Drought and water scarcity (DWS) events are significant threats to livelihoods and wellbeing in many countries, including the United Kingdom (UK). Parts of the UK are already water-stressed and are facing a wide range of pressures, including an expanding population and intensifying exploitation of increasingly limited water resources. In addition, many regions may become significantly drier in future due to environmental changes, all of which implies major challenges to water resource management. However, DWS events are not simply natural hazards. There are also a range of socio-economic and regulatory factors that may influence the course of droughts, such as water consumption practices and abstraction licensing regimes. Consequently, if DWS events are to be better managed, there is a need for a more detailed understanding of the links between hydrometeorological and social systems during droughts. With this research gap in mind, the Historic Droughts project aimed to develop an interdisciplinary understanding of drought from a range of different perspectives. Based on an analysis of information from a wide range of sectors (hydrometeorological, environmental, agricultural, regulatory, social and cultural), the project characterised and quantified the history of drought and water scarcity events since the late 19th century. The Historic Droughts project involved eight institutions across the UK: the British Geological Survey the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Cranfield University, the University of Exeter, HR Wallingford, Lancaster University, the Met Office, and the University of Oxford.
The texts were processed using CQPweb, Lancaster University’s software platform for large-corpus analysis. The inventory highlights instances when UK locations are mentioned in the news texts, and standardises these locations to a corresponding NUTS (Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics) area at an appropriate scale, which was achieved by the application of concordance geo-parsing to the newspaper dataset, and subsequent GIS processing. The inventory dataset includes references to drought which was happening or had happened in both the United Kingdom and also includes general references to drought which are not linked to any particular location. Instances where texts referred to droughts in locations outside of the UK were removed, providing no UK place-names were simultaneously mentioned. All of the available twentieth-century issues of the Times were searched.