General linear methods were derived approximately thirty years ago as a unifying approach for the study of consistency, stability and convergence of the Runge-Kutta and the linear multistep methods. Their discovery opened the possibility of obtaining essentially new methods which were neither Runge-Kutta nor linear multistep methods nor slight variations of these methods. It was hoped that general linear methods would exist which are practical and have advantages over the traditional methods. Locating such practical methods has proved difficult though, for several reasons. For example, the complexity of the order conditions becomes very high, making it difficult to even find the required conditions in many cases let alone solve them.Several simplifying assumptions must be made, which limit this large class to situations where practical methods are likely to exist. The first assumption is that the stage order is equal to the overall order of the general linear method. This results in methods which, among other things, are not affected by the order reduction phenomenon. The second assumption is that a Nordsieck vector is passed from step to step. This enables such methods to vary the stepsize in a convenient and practical way. The final assumption is that the stability regions of the general linear methods should be identical to those of corresponding Runge-Kutta methods.The first two assumptions are satisfied by the structure of the U and V matrices of the general linear methods. In order to satisfy the last assumption sufficient conditions are developed. These conditions result in a class of general linear methods with a property known as inherent RungeKutta stability (IRKS). The IRKS conditions relate the coefficient matrices of the general linear method with a doubly companion matrix X to satisfyConstructing general linear methods with the IRKS property in the most general way possible is the main aim of this thesis. To derive these methods a transformation is used; this transformation brings all methods of this class into a particular form, which allows the construction using only linear operations.Several special properties of methods with the IRKS property are introduced. For example, conditions which show that the ESIRK methods are a special case of the IRKS methods are introduced. This then allows the introduction of a new class of ESIRK methods which may have advantages over those already known. Also, methods which have a property known as strong stiff accuracy are developed which make them similar to strictly stable Runge-Kutta methods. Methods with strong stiff accuracy are likely to be considered good, particularly because they are the most suitable amongst the IRKS methods for the solution of differential algebraic equations.The theoretical properties of the general linear methods with IRKS are investigated using various implementations from fixed stepsize and fixed order to variable stepsize and variable order codes. The IRKS methods are experimentally compared with several traditional metho...