The programme booklet, which includes abstracts and maps, can be found here.
Day 1 – 9th June 2025
9.30-10.00am: Coffee, registration and welcome
10.00-11.30am Session 1: Health Transition: Long-Run Trends
Kristina Thompson, Wageningen University: Epidemiological Transition Theory at Colonial Crossroads: the case of Suriname 1903-1949
Eric Schneider, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: The Long-Run History of Child Stunting in India: A State-level analysis
Robert Stelter, University of Basel: Out of Africa: using genealogical data to assess the health impact of major historical events
11.30am-12noon: Coffee break
12noon-1.30pm Session 2: Geographical Perspectives
Anggi Novianti, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: Mortality of the 1918-1919 Influenza Pandemic in Java and the Drivers of Disparities
Maanik Nath, Utrecht University: Railroads and Health: Evidence from Colonial India
Carolina Román, Universidad de la República (Uruguay): Regional distribution of Health Conditions and the Role of Education in Uruguay, 1890-1970
1.30-2.30pm: Lunch
2.30-4.00pm Session 3: Sexual and Reproductive Health
Shane Doyle, University of Leeds: Maternal Mortality from the Local to the Global
Ivana Zečević, University of Groningen: Medicalization of Reproductive Health in Villa Maria and Mua Mission Hospitals, 1900s-1980s
Meiping Aggie Sun, Fordham University: Long-Term and Multi-Generational Benefits of Skilled Birth Attendance
4.00-4.30pm: Coffee break
4.30-5.30pm Session 4: Colonial Medicine
Grietjie Verhoef, University of Johannesburg: Modern Health care, Modern Hospitals in Africa: A historical perspective on health care developments in the Global South, with a focus on African hospitals.
Jutta Bolt, University of Groningen: Geographies of Healing: The long-term impact of Colonial-Era healthcare facilities in British Africa
5.30-6.30pm Drinks at local pub
7.00pm Dinner, Cinnamon Bazaar
Day 2 – 10th June 2025
10.00-11.30am Session 5: Gender and the Health Transition
Astrid Krenz, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: Male Excess Mortality During the Epidemiological Transition: Theory and evidence from India
Wen Su, University of Oxford: The Burden of HIV and Life Expectancy Sex Gap: Evidence from rural South Africa amid AIDS epidemic, 1994-2022
Juliana Jaramillo Echeverri (Eric Schneider), ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: Gender disparities in Global Child Stunting
11.30-12noon: Coffee break
12noon-1.30pm Session 6: Health Campaigns
Hampton Gaddy, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: The Missing Pacific influenza Epidemics, 1918–21
Leigh Gardner, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: A Rocky Start? Colonialism, state capacity and the impact of Rockefeller Foundation public health programmes in Africa
Eric Strobl, University of Bern: The Public Hookworm Campaign and Mortality in early 20th-century Colonial Jamaica
1.30-2.30pm: Lunch
2.30-4.00pm Session 7: Inequality in Mortality
Nick Fitzhenry, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳: Mortality in the Century of Apartheid, 1940-1970: Spatial and racial health inequalities during the Antibiotic Revolution
Dinos Sevdalakis, University of Groningen: Infant Mortality Decline in Urban Senegal: The case of colonial Saint-Louis, 1880- 1921
Johan Fourie, Stellenbosch University: Inequality in Infant Mortality: Evidence from a South African town, 1900-1930
4.00pm: Reception, 8th Floor Terrace, Marshall Building