Wonderful audience and great discussion today at the Italian Economic History Association keynote on “Leviathan’s Health: State Capacity and Pestilence from the Black Death to Covid”. An honour to be invited to this excellent conference! @PrincetonUPress @oxford-esh.bsky.social
04.10.2025 14:54 — 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
How did preindustrial work patterns differ between women and men? How do you even measure them? Amazing quantitative data coming out today at the Urbino conference on “Women and Men at Work in Preindustrial Europe” mobilityandhumanities.it/work/
25.09.2025 20:44 — 👍 10 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1
Looking forward talking about “Leviathan's Health: State Capacity and Pestilence from the Black Death to Covid” at the ASE Conference in Venice on 4 Oct, and learning more about the newest work in Italian economic history @oxford-esh.bsky.social @PrincetonUPress t.co/k5DWafQAbw
20.09.2025 20:30 — 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Keynote “Controlling Contagion: Epidemics and Institutions from Plague to Covid” | Radboud University
In this keynote lecture, prof. Sheilagh Ogilvie will explain how societies have historically managed epidemics through various social institutions.
Looking forward talking about “Controlling Contagion” at the Radboud Conference next week, and learning more answers to its key question: “How Did We Lift the Burden?” www.ru.nl/en/about-us/... @oxford-esh.bsky.social @timriswick.bsky.social @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social
21.08.2025 17:28 — 👍 8 🔁 2 💬 1 📌 0
Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, V:I, Part III, on government, externalities and public goods:
26.06.2025 17:25 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Adam Smith: "it would still deserve the most serious attention of government... to prevent a leprosy, or any other loathsome and offensive disease... from spreading itself... though, perhaps, no other publick good might result from such attention, besides the prevention of so great a publick evil"
26.06.2025 17:19 — 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1
A pleasure to talk about serfdom and my Leverhulme project yesterday at the Arthur Lewis Lab for Comparative Development. @oxford-esh.bsky.social @arthurlewislab.bsky.social @leverhulme.ac.uk #echist
16.05.2025 16:03 — 👍 7 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
Trade privileges didn't exactly benefit the special-interest groups, either. @OxfordESH @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social @PrincetonUPress #echist press.princeton.edu/books/hardco...
28.04.2025 20:54 — 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
What does history tell us about trade barriers to favour domestic interest-groups? On guilds and trade in medieval Europe, check out this BBC series, broadcast again this week. @BBCRadio4 @OxfordESH @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social #echist www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b...
28.04.2025 16:12 — 👍 8 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 1
Has the black box of "state capacity" ever frustrated you? These guys are prying it open ...
08.04.2025 09:47 — 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Wonderful audience today for “Controlling Contagion” at the Oxford Literary Festival @PrincetonUPress @oxford-esh.bsky.social @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social
03.04.2025 19:30 — 👍 8 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Follow the 1525 German Peasants' War day by day: @germanpeasantswar.bsky.social #earlymodern #skystorians
30.03.2025 21:31 — 👍 9 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
Der Freiheitskampf der Bauern - Bauernkrieg 1525
Terra X History - Der Podcast · Episode
Do revolutions break out when peasants are poor? Or when they realize they shouldn’t be? And what role does God play? Still trying to puzzle this out, 5 centuries after the Peasants’ War (podcast in German): open.spotify.com/episode/0ZVe...
30.03.2025 17:15 — 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1
The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, CambridgeCall the midwife! Birth attendance and birth outcomes across history. « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know ...
How can we raise the Human Development Index? Life expectancy at birth = 1/3 of the HDI. Infant and maternal deaths started to fall around 1650 – but why? Alice Reid's analysis of a complex, 300-year story. @amrcampop.bsky.social @camunicampop.bsky.social
www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/blog/2025/03...
28.03.2025 11:15 — 👍 4 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Sewer access shapes developing world cities. New research shows effects on population density as large as for highways, but little on demographics, from Sean E. McCulloch, Matthew P. Schaelling, Matthew Turner, and Toru Kitagawa https://www.nber.org/papers/w33597
27.03.2025 21:00 — 👍 13 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 1
The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, CambridgeCall the midwife! Birth attendance and birth outcomes across history. « Top of the Campops: 60 things you didn't know ...
Campop blog #42: The quality of care during birth has always affected outcomes for both mothers and infants. But the introduction of midwivery training in 1902 did seem to have an impact - today's blog explains why
@camunicampop.bsky.social
www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/blog/2025/03...
27.03.2025 12:55 — 👍 4 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 1
Departmental Lecturer in Economic and Social History
We are also inviting applications for a 2-year full-time Departmental Lecturer in Economic and Social History at @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social Applications should be submitted online and before noon Wednesday 23 April - details below! #econhist #history
www.history.ox.ac.uk/event/depart...
27.03.2025 11:12 — 👍 6 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
Job Details
JOB OPPORTUNITY: Associate Professorship in Economic and Social History, Faculty of History and All Souls College, Oxford. Deadline for applications 23 April 2025. @oxford-esh.bsky.social @oxhistoryfaculty.bsky.social my.corehr.com/pls/uoxrecru...
26.03.2025 16:05 — 👍 25 🔁 20 💬 0 📌 2
Controlling Contagion
How human institutions—markets, states, communities, religions, guilds and families—have helped both to control and to exacerbate epidemics throughout history.
Any advice for someone waking up in 1348 to find the Black Death had arrived? How much did it change by 2020? Some ideas in “Controlling Contagion” - out today in Europe. @princetonupress.bsky.social press.princeton.edu/books/hardco...
18.03.2025 19:02 — 👍 26 🔁 12 💬 0 📌 1
Thank you -- I hope you enjoy it!
04.03.2025 18:24 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Ever wondered what happened behind the harmonious facade of the traditional village community? Were the "commons" really open to the common people? More pathbreaking work in the Campop 60th birthday series.
20.02.2025 11:53 — 👍 8 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
Thank you very much indeed for this reference, which I hadn't come across! In ch. 5 of my book I found that religion affects mortality where you can control contagion by individual action, but not where it's influenced more by public water supply (as with cholera).
18.02.2025 16:22 — 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Did religion affect epidemics through hygiene? For astute reflections on some colourful ideas, I enjoyed Jeremy Brown’s “The Eleventh Plague” global.oup.com/academic/pro...
17.02.2025 23:06 — 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Controlling Contagion
How human institutions—markets, states, communities, religions, guilds and families—have helped both to control and to exacerbate epidemics throughout history.
How did religion affect the ways we tackled epidemics over the past 700 years? How do you get at an institution that works partly inside people's minds? I try to nail it down in Chapter 5 of press.princeton.edu/books/hardco... @princetonupress.bsky.social
17.02.2025 22:58 — 👍 10 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
Director, Centre for the Sciences of Place & Memory, Stirling Uni, Scotland. Skill, memory, embodied cognition, philosophy, cognitive history, cricket, music, collaborating, wayfinding. Leverhulme International Prof: johnsutton.net & placememory.net
www.earlyengines.org
Supporting new research into the origins and development of heat engines, atmospheric and steam prior to 1812.
The 4th IEEC takes place 20-22nd March 2026 at Kingswood Heritage Museum, Bristol.
Grupo de Estudios sobre Historia de la Prisión y las Instituciones Punitivas (GEHPIP). III Congreso Internacional (enero 2026): https://www.unavarra.es/congreso-historia-prision. #Metropolice en @elsaltodiario.com: https://www.elsaltodiario.com/metropolice
Researcher Econ History / Digital History @uni-muenster.de on premodern rural labour markets and the industrious revolution in Germany
Early modern intellectual history: seventeenth-century academic practice and communication; Georg Calixtus (1586-1656). MA(Research) (Qld Tech.), MBA (Aust. Inst. Mgt), MA (@uu.se). Inclusion champion, former senior public servant. he/him 🇦🇺🇸🇪🏳️🌈
Computational Biologist. Tenure Track Fellow in Health at the University of Liverpool. 🇧🇷🇯🇵🇪🇸🇬🇧🇨🇭
Phylogenomics and Chemometrics. Prog Rock and Post-Punk. C and Python.
@leomrtns@mstdn.science
Sociologist/demographer specializing in mortality, racial inequity, Covid-19. Avid theater-goer, inconsistent powerlifter, and erstwhile operator of an all-volunteer bookstore. Toddler parent. Living not-quite-car-free in Minneapolis. she/her
Profesor-investigador en Departamento de Filosofía, Lógica y Filosofía de la Ciencia. Universidad de Sevilla.
Filosofía, ciencia, psicología moral y ética y humanidades digitales.
Actualizando mis probabilidades previas.
http://www.hugoviciana.eu
China, climate, stats, and cities. Johns Hopkins SAIS, Good Authority. No Kings.
Ramon y Cajal & Deputy Director of IPERG http://www.ub.edu/iperg/. Advancing https://www.ub.edu/mipe/ at University of Barcelona
https://sites.google.com/site/cescamat
West Texas resident, HS teacher, now APUSH and Dual Credit, formerly AP World and APMicro/Macroecon, colonial and cultural Latin American history, US Constitutional history, wine and whisky enthusiast, cat lover
Economist @oucyprus, Research Fellow @iza.org
Alumnus: @CornellEcon @CIDE_MX
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Labor, Development, Growth Econ.
Lost Albertan doing an Applied Econ PhD at the University of Minnesota. I try to study the Economic History of Agriculture, and regularly get my heart broken by the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Underviser i historie og samfundsfag.
Forperson for Historielærerforeningen for stx & hf -> @historielaerer.dk
Likes might just be a 'bookmark'. Often use threads as an archive.
#skolechat #dkhist #dkøko #dkpol #uddpol #histmed #30DayChartChallenge
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Historian in Oz (history of work, education, capitalism) on unceded Dharug & Gundungurra land. Books = Virtue Capitalists: rise & fall of the professional class (2023) and History of the Modern Australian University (2014). She/her. Views mine. 🍉🍉🍉
Professor in Theory and History of Education, Groningen, NL. Historian of education, Groningen/Örebro/Uppsala. Father of two.
Cultural evolution researcher at the University of Exeter (Penryn campus), UK.
President of the Cultural Evolution Society @culturalevolsoc.bsky.social
Website: alexmesoudi.com
Digging through Mediterranean history. We love it all: the plow, the fishing net, the bandit's knife and the wedding contract. A little music as well.
Political science PhD @ UCLA, studying barriers to evidence-based policy. Previously @ Penn, BIT, Evidence Action, PIIE. 🇦🇹 🇨🇦 Website: www.dariosidhu.com