This paper investigates the proposition made by contemporaries that women and children disproportionately bore the brunt of industrialisation and urbanisation by examining how poor working-class families in mid-Victorian London shared their resources. Allocation is inferred from independently pooled cross-sectional data on the height, weight and body mass of 32,584 prisoners from a London House of Correction. As boys and girls moved into adulthood, they made some biological gains consistent with 'catch up' on earlier deprivation. The body masses of women and men then diverged. When families grew, women shrank. When children left home taking their wages with them, when age reduced the earning capacities of herself and her husband, women suff...
Did the male breadwinner get more household resources, and if so, why? A dearth of direct informatio...
Social reformer Charles Booth undertook a massive survey into the social and economic conditions of ...
The scale of the current global obesity epidemic and the implications of this for health, functional...
This paper investigates the proposition made by contemporaries that women and children disproportion...
<p>In mid-nineteenth-century Britain, a new institution emerged: the modern prison. Some prisons inv...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
This article explores how child neglect was criminalised during the period that the first statutory ...
Economic historians and development economists have exploited links between nutrition, health status...
The workhouse was central facet of the new poor law and the elderly – and aged men in particular – c...
This paper examines effects of socio-economic conditions on the standardised heights and body mass i...
The average height of a population has become a familiar measure of that population's nutritional st...
The working-age poor were the section of the poor who most preoccupied the Poor Law Commissioners an...
During the last two decades, economic and social historians have often used height and other anthrop...
Gender bias against girls in nineteenth-century England has received much interest but establishing ...
Did the male breadwinner get more household resources, and if so, why? A dearth of direct informatio...
Social reformer Charles Booth undertook a massive survey into the social and economic conditions of ...
The scale of the current global obesity epidemic and the implications of this for health, functional...
This paper investigates the proposition made by contemporaries that women and children disproportion...
<p>In mid-nineteenth-century Britain, a new institution emerged: the modern prison. Some prisons inv...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
This article explores how child neglect was criminalised during the period that the first statutory ...
Economic historians and development economists have exploited links between nutrition, health status...
The workhouse was central facet of the new poor law and the elderly – and aged men in particular – c...
This paper examines effects of socio-economic conditions on the standardised heights and body mass i...
The average height of a population has become a familiar measure of that population's nutritional st...
The working-age poor were the section of the poor who most preoccupied the Poor Law Commissioners an...
During the last two decades, economic and social historians have often used height and other anthrop...
Gender bias against girls in nineteenth-century England has received much interest but establishing ...
Did the male breadwinner get more household resources, and if so, why? A dearth of direct informatio...
Social reformer Charles Booth undertook a massive survey into the social and economic conditions of ...
The scale of the current global obesity epidemic and the implications of this for health, functional...