In the long-running debate over standards of living during the industrial revolution, pessimists have identified deteriorating health conditions in towns as undermining the positive effects of rising real incomes on the ‘biological standard of living’. This article reviews long-run historical relationships between urbanization and epidemiological trends in England, and then addresses the specific question: did mortality rise especially in rapidly growing industrial and manufacturing towns in the period c. 1830–50? Using comparative data for British, European, and American cities and selected rural populations, this study finds good evidence for widespread increases in mortality in the second quarter of the nineteenth century. However, this ...
It is well-recognized that both improved nutrition and sanitation infrastructure are important contr...
This dissertation examines the mortality experiences of two emerging industrial cities, Northampton ...
BACKGROUND Considerable regional variation existed in 19th century infant mortality (IMR) in England...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
In a recent article in the Review I challenged Szreter and Mooney’s account of a mortality crisis in...
The Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries is one of the most prolific societal change...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
Funder: The Leverhulme Trust and the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic ScienceAbstract: In a recent ...
Expectation of life at birth increased in Manchester from 27 years in 1841 to 31 years in 1861–70, f...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
The malign contribution of northern industrial cities to the stagnation of national life expectancy ...
McKeown and Record's classification of the causes of the nineteenth- century mortality decline has...
It is well-recognized that both improved nutrition and sanitation infrastructure are important contr...
This dissertation examines the mortality experiences of two emerging industrial cities, Northampton ...
BACKGROUND Considerable regional variation existed in 19th century infant mortality (IMR) in England...
In the long-running debate over standards of living during the Industrial Revolution, pessimists hav...
ObjectiveThis study tests the argument that industrialisation was accompanied by a dramatic worsenin...
This paper presents a new analysis of the contribution of particular causes of death to the decline ...
In a recent article in the Review I challenged Szreter and Mooney’s account of a mortality crisis in...
The Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries is one of the most prolific societal change...
Abstract: Romola Davenport's recent article is presented as a significant revision of the interpreta...
Funder: The Leverhulme Trust and the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic ScienceAbstract: In a recent ...
Expectation of life at birth increased in Manchester from 27 years in 1841 to 31 years in 1861–70, f...
The causes of the retardation of the infant mortality decline in the latter part of the nineteenth c...
This article presents a substantive analysis using the Great Britain Historical Geographical Informa...
The malign contribution of northern industrial cities to the stagnation of national life expectancy ...
McKeown and Record's classification of the causes of the nineteenth- century mortality decline has...
It is well-recognized that both improved nutrition and sanitation infrastructure are important contr...
This dissertation examines the mortality experiences of two emerging industrial cities, Northampton ...
BACKGROUND Considerable regional variation existed in 19th century infant mortality (IMR) in England...