Jenny Bishop
| Name: | Jenny Bishop |
| Affiliation: | Campop |
| E-mail: | (only provided to users who are logged into talks.cam) |
| Last login: | 26 Jan 2026, 10:21 a.m. |
Public lists managed by Jenny Bishop
- Core Seminar in Economic and Social History
- Economic and Social History Seminars
- Quantitative History Seminar
- The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure - seminar series
Talks given by Jenny Bishop
Obviously this only lists talks that are listed through talks.cam. Furthermore, this facility only works if the speaker's e-mail was specified in a talk. Most talks have not done this.
Talks organised by Jenny Bishop
This list is based on what was entered into the 'organiser' field in a talk. It may not mean that Jenny Bishop actually organised the talk, they may have been responsible only for entering the talk into the talks.cam system.
- The public speaks back: health communication in Britain, 1980s-2020.â **PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF TIME AND LOCATION**
- Challenges in estimating historical crisis mortality: spatial heterogeneity, endogenous incompleteness, sample size, and ad hoc methods.â
- Mortality in the century of apartheid, 1940-1970: spatial and racial inequalities in mortality and doctors during the antibiotic transition.â
- Transport and the transmission of plague across settlements in early modern England.â
- Progress in the pipeline: cholera, politics and the waterworks revolution in Germany.â
- People, places, and peers - fertility trajectories in Derbyshire, 1881-1911.â â
- Plague strikes back: The Pestis Secunda of 1361â62 and its demographic consequences in England and Wales
- Researching the possible effects of the New Poor Law of 1834 on the health of the population of England and Wales
- Fertility responses to short-term economic stress: Price volatility and wealth shocks in a pre-transitional settler colony
- How to Vaccinate the Masses? Safety, compulsion, and the success of vaccination policy in nineteenth-century Britain
- Quantifying job loss and job creation, 1851-1911
- Morbidity among working-class men and women in early-twentieth century Sweden
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