Scholar

Alice Reid

H-index: 21
Economics 26%
Public Health 25%

by Rebecca SearReposted by: Alice Reid

rebeccasear.bsky.social
Reflections on the #BSPS2025 conference, one of my favourites (after >20 years of conferencing). This year it was held at the beautiful campus on Swansea Bay (sadly didn’t get a pic of the delicious Welsh cakes that came out at afternoon tea!) 🧵
View from the conference location towards Swansea and the Mumbles (Mumbles lighthouse just visible if you really squint) View from the conference location towards Port Talbot (now decommissioned steelworks just visible if you squint)
amrcampop.bsky.social
Proud winners of the #BSPS2025 conference quiz!
amrcampop.bsky.social
In fact we do use the term 'birth rate', for certain types of rate, eg crude birth rate - births per 1000 people. 'Fertility rates' generally relate births to the people at risk of having them, ie women or women in particular age groups
amrcampop.bsky.social
I agree it's confusing, but in demography, fertility refers to achieved births, and the term for the ability to become pregnant is fecundity.
hggaddy.bsky.social
📢 Interested in excess mortality methods, and want a challenge? I'm organising the "One Epidemic, Many Estimates" (1EME) project! Register *now* as a many analyst team (submissions due 15 March 2026), and then join us at LSE for a workshop on 21-22 May 2026! (1/n)

www.lse.ac.uk/Economic-His...
One Epidemic, Many Estimates (1EME)
One Epidemic, Many Estimates (1EME)
www.lse.ac.uk
historyworkshop.org.uk
Are you an early-career historian interested in radical, public and digital history?

We are currently looking for two part-time, paid Editorial Fellows to join History Workshop.

Deadline is at midnight on 15th August. See below for more details!

www.historyworkshop....
Call for Applications: Editorial Fellowships at History Workshop, 2025
History Workshop is advertising two part-time, paid Editorial Fellowships in 2025, open to early career historians.
www.historyworkshop.org.uk
amrcampop.bsky.social
We've done it: 60 blogs over our 60th Anniversary Year!
Check out all 60 #Campop blogs here www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/blog/, and keep your eyes peeled for occasional blogs to follow in the same space!
@camunicampop.bsky.social
@camunigeography.bsky.social
@camhistory.bsky.social
amrcampop.bsky.social
The Demographic Transition Model is a useful shorthand for the fall from high birth and death rates to low, but not as a model for how it happens. 4/4
amrcampop.bsky.social
During the period usually thought of as the first Demographic Transition in England (1870-1930) fertility fell faster than mortality and the population growth rate was slowing ... 3/4
amrcampop.bsky.social
Instead of following the classic Demographic Transition Model, in England very rapid population growth before the mid 19C was driven by rises in fertility as well as falls in mortality, and fertility contributed more than mortality did ... 2/4
amrcampop.bsky.social
Campop blog #60: According to the Demographic Transition Model, populations grow because economic growth leads to mortality decline. Population pressure then leads to fertility decline. But this was not what happened in England ...
@camunicampop.bsky.social
www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk/blog/2025/07...
The Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure, Cambridge
www.campop.geog.cam.ac.uk

Reposted by: Alice Reid

camunigeography.bsky.social
Follow us and our research units

‪@scottpolar.bsky.social‬
‪@conservation.cam.ac.uk‬
@camunicampop.bsky.social

Reposted by: Alice Reid

camunigeography.bsky.social
Expect to see research highlights, event announcements, student successes, and fascinating geographical insights.

Want to learn more about our journey? Check out our history here: www.geog.cam.ac.uk/alumni/early...
Department of Geography, Cambridge » A brief history of the early years of the Department 1888-1960
www.geog.cam.ac.uk

Reposted by: Alice Reid, Sarah Hall

camunigeography.bsky.social
Hello Bluesky community! The Department of Geography of the University of Cambridge is here and we're excited to share our passion for understanding the world.

We explore everything from climate change and urbanisation to cultural landscapes and GIS mapping.
amrcampop.bsky.social
... Using the mid-20th century (when mortality was low, divorce was still relatively difficult, and the marriage & baby boom meant many families were fairly newly formed) as the only reference point for subsequent trends leads to deep misconceptions about families and households in the past. 3/3
amrcampop.bsky.social
... In the 19th century there were more lone fathers than today, although there were still more lone mothers than lone fathers. In contrast to recent decades, 19th century lone parenthood was mainly formed by the death of one partner - breaking up happy families as well as unhappy ones ... 2/3
amrcampop.bsky.social
... places with high fertility have low CO2 emissions, & few places have lowered fertility without massively increasing emissions. So 'population control' is unlikely to reduce environmental impacts on its own. Better to focus on reducing per capita consumption and waste where these are still high.

References

Fields & subjects

Updated 1m