Conference programme

AGENDA

Venue: Lecture Room 126, Geography Building, Mile End Road campus. Building 26 on campus map.

Thursday, 7 July

9:00–10.00: Registration with tea/coffee bar

10.00–10:15: Welcoming remarks

10.15–12.30 The Development Of Medical Ecology In France

Frédéric Vagneron (University of Zurich), ‘La Grippe Existe-t-elle?’ Research on influenza in France before 1918 and the predominance of ecological conceptions of disease.

Pierre-Olivier Méthot (Université Laval, Québec), Inventing Medical Ecology: The Reception of Charles Nicolle in France, 1930-1960.

Jon Arrizabalaga (Institución Milà i Fontanals, Spanish National Research Council), Between medical geography and disease ecology: Mirko D. Grmek’s historical epidemiology views.

12:30–13:30 Lunch

13:30–15:00: Revisiting Key Figures In Disease Ecology

Warwick Anderson (University of Sydney), The Calculus of Disease Ecology Emerging from Cold-War Canberra.

Mark Honigsbaum (QMUL), Accidental Ecologist: René Dubos, the Rockefeller and the ‘road less travelled by.’

15:00–15:30 Tea/coffee break

15:30–17:00: Microbes and Globalisation

Andrew Mendelsohn (QMUL), Modelling Epidemics and Policies in the Age of Extremes, 1915-1946.

Anne-Marie Moulin (University of Paris), Governance of complexity or the political ecology of the microbial diseases in a Global World.

Friday, 8 July

8:30–9:15 Coffee bar

9:15–11:30 Soviet Approaches To Plague Ecology

Susan D. Jones and Anna A. Amramina (University of Minnesota), Entangled Histories of Plague Ecology in Russia and the USSR.

Christos Lynteris (CRASSH) and Michael Y. Kosoy (CDC), Natural Focality of Disease: Origins, Development and Legacy of a Soviet Disease Ecology Paradigm.

Nils Chr. Stenseth (University of Oslo) – A Unified Biology: Six Blind Scientists and the Elephant in the Room, a Parable for Environmentally Mediated Diseases (With a Focus on Plague).

11:30–12:00: Tea break

12:00–13:00: Keynote Address

David Morens (National Institutes of Health), Miasmatism, Contagionism, and Infection: The Evolution of Ideas to Explain Diseases.

13:00–14:00 Lunch

14:00–15:30: Ecologies of Prevention and Control

Christoph Gradmann (University of Oslo), Natural History by the Bedside: Hospital Hygiene, Antibiotics and Infectious Disease 1950-1990.

David Heymann (LSHTM), Emerging Infections: Shifting the Paradigm from Rapid Detection and Response to Prevention at Source.

 15:30–16:00: Tea break

16:00–17:00: Roundtable discussion

Chair: Andrew Mendelsohn (QMUL)

 19:00 Conference dinner at Coburn Arms, 8 Coborn Road, E3 2DA.