HLCS is a peer-reviewed and open-access journal on historical population studies. Methodological papers and databases reports are also wellcome.

Joined February 2022
3 Photos and videos
We just posted a new addition to our special issue on causes of death: Addressing health. Collecting and coding causes of morbidity from the United Kingdom, 1860–1908, by Harry Smith, David R. Green, Kathleen McIlvenna and Nicola Shelton. hlcs.nl/article/view/25912

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We are happy to announce a new addition to our special issue "Counting the Death": Aragonese Socieconomic Inequality at Death Database (ASIDD) by Francisco J. Marco-Gracia, María Pilar Rodrigo Val & Judit Gil-Farrero. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs26294

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We just posted a new addition to the special issue “Counting the Death”: The Intricacies of Sources on Causes of Death, Their Interpretation, and the Construction of a Database for the City of Poznań, 1830–1900 by Liczbińska, Pankowski, Antosik, Kowalska. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25008

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We just posted a new addition to our special issue by Igor Serdiuk and Sviatoslav Chyruk on causes of death in 19th-century Ukraine: doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25896

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Happy to announce a new addition to our special issue on causes of death: Individual-Level Causes of Death in Portugal, 1834–1910. Their Potential and Pitfalls for Studying Health Inequalities, by Paulo Teodoro de Matos, Diogo Paiva. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25479

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We just posted another article to our current special issue, on causes of death in Hungary, by Péter Öri and Levente Pakot. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25909

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Proud to announce a new addition to our special issue on causes of death by Matteo Manfredini and Lucia Pozzi: A New Source for the Study of Unexplored Aspects of the Italian Health Transition: The Burial Permits. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25553

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We just posted the first article of our new special issue on causes of death: Individual-Level Data on Causes of Death in Madrid From 1905 to 1927 by Diego Ramiro Fariñas, Stanislao Mazzoni, Mélanie Bourguignon, Begoña Villuendas Hijosa and Michel Oris. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25002
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We just posted the first article of our new special issue on causes of death: Individual-Level Data on Causes of Death in Madrid From 1905 to 1927 by Diego Ramiro Fariñas, Stanislao Mazzoni, Mélanie Bourguignon, Begoña Villuendas Hijosa and Michel Oris. doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25002

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We are happy to announce a paper by Lars Holden, Svetlana Boudko and Bjørn Fjellvoll on the Norwegian Historical Population Register (1801–present): doi.org/10.52024/hlcs25461

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Happy to share a new paper “Reproductive Timing and Family Structure as Determinants of Early-Life Mortality in Historical Poland” by Linda Koníková, Patryk Pankowski, Miroslav Králík and Grażyna Liczbińska: doi.org/10.52024/hlcs24844

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Proud to announce an article by Javier Luis Álvarez Santos: From Islands to Oceans. Gendered Strategies of Kinship and Patrimony Among Portuguese Women in Canary Islands (16th–17th Centuries). doi.org/10.52024/hlcs26296

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We are proud to announce a new article: POPP. An OCR-Generated Database of the Population Censuses of Paris (1926–1936) by Sandra Brée, Victory Gay, Marion Leturcq, Yoann Doignon and Baptiste Coulmont - doi.org/10.52024/hlcs18627

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Historical Life Course Studies journal retweeted
We just posted an editorial by co-editors Joana Maria Pujadas-Mora and Paul Puschmann and associate editors Wieke Metzlar and Gabriel Brea-Martinez: doi.org/10.52024/hlcs26406.

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We just published the paper ‘Overview and Comparison of 84 Databases with Historical Population Longitudinal Micro Data’ by Kees Mandemakers: doi.org/10.52024/hlcs21660

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Happy to announce the publication of the introduction article ‘What was Killing Babies in 19th-Century Europe? Categorising Their Deaths Using ICD10h’ by Alice Reid and Angélique Janssens to the special issue about infant mortality: doi.org/10.51964/hlcs23751

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We are very pleased to announce our latest special issue ‘Histories of Health’, dedicated to Professor Angélique Janssens on the occasion of her retirement: hlcs.nl/specialissue7

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We are very pleased to announce the publication of “A Comparison of Rule-based and Supervised Machine Learning Approaches for Record Linkage of Italian Historical Data” by Saverio Minardi, Suzanne Greco and Nicola Barban: doi.org/10.51964/hlcs18990.

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