Professor Mark Jackson
Professor
History
My research interests focus on the social and cultural history of modern science and medicine and the history of crime and justice since the seventeenth century. I have particular interests in the history of allergic diseases, such as asthma, hayfever and eczema, the history of stress, and the history of life transitions including the midlife crisis and retirement. Drawing on my degree in immunology and qualification as a doctor, I have always had a strong interest in developing and expanding the undergraduate medical curriculum and in creating opportunities for wider public engagement activities in radio, television, newspapers and schools. I have worked as Senor Academic Adviser (Medical Humanities) at the Wellcome Trust and have served as Chair of the Wellcome Trust History of Medicine Funding Committee (2003-8) and the Trust's Research Resources Funding Committee (2008-13). I chaired the History sub-panel for REF 2021 and was a member of the sub-panel for REF 2014. I am the founding Director of the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health, co-director of the WHO Collaborating Centre on Culture and Health and have served as Chair of the WHO Euro Expert Group on the Cultural Contexts of Health and as a member of the WHO European Advisory Committee on Health Research.
Biography:
I am Professor of the History of Medicine and Founding Director of both the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health and the WHO Collaborating Centre on Culture and Health. But my career has been checkered. Having gained clinical experience as an auxillary nurse, I studied medicine at St. Thomas's Hospital Medical School. After qualifying in immunology in 1982 and medicine in 1985, and a short career in medical practice, I pursued doctoral research on the social history of infanticide and post-doctoral work on the history of `feeble-mindedness' at the Universities of Leeds and Manchester. My research interests focus broadly on the social and cultural history of modern science and medicine and the history of crime and justice since the seventeenth century. I have particular interests in the history of allergic diseases, such as asthma, hayfever and eczema, the history of stress, and the history of life transitions including the midlife crisis and retirement. My publications include New-Born Child Murder: Women, Illegitimacy and the Courts in Eighteenth-Century England (1996), The Borderland of Imbecility: Medicine, Society and the Fabrication of the Feeble Mind in Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain (2000), Allergy: The History of a Modern Malady (2006), Asthma: The Biography (2009), Oxford Handbook of the History of Medicine (Ed., 2011), The Age of Stress: Science and the Search for Stability (2013), The History of Medicine: A Beginner's Guide (2014, shortlisted for the Dingle Prize and available as an audiobook), The Routledge History of Disease (2017), Stress in Post-War Britain, 1945 - 85 (2015), Balancing the Self: Medicine, Politics and the Regulation of Health in the Twentieth Century (edited with Martin Moore, 2020), Broken Dreams: An Intimate History of the Midlife Crisis (2021), and Infanticide and Baby-Farming in Victorian England: The Torquay Murder of 1865 (2025), as well as numerous other edited volumes, book chapters and journal articles. I am currently writing a book on popular and political opposition to the cost of the Duke of Wellington's funeral in 1852.
I have a strong interest in developing and expanding the undergraduate medical curriculum and in creating opportunities for wider public engagement activities in radio, television, newspapers and schools. I have worked as Senor Academic Adviser (Medical Humanities) at the Wellcome Trust and have served as Chair of the Wellcome Trust History of Medicine Funding Committee (2003-8), and the Trust's Research Resources Funding Committee (2008-13). I chaired the History sub-panel for REF 2021 and was a member of the sub-panel for REF 2014. I founded the WHO Collaborating Centre on Culture and Health and have served as a member of the WHO European Advisory Committee on Health Research and Chair of the WHO Euro Expert Group on the Cultural Contexts of Health.
Grant income:
Since 1991, I have been awarded over £13 million in research grants, including £8.7 million for the interdisciplinary Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health. Major grants include:
2020 £1.429 million, PI, Wellcome Trust award for the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health; £220k in matched funding from the University of Exeter
2018 £94,998, Co-I, `Social-Cultural Approaches to Microbial Life in an Era of Antimicrobial Resistance’, ESRC, with Katie Ledingham
2018 £10,116, Co-I, `Understanding and building resilience to early life trauma in Belarus and Ukraine’, MRC Confidence in Global Mental Health, with Felicity Thomas
2017 £4.1 million, PI, Wellcome Trust Centre award for the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health
2017 £3 million, PI, University of Exeter, matched funding to establish the Wellcome Centre
2017 £172,626, Co-I, `Care under Pressure’, National Institute for Health Research, with Karen Mattick and Daniele Carrieri
2016 £200,000, PI, 50% from the University of Exeter; 50% from the Wellcome Trust to establish the WHO Collaborating Centre on Culture and Health
2013 £850,000, PI, 5-year Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator Award, `Lifestyle, health and disease: changing concepts of balance in modern medicine’
2009 £20,347, PI, `Masculinity and health in post-war Britain’, Wellcome Trust
2008 £803,140, PI, 5-year Wellcome Trust Strategic Award 2008-13
2007 £454,118, PI, Wellcome Trust Programme Grant, `Contested knowledge: the history of stress research in the twentieth century’
2003 £705,000, PI, 5-year Wellcome Trust Strategic Award, `Health, Medicine and Environment, 1850-2000'
2001 £34,000, Co-I, Wellcome Trust grant for the Centre for Medical History
1998 £193,000, PI, 6-year Wellcome Trust University Award, `Research, policy and practice: a history of allergy and asthma in the twentieth century', Exeter
1992 £60,000, PI, 3-year Wellcome Trust Fellowship, University of Manchester
1987 British Academy PhD studentship, 1987
Editorial and professional positions - past and present:
Chair, History sub-panel, REF 2021
Member of the History sub-panel, REF2014
Chair, WHO Expert Advisory Group on Cultural Contexts of Health, 2014-20
Member, WHO European Advisory Group on Health Research, 2014-18
Chair, steering group for Exeter’s successful bid to become a UNESCO Creative City of Literature in 2019
External Assessor, Hong Kong University, Mock RAE, 2024
External Assessor, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Mock RAE, 2024
REF Advisor, University of Hertfordshire, 2014-17, 2023-
REF Advisor, Liverpool Hope University, 2014-17, 2023-5
AHRC COVID-19 Expert Peer Review Group, 2020-2022
Senior Academic Adviser, Wellcome Trust, 2013-16
Chair of the Wellcome Trust History of Medicine Grants Panel, 2003-8 (Member from 2000-3)
Member of the Wellcome Trust Research Resources in Medical History Panel, 2008-13 (Member from 2003)
Chair of the Wellcome Trust Medical Humanities Strategic Award Funding Committee, 2008-9
Member of the Wellcome Trust Public Engagement Strategic Advisory Group, 2002-8
Member of the Wellcome Trust Medical Humanities Strategy Group, 2004-7
Specialist Advisor, Panels 60 and 62, RAE 2008
Member of College of Reviewers, Canada Research Chairs Program, 2008-10
Member of the Peninsula Medical School Board
Accreditation panel member, Museums, Libraries and Archives Council, 2005-7
Editorial board member for Science and Culture in the Nineteenth Century, (Pickering & Chatto)
Reviews Editor, Social History of Medicine, 1997-2001
Member of Editorial Advisory Board, Medical Humanities.
Editor, Arts and Humanities section of Medical Education, (2002-3)
External Examiner, MPhil in Health, Medicine and Society, University of Cambridge, 2024-
External Examiner, Newcastle University, MA in medical history, 2011-
External Examiner, Open University, History of Medicine, 2008-
External examiner, UCL Intercalated BSc in the History of Medicine, 2002-6
External examiner, University of Birmingham, Intercalated B.Med.Sc.(History of Medicine), 2001-4
External examiner, University of Cardiff, MA in History, 2003-6
Member of the Programme Committee of the Wellcome Trust Centre History of Twentieth-Century Medicine Group, 2001-5
Chairman of the National Action Group for the integration of medical history into the medical curriculum, 2000-5
Research supervision:
I supervise projects in the following areas:
1. The history of lifestyle, health and disease
2. The history of crime
3. Histories of modern medicine including allergies, asthma and stress
4. History of mental health
Qualifications:
BSc Immunology, 1st class
MB BS, London, with Honours in Pathology
PhD, Leeds
Prizes and scholarships:
2018 Royal Society Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Medal and Lecture for contributions to the history of medicine
2017 Fellow of the Royal Historical Society
2006 Sydenham Medal, Society of Apothecaries
2001 Visiting Scholar, Institute for Medical Humanities, UTMB, Texas.
1987 British Academy, PhD studentship
1985 Nuffield Provincial Hospital Trust essay prize
1984 Second Charles Box Prize in Medicine, St. Thomas’s Hospital, London
1984 Medical Defence Union bursary for study in the Department of Pathology, UTMB, Texas
1982 Grainger BSc Prize in Immunology, St. Thomas’s Hospital, London
1981 Peacock Scholarship - top second-year pre-clinical student
1981 Grainger Basic Medical Science Prizes in Anatomy, Biochemistry, Pharmacology and Physiology
1980 Tite Scholarship - top first-year pre-clinical student
1979 Open Scholarship, St. Thomas's Hospital, London