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The Urban Penalty

Managou, Angeliki LU (2014) EKHM51 20141
Department of Economic History
Abstract
The stimulus for this essay was given by the fact that life expectancy in certain countries started to increase long before the development of modern medicine. Having as a principal axis the so called „urban penalty‟, the analysis was limited in two port cities; Glasgow and Malmö. Data on crude, age-specific and disease-specific mortality were used over the period 1800-1914 in order to identify the mortality development of these two cities. In addition, data on various investments were used for the two cities mentioned above. All these combined, tried to answer a principal question concerning whether the reduction in mortality before the advancement of modern medicine was associated with investments. If the answer to this question was... (More)
The stimulus for this essay was given by the fact that life expectancy in certain countries started to increase long before the development of modern medicine. Having as a principal axis the so called „urban penalty‟, the analysis was limited in two port cities; Glasgow and Malmö. Data on crude, age-specific and disease-specific mortality were used over the period 1800-1914 in order to identify the mortality development of these two cities. In addition, data on various investments were used for the two cities mentioned above. All these combined, tried to answer a principal question concerning whether the reduction in mortality before the advancement of modern medicine was associated with investments. If the answer to this question was positive, two secondary questions were raised concerning firstly, which investment proved to be more effective, and secondly, if there was an investment that could be described as a „common ingredient of success‟. The analysis of these two cities revealed that undoubtedly their mortality decline over the second half of the 19th century was driven by investments; however, it did not manage to reveal any „winner‟ in terms of efficiency, or any common „ingredient of success‟. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Managou, Angeliki LU
supervisor
organization
course
EKHM51 20141
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
Urban mortality, investments, mortality decline
language
English
id
4467459
date added to LUP
2014-06-26 10:49:07
date last changed
2014-06-26 10:49:07
@misc{4467459,
  abstract     = {{The stimulus for this essay was given by the fact that life expectancy in certain countries started to increase long before the development of modern medicine. Having as a principal axis the so called „urban penalty‟, the analysis was limited in two port cities; Glasgow and Malmö. Data on crude, age-specific and disease-specific mortality were used over the period 1800-1914 in order to identify the mortality development of these two cities. In addition, data on various investments were used for the two cities mentioned above. All these combined, tried to answer a principal question concerning whether the reduction in mortality before the advancement of modern medicine was associated with investments. If the answer to this question was positive, two secondary questions were raised concerning firstly, which investment proved to be more effective, and secondly, if there was an investment that could be described as a „common ingredient of success‟. The analysis of these two cities revealed that undoubtedly their mortality decline over the second half of the 19th century was driven by investments; however, it did not manage to reveal any „winner‟ in terms of efficiency, or any common „ingredient of success‟.}},
  author       = {{Managou, Angeliki}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{The Urban Penalty}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}