Mark Harrison
Professor of the History of Medicine
- Faculty of History | Centre for the History of Science, Medicine, and Technology Co-Director of the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities
Professor Harrison is prepared to supervise students with interests that lie in the areas of military and colonial medicine, or more generally in the history of disease, from c.1800 onwards.
Mark Harrison has published widely on the history of disease and medicine, especially in relation to the history of war and imperialism from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries. One of his current interests is the global history of disease and medicine.
Recent publications
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Medical Intelligence In Counter-Insurgency (COIN) And Counter-Terrorist (CT) Operations
Warnes R. and Harrison M., (2024), Security science journal, 5, 103 - 118
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Police Powers and Public Assemblies: Learning from the Clapham Common ‘Vigil’ during the Covid-19 Pandemic
Stott C. et al, (2022), Policing (Oxford), 16, 73 - 94
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If Global Health Is to Be Worthy of the Name, It Needs to Be Designed From the "Bottom Up".
Harrison M., (2017), American journal of public health, 107, 493 - 495
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Britain's medical war: a brief comparison of health and medicine on several fronts.
Harrison M., (2014), Medicine, conflict, and survival, 30, 295 - 300
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Commentary: Cholera in Krishnapur.
Harrison M., (2013), International journal of epidemiology, 42, 382 - 383