Roman childhood: a date for your diary

Growing up in the Roman Empire: A multidisciplinary approach to Roman childhood An evening event held in the beautiful World Heritage site of Durham Castle. Two talks by leading experts in Roman childhood bring together a wide range of archaeological, skeletal and historical evidence for understanding the experience, perceptions and care of children in the […]

Forager Child Studies

(a message from the Forager Child Studies Group): We would like to inform you of a new and exciting research project coming out of the forager child studies research team (foragerchildstudies.wordpress.com). We are looking to conduct a cross-cultural analysis of the ecological factors that influence forager children’s participation in play and work activities across the […]

Snap-shots of research: Personhood of perinates in the past — The Bioarchaeology of Childhood

This month we are featuring Dr Tracy Betsinger who is an Assistant Professor from SUNY Oneonta. Prior to joining SUNY Oneonta, Dr. Betsinger held a post-doctoral research position with the Global History of Health Project at Ohio State University. Tracy working on a perinate from the post-medieval Drawsko collection, Poland (while pregnant with a fetal […] […]

New resource on the bioarchaeology of childhood available now

We have a just published a large annotated bibliography on the Bioarchaeology of Childhood with Oxford Bibliographies online. This will be useful to all bioarchaeology and human osteoarchaeology students, and academics for research and teaching. Please access this here Halcrow, Siân E.; Ward, Stacey M. “Bioarchaeology of Childhood.” In Oxford Bibliographies in Childhood Studies. Ed. […] […]

Call for Proposals: New Book Series

SSCIP member Professor David Lancy invites proposals for a new book series, Palgrave Studies in the Anthropology of Children and Youth The goal of this series is to advance a robust new  sub-field in anthropology that treats childhood and adolescence as distinct and worthy of scholarship. The series aims to break down historic barriers that […]

How teeth can tell the story of your secret stresses — The Bioarchaeology of Childhood | Sian Halcrow

As the most vulnerable members of any population, infants and children are dependent on others for their survival. They are the most represented groups in cemetery samples, simply because surviving past the first year of life is no mean feat when you are so fragile. Providing you survive childhood, the stresses you experience during that […] […]

Take a sneak peek at our new resource on the “Bioarchaeology of Childhood” coming soon to Oxford Bibliographies in Childhood Studies — The Bioarchaeology of Childhood | Sian Halcrow

We have a forthcoming large annotated bibliography on the Bioarchaeology of Childhood coming soon to Oxford Bibliographies online. Take a sneak peek here. This will be useful to all bioarchaeology and human osteoarchaeology students, and academics for research and teaching. Please contact me here to request a personal copy. Halcrow, Siân E.; Ward, Stacey M. […] […]