4.4 Article

Epidemics in pre-industrial Europe: Impacts of climate change, economic well-being, and population

Journal

ANTHROPOCENE
Volume 37, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ancene.2021.100317

Keywords

Epidemics; Climate change; Economic well-being; Population; Pre-industrial Europe

Funding

  1. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong SAR [18607521]
  2. Education University of Hong Kong [FLASS/DRF/IRS-3, RG79/2019-2020R]

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The study found that climate change significantly affected epidemics, and economic well-being was a crucial factor in determining epidemic dynamics, while the impact of population was relatively minor. This research not only expands our understanding of epidemic mechanisms within the context of human ecology, but also analyzes the role of economy in epidemic outbreaks from a pre-industrial perspective. Lessons from macro-history will offer historical references for current societies facing unprecedented global pandemics.
Academic attention is increasing to examine historical epidemics from the perspective of human ecology. Studies are still inadequate, however, from a macro-scale perspective (quantitative studies in particular) focusing on long-term dynamics of epidemics in pre-industrial Europe. In this study, two pathways in Europe during AD1350-1850, namely, climate plus economy on epidemics and climate plus population on epidemics, were empirically investigated via correlation, multivariate regression analysis, and autoregressive exogenous (ARX) analysis under the framework of human ecology. The statistical findings show that climate change, particularly cooling, affected epidemics significantly. Economic well-being was the important factor that influenced the dynamics of epidemics alongside climate change. Furthermore, if considering climatic impacts, population was also significant, but its effects had limited importance on epidemics compared with economic well-being. This study not only supplements current understanding of epidemic mechanisms within the context of human ecology, but also examines the economy-epidemic link from a pre-industrial perspective to consider the role of economy in epidemic outbreaks in the modern time. Lessons from macro-history will provide historical references to current societies when facing to unprecedented pandemic globally.

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