Katherine Jane Humphries, CBE FBA (born 9 November 1948),[1] is a Fellow of All Souls College, University of Oxford with the Title of Distinction of professor of economic history. Her research interest has been in economic growth and development and the industrial revolution. She is the former president of the Economic History Society[2][3] and the current vice-president of the Economic History Association.[4]
Jane Humphries CBE | |
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Born | Katherine Jane Humphries 9 November 1948 |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | Cornell University |
Thesis | The role of the manufacturing sector in economic development (1973) |
Academic work | |
Institutions | All Souls College, University of Oxford |
Main interests | Economic history |
Website | http://www.history.ox.ac.uk/people/professor-jane-humphries |
Humphries gained her economics degree from Newnham College, Cambridge, in 1970; she went on to Cornell University to do both her masters and then her doctorate which she completed in 1973.[5][2][6]
Her professional life began at University of Massachusetts Amherst, first as an assistant professor (1973–1979), then as an associate professor (1979–1980). She was lecturer at the University of Cambridge and later a fellow of Newnham College (1980–1995). In 1993, during her period at Newnham College, Humphries was a visiting fellow at the Centre for Population and Development within Harvard University's School of Public Health.
Humphries returned to Newnham College as reader in economics and economic history in 1995, she then took up a post as reader in economic history and fellow at All Souls College, University of Oxford in 1998. In 2004, she was awarded a Title of Distinction as professor of economic history at All Souls.[2] In 2012, Humphries was elected a Fellow of the British Academy (FBA), the United Kingdom's national academy for the humanities and social sciences.[7] After retiring from Oxford, she became Centennial Professor of Economic History at the London School of Economics in 2018.[8]
Humphries has sat on the editorial boards of a number of peer-reviewed journals.[2] She is currently on the editorial boards of Gender, Work and Organization,[9] and Feminist Economics.[10]
On 29 January 2016 Humphries received an honorary doctorate from the Faculty of Educational Sciences at Uppsala University, Sweden.[11] In 2018 she received an honorary doctorate from Sheffield University.[8] Her 2019 article 'Unreal Wages? Real Income and Economic Growth in England, 1260-1850', co-authored with Jacob Weisdorf, was awarded the 2019 Royal Economic Society Prize.[12]
data sheet (b. 11-9-48)