Death at the Opposite Ends of the Eurasian Continent: Mortality Trends in Taiwan and the Netherlands 1850-1945
edited by Theo Engelen, John R. Shephard and Yang Wen-shan
Amsterdam University Press, 2011 eISBN: 978-90-485-1468-7 | Paper: 978-90-5260-379-7 Library of Congress Classification HB1435.D43 2011
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
This volume examines contrasting historical demographics in Western Europe and Asia, taking the Netherlands and Taiwan as representative populations. Both countries have witnessed steady, continuous improvements in public health, disease prevention, and medical care. The contributors compare the impact of disease and mortality on the lives of individuals and families under very different cultural and social conditions. Death at the Opposite Ends of the Eurasian Continent analyzes a variety of factors, including maternal and infant mortality, as well as the accuracy of Taiwan’s censuses and death reporting.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Theo Engelen is professor of historical demography at Radboud University Nijmegen. John R. Shepherd is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Virginia. Wen-Shan Yang is program director in historical demography at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Death at the opposite ends of the Eurasian continent: Mortality trends in Taiwan and the Netherlands, 1850–1945
Theo Engelen and John R. Shepherd
1. Trends in mortality and the evolution of the cause-of-death pattern in the Netherlands: 1850–2000
Frans van Poppel
2. Trends in mortality and causes of death in Japanese colonial period Taiwan
John R. Shepherd
3. Mortality in the Netherlands: general development and regional differences
Theo Engelena nd Marloes Schoonheim
4. Regional and ethnic variation in mortality in Japanese colonial period Taiwan
John R. Shepherd
5. An outline of socio-medical care in the Netherlands, 19th and early 20th centuries
Willibrord Rutten
6. An overview of public health development in Japan-ruled Taiwan
Liu Shi-yung
7. The demographic history of smallpox in the Netherlands, 18th–19th centuries
Willibrord Rutten
8. Anti-malaria policy in colonial Taiwan
Ku Ya-wen
9. Maternal mortality in Taiwan and the Netherlands, 1850–1945
John R. Shepherd, Marloes Schoonheim, Chang Tian-yun and Jak Kok
10. Maternal depletion and infant mortality
Theo Engelen and Arthur P. Wolf
11. The massacre of the innocents: Infant mortality in Lugang (Taiwan) and Nijmegen (the Netherlands)
Theo Engelen and Hsieh Ying-hui
12. Illegitimacy, adoption, and mortality among girls in Penghu, 1906–1945
Yu Guang-hong, Huang Yu-lin and Chuu Ling-in
13. How reliable is Taiwan's colonial period demographic data? An empirical study using demographic indirect estimation techniques
Li Chun-hao, Yang Wen-shan and Chuang Ying-chang
Death at the Opposite Ends of the Eurasian Continent: Mortality Trends in Taiwan and the Netherlands 1850-1945
edited by Theo Engelen, John R. Shephard and Yang Wen-shan
Amsterdam University Press, 2011 eISBN: 978-90-485-1468-7 Paper: 978-90-5260-379-7
This volume examines contrasting historical demographics in Western Europe and Asia, taking the Netherlands and Taiwan as representative populations. Both countries have witnessed steady, continuous improvements in public health, disease prevention, and medical care. The contributors compare the impact of disease and mortality on the lives of individuals and families under very different cultural and social conditions. Death at the Opposite Ends of the Eurasian Continent analyzes a variety of factors, including maternal and infant mortality, as well as the accuracy of Taiwan’s censuses and death reporting.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Theo Engelen is professor of historical demography at Radboud University Nijmegen. John R. Shepherd is associate professor of anthropology at the University of Virginia. Wen-Shan Yang is program director in historical demography at the Academia Sinica in Taiwan.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction: Death at the opposite ends of the Eurasian continent: Mortality trends in Taiwan and the Netherlands, 1850–1945
Theo Engelen and John R. Shepherd
1. Trends in mortality and the evolution of the cause-of-death pattern in the Netherlands: 1850–2000
Frans van Poppel
2. Trends in mortality and causes of death in Japanese colonial period Taiwan
John R. Shepherd
3. Mortality in the Netherlands: general development and regional differences
Theo Engelena nd Marloes Schoonheim
4. Regional and ethnic variation in mortality in Japanese colonial period Taiwan
John R. Shepherd
5. An outline of socio-medical care in the Netherlands, 19th and early 20th centuries
Willibrord Rutten
6. An overview of public health development in Japan-ruled Taiwan
Liu Shi-yung
7. The demographic history of smallpox in the Netherlands, 18th–19th centuries
Willibrord Rutten
8. Anti-malaria policy in colonial Taiwan
Ku Ya-wen
9. Maternal mortality in Taiwan and the Netherlands, 1850–1945
John R. Shepherd, Marloes Schoonheim, Chang Tian-yun and Jak Kok
10. Maternal depletion and infant mortality
Theo Engelen and Arthur P. Wolf
11. The massacre of the innocents: Infant mortality in Lugang (Taiwan) and Nijmegen (the Netherlands)
Theo Engelen and Hsieh Ying-hui
12. Illegitimacy, adoption, and mortality among girls in Penghu, 1906–1945
Yu Guang-hong, Huang Yu-lin and Chuu Ling-in
13. How reliable is Taiwan's colonial period demographic data? An empirical study using demographic indirect estimation techniques
Li Chun-hao, Yang Wen-shan and Chuang Ying-chang