Contextualizing the Modern Era of Vaccination

Time and date

Friday 6 March 2026, 17:00

Venue

Tsuzuki Theatre, St Anne's College

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Organisers

Convenor: Dr Alberto Giubilini, Medical Humanities Programme Leader at the Uehiro Oxford Institute, University of Oxford

This event is supported by the Oxford Medical Humanities Research Hub and the Uehiro Oxford Institute. 

Description

Speaker: Dr Elena ConisUniversity of California, Berkeley

Hesitancy toward vaccination has been a constant since the practice’s inception at the end of the eighteenth century, yet the mid-twentieth century introduced a complex paradox: the simultaneous rise of vaccine skepticism and the mass acceptance of compulsory childhood immunization. This presentation examines how historical trends in religious, political, and secular objections to vaccination have persisted and mutated over the last 200 years. It will describe the impact of modern social drivers—including shifting gender roles, environmental concerns, economic imperatives, and the valuation of children—on vaccination discourse from the latter-twentieth century to today. This historical contextualization will offer insight into how today’s vaccination resistance and rejection both mirror and depart from the past.