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Call for Papers: Aftermath of a Pandemic – Changes in Mortality and Health (09/11/26)

IUSSP and its co-organizes invite papers for a workshop focused on “Aftermath of a Pandemic: Changes in Mortality and Health.” Post-pandemic periods can reveal or amplify existing health inequalities, and the effects of pandemics often extend beyond the acute phase of infection, influencing long-term patterns of mortality and overall population health. This workshop will focus on these poorly understood effects.

The workshop will be hosted by the Oslo Metropolitan University on January 28-29, 2027. Submit a 300-word abstract and include a title, author(s), affiliation(s) via this form by September 11, 2026. Abstracts should be written in English. Attendance to the workshop is limited to 25 participants. Following the workshop, the organizers plan to pursue a special issue of a scientific journal.

This international workshop is organized by the University of Zurich, Oslo Metropolitan University, Roskilde University and the IUSSP Scientific Panel ‘Epidemics and Contagious Diseases: The Legacy of the Past’, with support from COST-Action GREATLEAP (CA22116).

Description:

Pandemics are transformative events that leave lasting marks on population health, mortality, and social structures. While immediate impacts such as short-term infection-related impact on health and mortality are well documented, far less is known about the aftermath of a pandemic in the mid- to long-term both in direct and indirect health and mortality impact.

Mortality and disease patterns may shift and survivors may face lasting physical and psychological consequences, including post-viral syndromes, mental health challenges, or worsening of chronic conditions. Health systems may adapt by placing greater emphasis on surveillance, preventive care, and preparedness for future crises. Demographic effects may also occur, e.g., on life expectancy, birth rates, and age-specific mortality rates. Pandemic mitigation strategies may also have disrupted normal disease patterns and affected population immunity to non-pandemic diseases, with out-of-season epidemics as a consequence. Furthermore, in-utero exposure to a pandemic can have long-term effects on the future health of those born during a pandemic. Post-pandemic periods can reveal or amplify existing health inequalities, and the effects of pandemics often extend beyond the acute phase of infection, influencing long-term patterns of mortality and overall population health.

This workshop will focus on these poorly understood effects. We invite submissions that engage with questions related to the aftermath of a pandemic, such as:

  • How do mortality patterns change, and which causes of death increase or decrease?
  • Are mortality changes influenced by socio-demographic or socio-economic factors?
  • What demographic effects arise following a pandemic?
  • How do pandemics interact with the epidemiology of other infectious diseases?
  • How are healthcare systems impacted or restructured?
  • Is there an increase in hospitalizations for specific diseases?
  • What are the short- and long-term health and mortality effects for individuals born during a pandemic?

If you are interested in participating in this workshop, please submit a 300-word abstract and include a title, author(s), affiliation(s) via the form https://forms.gle/3KxXwCKxMVQUjt8S6

Abstracts should be written in English. Attendance to the workshop is limited to 25 participants. Following the workshop, we plan to pursue a special issue of a scientific journal.

  • Deadline for submissions: 11 September 2026
  • Notification of acceptance: 1 October 2026

For information on Oslo, see https://www.visitoslo.com/en/

Questions? Contact: Katarina Matthes, katarina.matthes@iem.uzh.ch

Scholarship: Limited funding for travel and accommodation is available to members of the COST-Action GREATLEAP. To apply, please briefly explain your need for a scholarship in the form. Priority will be given to early career researchers presenting at the workshop.

Organisers:

  • Katarina Matthes, Institute of Evolutionary Medicine, University of Zurich
  • Svenn-Erik Mamelund, Centre for Research on Pandemics & Society (PANSOC), Oslo Metropolitan University, Oslo, Norway
  • Maarten van Wijhe, Department of People and Technology & PandemiX – Center for Interdisciplinary Study of Pandemic Signatures, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark
  • Harris Bendel, Department of People and Technology, Roskilde University, Roskilde, Denmark

Call for Papers: Special Issue of Studies in Family Planning on Pandemic and Epidemic Impacts on Reproduction, Sexual and Reproductive Health, and Family Dynamics (09/15/26)

Studies in Family Planning is calling for submission for a special issue on “Pandemic and Epidemic Impacts on Reproduction, Sexual and Reproductive Health, and Family Dynamics: Longer-Term Consequences and Cross-Crisis Perspectives,” due September 15, 2026. The special issue aims to broaden the field by situating COVID-19 within a broader landscape of pandemics and epidemics with demonstrable implications for reproduction, family life, and SRHR. In addition to longer-term analyses of the COVID-19 pandemic, we invite research that explicitly engages with other health crises—such as the Zika epidemic or the mpox (monkeypox) outbreak—that have had well-documented sexual and reproductive health consequences. Please submit to wiley.atyponrex.com/journal/SIFP. 

We welcome studies employing diverse methodological approaches, including quantitative analyses using administrative or survey data, mixed-methods research, comparative and cross-national designs, and innovative uses of new data. Research may focus on fertility intentions and realizations, partnership
formation and dissolution, contraceptive behaviors, abortion access and uptake, relationship dynamics, maternal and reproductive health risks, household time use and labor division, parenting and childcare arrangements, or related reproductive, family, and SRHR processes in the context of pandemic or
epidemic disruptions.

Authors should adhere to the journal’s author guidelines when preparing manuscripts. We particularly value clear, concise writing and encourage authors to remain at or below 8,000 words. Submissions should include robust empirical evidence or substantial theoretical contributions, situate findings within relevant literatures, and clearly articulate implications for scholarship and policy. Tag your paper as part of this special issue and indicate this in your cover letter. Please contact rfriedman[@]popcouncil.org with any questions.

*New* Call for LOIs: Capland Foundation for Early Childhood (09/30/2026)

The Caplan Foundation for Early Childhood seeks LOIs by September 30, 2026. The Caplan Foundation for Early Childhood is an incubator of promising research and development projects that appear likely to improve the welfare of young children, from infancy through 7 years, in the United States. Welfare is broadly defined to include physical and mental health, safety, nutrition, education, play, familial support, acculturation, societal integration and childcare.

Grants are only made if a successful project outcome will likely be of significant interest to other professionals, within the grantee’s field of endeavor, and would have a direct benefit and potential national application. The Foundation’s goal is to provide seed money to implement those imaginative proposals that exhibit the greatest chance of improving the lives of young children, on a national scale. Because of the Foundation’s limited funding capability, it seeks to maximize a grant’s potential impact.

Call for Nominations: 2027 IUSSP Early Career Awards (11/01/26)

The IUSSP Early Career Awards aim to honour outstanding contributions to the broad field of population studies by early career scholars in different world regions and boost the global visibility of their achievements. Nominate colleagues by November 1, 2026. Nominees must have received their PhD within the last seven years and be IUSSP members. For more information about the Award and the nomination procedure and to fill out the application form, please go to IUSSP Early Career Awards.

The Awards are bestowed in a unique collaboration with the regional population associations: Union for African Population Studies (UAPS), the Asian Population Association (APA), the European Association for Population Studies (EAPS), the Latin American Population Association (ALAP), and the Population Association of America (PAA).

Who is eligible?

  • Candidates up to 7 years post-PhD (after 1 November 2019, with extensions possible to account for career interruptions such as parental leave…)
  • Must be an IUSSP member (listed in IUSSP membership directory)

Nomination requirements:

  • 5 IUSSP member supporters, from more than one country, at least 3 from candidate’s region
  • Self-nominations allowed

Call for Contributions to Special Collection on Kinship Demography (12/15/26)

Demographic Research invites contributions to the Special Collection on Kinship Demography: Structures, Dynamics, and Inequalities in the journal Demographic Research, organized by Ashton Verdery, Bussarawan Puk Teerawichitchainan, Diego Alburez-Gutierrez, and Elena Maria Pojman. Submissions to this collection are possible from June 15, 2026 until December 15, 2026. Please find more information on the collection’s description and goals as well as on submission procedures here.