JIH

The Journal of Interdisciplinary History celebrates its fiftieth anniversary

The Journal of Interdisciplinary History celebrates publishing substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews for half a century

This year, the Journal of Interdisciplinary History (JIH) celebrates fifty years of publication. One of the MIT Press’s inaugural journals, JIH has been publishing substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews that relate historical study to other disciplines such as economics and demography for half a century.

Recently, we sat down with Robert I. Rotberg (founding co-editor of the journal and founding director of the Harvard Kennedy School’s Program on Intrastate Conflict) and Ed Freedman (managing editor), to discuss the journal’s impact on the field of history and their approach to the fiftieth volume. Read the interview.

We planned an event to commemorate the anniversary this fall, but have had to postpone it until spring 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Since we can’t gather to celebrate JIH yet, we are making 11 special semicentennial articles—published throughout the fiftieth volume—freely available until August 31, 2020:

The Journal of Interdisciplinary History features substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews that combine the study of history, spanning all geographical areas and periods, with other scholarly disciplines. The JIH features articles that incorporate or engage:

  • Archaeology/Material Culture
  • Art
  • Big Data
  • Biography/Psycho-biography
  • Biology
  • Climate/Environment
  • Economics
  • Geoscience/GPS
  • Opera/Theater
  • Population/Demography
  • Quantitative Methods
  • Technology
  • Urban Studies

The journal encourages contributions that demonstrate how methodological connections with other disciplines, and the methodologies of other disciplines, can throw light on the past.


Learn more about the Journal of Interdisciplinary History