Staff Profiles
Dr Clare Hickman
Reader in Environmental and Medical History
- Email: clare.hickman@ncl.ac.uk
- Personal Website:
I work at the intersection of environmental and medical history. My research takes a historical approach to human-environment relationships in relation to ideas of health and wellbeing. As a scholar with a background in science communication as well as history, I often investigate current issues through the lens of the past and I believe historic research on landscape and human health is becoming increasingly relevant as we face the biodiversity and climate crises. I am also take a sensory approach in my research both in relation to the embodied experiences of plants and landscapes, and multispecies intersections and health.
Areas of expertise include the design and use of nineteenth and twentieth-century English hospital and asylum gardens; eighteenth century doctors and their gardens; concepts of air, health and access to the countryside; and open air sanatoria and multispecies relationships. By examining the creation and use of green and blue spaces in relation to changing medical concepts, my research crosses the disciplinary boundaries of medical history, environmental history and history of science.
Before arriving at 缅北禁地 in 2019, I was a Senior Lecturer in History at the University Chester, a Wellcome Fellow in Medical History & Humanities at King’s College London (2013-15) and a Research Fellow on the Leverhulme funded Historic Parks & Gardens of England project at the University of Bristol (2007-2012). I have also worked as a museum assistant, writer and editor for Usborne publishing and as a Research Facilitator for Oxford University.
My research bridges the intersection of environmental and medical humanities. I am interested in supervising any PhD projects or other undergraduate or postgraduate research projects that investigate the modern history of medical and/or environmental history, landscape design, multispecies histories, or that use history to understand current issues such as the climate crisis, pollution, biodiversity loss and urban/rural inequalities.
Recent funded projets include:
I was Co-I on the AHRC funded (2021-2024) led by Professor Glen O'Hara at Oxford Brookes University. I led the strand on pathways for meaning, health and wellbeing which investigated how rights of way are central in facilitating activities for physical and mental health such as walking, and the ability to connect humans to nature for wellbeing.
I was also a Co-I on the large cross-disciplinary project funded by NERC, ‘Connected treescapes: a portfolio approach for delivering multiple public benefits from UK treescapes in the rural-urban continuum’ (2021-2024) led by Professor Piran White of York University.
I recently led two networks. The first funded by the Wellcome Trust, (2020-2023) was organised with colleagues at Liverpool, Cardiff and Bristol Universities. Our ambition was to lead research in this field from an historically-informed humanities standpoint and to develop future research collaborations to consider the rich nature of human and more-than-human interrelationships and their impact on health and wellbeing.
The second was the AHRC ‘Unlocking Landscapes Network: History, Culture and Sensory Diversity in Landscape Use and Decision Making’ (2020-2023) which was funded under the Research Networking Highlight Notice for Changing Landscapes: ‘Towards a new Decision Making Framework for UK Landscapes and Land Assets. By bringing together academics, practitioners, artists and policy makers, ‘Unlocking Landscapes’ seeks to bridge traditional policy silos. This was a collaborative network with Dr Sarah Bell of the University of Exeter, and included colleagues from the Universities of Exeter and Bristol, Historic England, the National Trust, the Sensory Trust, Sense, and Natural Inclusion. You can read more about our findings here:
Alongside these I have also been a core collaborator on the led by Victoria Bates, University of Bristol.
I am interested in supervising any PhD projects or other postgraduate research projects that investigate the modern history of medical and/or environmental history, landscape design, architecture for health or that use history to understand current issues such as the climate crisis, air pollution and urban life in a post-pandemic world.
I am module leader for the following courses:
- HIS1101: Sources and Methods
- HIS2321: Destroying Nature: Disasters, Diseases and Environmental Injustice
- HIS3349: Healthy Spaces for Healthy Bodies: Medicine, Humans, Places
- HIS8173: In Sickness and in Health: Historical perspectives on patients, diseases and healthcare workers
And I am part of the teaching teams on the following modules:
- HCA1007: Stuff: Living in a Material World
- HIS3020: Writing History
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Articles
- Bates V, Hickman C. . British Journal of Healthcare Management 2026, 32(4), 1-4.
- Hickman, C, Bell, S. . Plant Perspectives 2024, 1(1). In Press.
- Hickman C. . Modernist Cultures 2024, 19(1), 8-32.
- Breen T, Flint A, Hickman C, O'Hara G. . Journal of Transport History 2023, 44(2), 276-307.
- Bell S, Hickman C, Houghton F. . Wellbeing, Space and Society 2023, 4, 100126.
- Allitt M, Arnold-Forster A, Bates V, Barratt H, Fleetwood-Smith R, Hickman C. . Medical Humanities 2023, 49(4), 641-649.
- Hickman C. . Medical Humanities 2022, 48(1), 104-113.
- Bates V, Hickman C, Manchester H, Prior J, Singer S. . Health and Place 2020, 61, 102271.
- Preston R, Hickman C. . Women's History 2019, 2(13).
- Hickman C. . British Journal for the History of Science 2019, 52(4), 543-567.
- Hickman Clare. . Environment and History 2018, 24(1), 59-80.
- Hickman C. . Post-Medieval Archaeology 2014, 48(1), 229-247.
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Authored Books
- Flint A, Hickman C. . Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2026.
- Hickman C. . New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2021.
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Book Chapters
- Flint A, Hickman C. Moving research: Walking and other mobile methods. In: Abrams, A; Bates, V; Gomez, R, ed. The Routledge Handbook of Health and Environmental Humanities. Routledge, 2026. In Preparation.
- Hickman C. . In: Konrad, T, ed. Imagining Air: Cultural Axiology and the Politics of Invisibility. Exeter: University of Exeter, 2023, pp.190-199.
- Hickman C, O'Hara G. . In: Svensson, D; Saltzman, K; Sörlin, S, ed. Pathways: Exploring the Routes of a Movement Heritage. White Horse Press, 2022, pp.56-73.
- Hickman C. . In: Malcolm D; Mitchell E, ed. Gardens and Green Spaces in the West Midlands since 1700. Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, 2018, pp.160-85.
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Editorial
- Allitt M, Arnold-Forster A, Barratt H, Bates V, Fleetwood-Smith R, Hickman C. . The Senses and Society 2024, 19(3), 275-284.
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Report