Jennifer Beam Dowd

Jennifer Beam Dowd

United States
American social scientist; Professor of Demography and Population Health and deputy director of the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science at the University of Oxford; founding member of public-health collective Dear Pandemic.

Why Jennifer Beam Dowd is on this page

Jennifer Beam Dowd is an American social scientist whose research centres on the social determinants of health and the relationship between infection and immune function. She is Professor of Demography and Population Health at the University of Oxford and deputy director of its Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science. During the COVID-19 pandemic she became a founding member of Dear Pandemic, an all-woman public-health collective known as the ‘Nerdy Girls’ that worked to debunk misinformation across mainstream and social media.

Dowd studied political science and Spanish at Washington and Lee University, graduating in 1996, and spent a year as a Henry Luce Scholar at the Rural Development Foundation in East Java, working on agricultural and reproductive health. She completed her graduate work in Demography and Economics at Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs and Office of Population Research, and in 2006 moved to the University of Michigan as a Robert Wood Johnson Health Scholar.

She began her independent scientific career at the City University of New York — first at CUNY School of Public Health and the CUNY Institute for Demographic Research — and relocated to the United Kingdom in 2016 as associate professor at King’s College London, before moving to Oxford in 2019. She has drawn extensively on the TwinsUK cohort and the NYC Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, and in 2020 was awarded a European Research Council Consolidator Grant to investigate stalled life expectancy in high-income countries.

Sources

  • Wikipedia — Jennifer Dowd.
  • Wikidata Q57107320.

Heritage notes

Family root: diaspora-unconfirmed.

The directory threads Jennifer Beam Dowd back to the Ó Dubhda clan story via the surname-variants reality — the same family carried these spellings as it scattered. See the septs and the diaspora for the wider pattern, or the Clan DNA Project for the genetic connections being mapped now.