Image of Julia Mead Knox on a grey background with text: The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize for Research in Demography and Population Health

Entries are open for The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize for Research in Demography and Population Health. The prize commemorates the talented demographer and Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science’s DPhil student Julia Media Knox who tragically passed away in November 2023.

The annual prize aims to encourage scholarship from DPhil students across all departments, divisions and colleges at the University of Oxford. The submitted essay can be on any topic related to demography and population health, broadly defined, but preference will be given to those working in Julia’s research area of genetics/genomics, inclusivity and public health.

Entries are open to DPhil students across the University of Oxford until Monday 30 June and should be submitted via the LCDS Office mailbox. We welcome entrants to nominate either themselves or somebody else. We especially encourage nominations from departmental or college supervisors on behalf of their students. The winner will receive a monetary prize of £1,000, with presentation of the award to take place at an upcoming event.

 

Julia Mead Knox

The prize was established in honour of Julia Mead Knox. Julia was a DPhil student at the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science and Green Templeton College, where she studied the diversity of participants in genomic research and public health.

Julia received her bachelor’s degree in women’s studies from the University of Vermont, and her master’s degree in public health from the University of New England. She loved books and everything about them. Not only a reader, Julia was a born writer with a deep love of and respect for words. She had a treasured collection of pens from many places. She loved the natural world, its beauty, the all of it, and was full of wonder. 

Julia was fiercely intelligent, curious, forthright and with a great wit. Committed to social justice, she was truly kind and thoughtful, compassionate, and always sought the good. She was beloved. Julia tragically died on 7 November 2023, following complications arising from Covid-19.

 

Prize rules

The competition is open annually, from 1 April to 30 June, to anyone currently enrolled in postgraduate research at the University of Oxford. They can be from any department, although they should not have defended their thesis earlier than in the January of the calendar year of the award. The winner’s student status verification will be requested from their academic supervisor or relevant Graduate Studies Team.

Submissions should include a title and an abstract (of up to 250 words), and may be of variable length, but they should be no longer than 10,000 words (inclusive of all tables, figures and references). Typically, the work is a chapter or article from their thesis and may be co-authored, but we require that the entrant is the primary author and that the paper contains an author contribution statement. We will not accept summaries of work or a thesis, but rather only a substantive research article or chapter.

 

Prize donations

If you would like to donate to The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize for Research in Demography and Population Health, you can do so via the fundraising link. If you prefer another payment method, please contact Frances Allen at the University of Oxford’s Development Office who can help process your donation and provide more information about Americans for Oxford if required. 

Your support will help us encourage scholarship in demography and population health across the University of Oxford to leave a lasting legacy for an extremely talented demographer, Julia Mead Knox.

 

The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize 2024

DPhil student Henrik-Alexander Schubert received the Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize 2024 at the inaugural Demographic Science Summit for his paper Too Many Men? Subnational Population Imbalances and Male Childlessness in FinlandThe paper used Finnish data to examine whether gender imbalances are a driver of male childlessness.

On receiving a unique 3D population pyramid of Finland as the award, Henrik-Alexander Schubert said ‘My work studies the regional population structures and how they affect the level of childlessness in the Finnish population. I’m very happy and so surprised to hold the Finnish population in my hands! It’s amazing and this award means a lot to me.’

Naa Adjeley Mensah, scholarship student at the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science, received the finalist award for her research on Navigating Reproductive Goals and Female Agency in Contemporary Cultural Contexts: A Qualitative Study in Peri-Urban Ghana.

Left to right: Jury members Dr Charles Rahal, Professor Ridhi Kashyap and Professor Melinda Mills presenting The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize for Research in Demography and Population Health2024 to University of Oxford DPhil students Henrik-Alexander Schubert and Naa Adjeley Mensah. Credit: Oxford Atelier
Left to right: Jury members Dr Charles Rahal, Professor Ridhi Kashyap and Professor Melinda Mills presenting The Julia Mead Knox Memorial Prize for Research in Demography and Population Health 2024 to University of Oxford DPhil students Henrik-Alexander Schubert and Naa Adjeley Mensah. Credit: Oxford Atelier