Biography
Maarten Van Dijck (1980) is associate professor in history and theory of the social sciences at the ֱ. His teaching concerns the theories and methodologies used in historical and social research. Maarten is specialised in urban history from long-term perspective. His PhD research dealt with the complex relation between criminalization, urbanization and behavior changes in the urban societies of the Low Countries during the late medieval and early modern period. This thesis claims that urban growth in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries caused the decline of interpersonal violence in Europe. Homcide rates tend to be lower in larger cities, especially after 1500. He also studied the evolution of democracy, civil societies and public spheres in the Low Countries during the late medieval and the early modern period. A third research line deals with the unequal distribution of social resources in the Low Countries during the early modern period.
Maarten's research makes use of concepts from the social sciences to understand long-term historical developments such as the rise of democratic societies. Methodologically, he makes use of digital humanities techniques in his research such as GIS and Social Network Analysis.
Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication
- vandijck@eshcc.eur.nl
More information
Work
- Maarten van Dijck (2024) - -
- Maarten van Dijck (2023) - - Erasmus Student Journal of History Studies (History Collective), 1, 96-101 -
- Maarten van Dijck (2020) - - doi: -
- Maarten van Dijck (2019) - - Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, 132, 319-321 - doi: -
- Maarten van Dijck (2018) - -
- Maarten van Dijck (2017) - - Social Science History, 41 (1), 59-81 - doi: -
- Maarten F. Van Dijck, Bert De Munck & Nikolas Terpstra (2017) - - Social Science History, 41 (Special Issues 1), 1-17 - doi: -
- Maarten van Dijck (2015) -
- Maarten van Dijck (2015) -
- Maarten van Dijck, A Van Hiel & E Raspoet (2015) - - Knack, 114-118
- Maarten van Dijck (2024) - “This thriving republic”. Political institutions and social capital in Dutch Tayouan (1655-1662) (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten van Dijck & Paul van de Laar (2024) - The lure of the waterfront. Mapping economic inequality in Rotterdam from the sixteenth until the nineteenth century (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten van Dijck (2024) - Inclusive institutions? Access to political power in the city of Tainan (Fort Zeelandia) in Dutch Formosa (1655-1662) (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten van Dijck (2022) - Historicidagen 2024 (Participant)
Activity: Organising and contributing to an event › Professional - Maarten Dijck & Jeroen Euwe (2019) - The Wine Business in Rotterdam, 1600-1900 (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten Dijck (2018) - Dutch port cities in the early modern period: local responses to global challenges (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten Dijck (2018) - Women in business in New Amsterdam and Rotterdam during the seventeenth century (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten Dijck (2017) - Economic networks in the seventeenth-century Dutch Atlantic. Social capital in early modern New Amsterdam and Rotterdam (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten Dijck (2016) - Gendered networks in early modern Dutch harbor towns. A comparison of Cape Town, New Amsterdam and Rotterdam during the seventeenth century (Speaker)
Activity: Oral presentation › Academic - Maarten van Dijck (2015) - Familiaal kapitaal. De familiale netwerken van testateurs in het zestiende-eeuwse Mechelen (Examiner)
Activity: Examination › Academic