New Researchers Conference

Research degree students and independent scholars are warmly encouraged to share their work at our annual New Researchers Conference.

Student and Research Prizes

Are you a student working on maritime history? Apply for our Undergraduate and Postgraduate prizes.

Call for abstracts - book about the History of Port Cities

Posted: Friday 27th September 2024

Call for abstracts - book about the History of Port Cities

Submissions on topics from the built environment and culture to imperial factors, migration and more are invited for a new book about the history of port cities worldwide. The project is led by the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures and the History Department at Hong Kong Baptist University.

Deadline: 8 September 2024  

Do you have research to share about the important and intriguing history of port cities across the world for a new book?

Submissions are invited on a wide range of topics, from the built environment and culture to imperial factors, migration and more. Postgraduate students and early career researchers are particularly encouraged to apply to write for the edited volume.

The project is led by the Centre for Port Cities and Maritime Cultures (PCMC) at the University of Portsmouth, and History Department at Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU).

The book has been inspired by the conference ‘Port Cities in Comparative Global History: Potentials and Issues’ held in Hong Kong in June 2023. The edited collection aims to explore emerging scholarship in global history and new, original, research aspects of maritime society and culture within the urban maritime sphere.

PCMC welcome submissions on (but not restricted to) the following topics:

  • Modern and early-modern time periods
  • Port city culture and the built environment, to include institutions, living patterns or infrastructure
  • Multinational maritime histories of work, migration, cultures, public health, and/or diseases
  • The impacts of imperial and global factors on port cities, including the integration or acknowledgement of previously overlooked, hidden, underexplored, or ‘challenging’ maritime histories
  • The shared histories, cultural exchange, or hybridisation that happens within the port city milieu
  • New approaches to colonial and imperial histories within the port city – reimagining and re-telling stories that restore balance and agency in unequal power relationships
  • Cross- and trans-disciplinary opportunities for maritime heritage on land (e.g., practice-based museum professionals, academics, practitioners in the sciences, arts and/or digital technologies)

Find out more