Isabelle Devos is a historian (Ghent University) and demographer (Université Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve). She is Full Professor at the History Department of UGent. Before her appointment at UGent in 2004, she worked as a Research Fellow at the History Department at the European University Institute in Fiesole (Italy), at Indiana University, Bloomington (USA) and as a Fulbright Fellow at the Department of Demography at University of California, Berkeley (USA).
Over the years her research has revolved around social and economic issues of the early modern period and the long nineteenth century in a comparative perspective, with a particular focus on demography, health and living standards. Under her supervision there are several ongoing and finished projects on the life courses of population groups which up until now have largely been neglected in historical research (the hearing impaired, never married women, prostitutes, servants, prisoners etc.). By focusing on such vulnerable populations, Devos aims to gain more insight into the manner in which societies determine hierarchies and adapt to economic change.
Isabelle Devos also possesses vast experience in the development of data infrastructures at the national, regional and local level. She is the main promotor of STREAM, a spatiotemporal research infrastructure for early modern Flanders and Brabant (funded by Hercules Foundation), of HISSTER, a data-infrastructure project on historical mortality statistics available at the local level and co-supervisor of LOKSTAT, a research infrastructure for nineteenth and twentieth century local statistics. She is also heavily involved in international networks and collaborations. As such, she is member of the Board of Directors of the International Research School N.W. Posthumus and Research Director of the research program Life-course, Family and Labour. She is also member of the Steering Committee of the FWO Research Community Historical Demography, of the VUB-UGhent Research Alliance Institute for Early Modern History and of the International Research Community Comparative Rural History of the North Sea Area. She is part of the editorial board of the CORN Publication Series and of peer-reviewed journals such as Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis/the Low Countries Journal of Social and Economic History.