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Health & medicine

Our health and medicine collections include the Mike Daube Tobacco Control and Public Health collection, Women’s Health collection, Jules Black Sexology collection, and a collection of over 600 published works.

Mike Daube portrait

Mike Daube Tobacco Control and Public Health collection

Emeritus Professor Mike Daube AO (born 1948) was a Professor of Health Policy at Curtin University from 2005 until his retirement in 2018. He is internationally renowned for his leadership in public health, especially in the areas of tobacco and alcohol. The collection is strong in the history of tobacco control both in the United Kingdom and Australia dating from 1973. It includes published and unpublished documents, letters, ephemera and photographs. Later material covers other areas of public health including drugs and alcohol.

View the collection records Learn more about Mike Daube
Havelock Ellis and Francoise Lafitte-Cyon (Delisle) Library

Havelock Ellis and Francoise Lafitte-Cyon (Delisle) Library

Henry Havelock Ellis (1859-1939) was a renowned British physician, psychologist and sexologist.

The JCPML holds 196 published works from the library of Havelock Ellis and his partner Francoise Lafitte-Cyan together with correspondence, dated 1907 – 1929.

Jules Black Sexology collection

Jules Black Sexology collection

Dr Jules Black (born 1940) is an obstetrician, gynaecologist, and an internationally noted sexologist. The collection includes 300+ significant textbooks and works by post World War II sexologists, plus a few earlier works, and some personal papers of Dr Black.

The collection is a resource for researchers studying sexual behaviours, the theory and science of sexology, and clinical and therapeutic sexology.

Women’s Health Collection

The Women’s Health collection comprises more than 600 books and pamphlets documenting all aspects of women’s health, with particular focus on relationships, sexuality and birth control.

The principal strength is material published between the wars, but some nineteenth-century and earlier publications are included. The collection includes several first editions, classics of medical literature, books inscribed by the authors, and good representations of three important figures in the field of women’s health – Marie Stopes, Margaret Sanger and Havelock Ellis.

The collection is an excellent resource for researchers interested in the history of women’s health. While the strength of the collection is women’s health, the subject range is broader, and includes eugenics, gynaecology, sexuality, obstetrics, marriage, birth control, and changing attitudes to women’s health and women’s place in society.