Yves Segers (Dendermonde, 1970) studied History at the University of Ghent and Archival and Contemporary Records Management at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. He obtained his PhD in Modern History at KU Leuven in 2002 with a thesis on ‘Economic growth and living standards. The development of private consumer expenditure and food consumption in Belgium, 1800-1913’.
He is director of the Interfaculty Center for Agrarian History (ICAG) at KU Leuven, director of the Center for Agrarian History (CAG ngo, a heritage expertise center), and associate professor of Rural History at the research unit Modernity & Society 1800-2000 (MoSa) of the Faculty of Arts , KU Leuven. His research focuses on the social and economic history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with as main themes agriculture and countryside, the development of the food chain and food culture.
In recent years he has conducted research on the agricultural history of the Belgian Congo, which has resulted in the following publications:
- Charlotte Vekemans and Yves Segers, ‘Settler farming, agricultural colonization and development in Katanga (Belgian Congo), 1910-1920’, Historia Agraria, 2020, 81, pp. 195-226.
- Yves Segers and Leen Van Molle, ‘L’agriculture dans le Congo colonial. Un succès aux dépens de la population rurale?’, in Idesbald Goddeeris, Lauro Amandine and Guy Vantemsche (eds.), Le Congo colonial. Une histoire en questions, Waterloo, Renaissance du Livre, 2020, pp. 167-181.
- Leen Van Molle, Yves Segers and Stephanie Kerckhofs, ’”C’est par la science qu’on colonise”. Over de relatie tussen de Grote Depressie en de landbouwpolitiek in Belgisch Congo’, in Jan Vanderlinden (ed.), The Belgian Congo between the two world wars, Brussels, Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences, 2019, pp. 159-189.