Media Coverage
United Kingdom
'Public scepticism of vaccination is rising- social scientists call for a rethink of research'
'đ Stagnant vaccination rates and slipping vaccine coverage - why?'
United States
'Humanities faculty help lead international effort advancing person-centered vaccine research'
Romania
FoVaS Press Releases
Public scepticism of vaccination is risingâsocial scientists globally call for a rethink of research
Oxford, UK â A new international network of social scientists, the Forum for Vaccine Social Science (FoVaS), is calling for a fundamental rethink of how vaccines and vaccination are studied in society.
The group argues that scholarship has focused too narrowly on âvaccine hesitancy,â overlooking the social contexts, policy environments, and everyday conditions that shape how vaccines are usedâespecially in the Global South. Vaccine coverage has been either stagnating or slipping globally, most strikingly with over 14 million âzero-doseâ children who have no vaccinations at all. Access to vaccines across the
world is deeply unequal, but public scepticism has also risen post-pandemic.
Resurgent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases, such as measles, are showing the risks. FoVaS was founded by Prof Stuart Blume in 2024, with 17 scholars from 16 countries, to explore how the social sciences can better contribute to tackling current and anticipated issues concerning vaccination efforts. Prof Blume describes how âFoVaS has spent the past year in small and large working groups mapping a future
agenda for vaccine social science with the aim of challenging the current status quo in scholarshipâ. On 24â25 November 2025, the network held its first two-day workshop at the University of Oxford, hosted by the Vaccines and Society Unit.
Members and guests shared outcomes from the yearâs conversations and planned next steps, including future workshops, collaborative research articles, community outreach and engagement, and other provocations aimed at reframing the field.
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About FoVaS:
A representative international network of social scientists advancing research on vaccines and society.
About Vaccines and Society:
The Vaccines and Society Unit (VAS) is a multidisciplinary research centre at the University of Oxford that aims to improve understanding of the roles played by individuals and groups in their interaction with healthcare practice and medical research. The unit aims to produce theoretical and
empirical research in social sciences and create a bridge to public health issues through policy advice, interventions, and public engagement. We draw on a variety of disciplines from sociology, history, behavioural science, health economics, and public policy to combine a wide set of tools and literatures.