Steven Yearley

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Steven Yearley

Professor Steven Yearley
Born 1956 (1956)
United Kingdom
Occupation Sociologist
Known for ESRC Genomics Policy and Research Forum

Steve Yearley (Born in Walthamstow, North East London, in 1956) is a British sociologist, Professor of the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge at the University of Edinburgh, a post he has held since 2005. He is currently seconded from the sociology unit to be Director of the ESRC Genomics Policy and Research Forum, more often known as the Genomics Forum. He first studied Natural Sciences and then Social and Political Sciences at Cambridge University before doing his PhD in sociology, supervised by Michael Mulkay at the University of York from 1978 - 1981.

Yearley is known chiefly for three kinds of work within this field: theoretical analysis of trends within the sociology of scientific knowledge, the application of arguments from the sociology of scientific knowledge to environmental issues and to the understanding of environmental controversies and campaigning, and pioneering work that demonstrated how public participation in the evaluation of environmental modelling could lead to refinement and better uptake of the models.

Due to the scarcity of sociology jobs in the UK in the early 1980s, Yearley had a couple of short-term positions before he got a lectureship in sociology at Queen's University Belfast in 1983. It was in Belfast that he began to concentrate on environmental issues and in the late 1980s and early 1990s he was closely associated with Friends of the Earth, the Ulster Wildlife Trust and Northern Ireland Environment Link. He became the first Professor of Sociology at the University of Ulster in 1992, returning to Queen’s for a short stint as Professor there in 1994, and then moving to the sociology professorship at the University of York in 1995. He worked in York from 1995 to 2005, spending his last six years there as Head of Department; in York he worked closely with colleagues in the Stockholm Environment Institute. Yearley has also spent periods as Visiting Professor in Science and Technology Studies at Cornell University, at the Technical University of Denmark and at the University of Melbourne.

Since 2006, Yearley has worked primarily as Director of the Genomics Forum, a novel form of research institute, funded by the ESRC aimed at linking social research on life-science issues with a variety of audiences beyond the social sciences: policy makers, lobbyists and NGOs; public groups of various kinds; and practising scientists and medics. In this role he has collaborated with among others the Human Genetics Commission, Citizens' Inquiry into the Forensic Use of Genetic Information, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Scottish Government's Health and Wellbeing Directorate and the Edinburgh International Book Festival. At the Forum, he focuses primarily on environmental aspects of the life sciences (such as issues around synthetic biology) and on new ventures in public engagement with the science and technologies of genomics. In 2010, Steven Yearley was elected to the fellowship of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.

Selected Publications

Book reviews

Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth about Climate Change
The Times Higher Education listed Requiem for a Species as "Book of the week" for 3 June 2010. Steven Yearley's review calls it a "provocative and sobering book".

Why We Disagree About Climate Change: Understanding Controversy, Inaction and Opportunity
Steven Yearley writing for The Times Higher Education said, "This is a distinctive and courageous book".

Mao's Great Famine: The History of China's Most Devastating Catastrophe, 1958–62
Steven Yearley, Professor of the Sociology of Scientific Knowledge at the University of Edinburgh, notes that the book "stands out" from other works on the famine "on account of its basis in recently opened archives and in the countless compelling details which are provided to clarify the interlocking themes of the text."

References

    External links

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