Elizabeth Stokoe | |
Nationality: | British |
Fields: | Conversation analysis, Psychology |
Workplaces: | The London School of Economics and Political Science, Loughborough University |
Alma Mater: | Leicester University, University of Central Lancashire |
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Known For: | Research in conversation analysis. Conversation Analytic Role-play Method (CARM) |
Awards: | Wired Innovation Fellow (2015)HonFBPsS (2021) |
Website: | https://www.lse.ac.uk/PBS/People/Professor-Elizabeth-Stokoe |
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Elizabeth Stokoe is a British social scientist and conversation analyst.[1] Since January 2023, she has been Professor in the Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science at The London School of Economics and Political Science. She was previously Professor of Social Interaction at Loughborough University (2002-2022) in the Discourse and Rhetoric Group, where she remains an Honorary Professor. She has been Professor II at University of South-Eastern Norway since 2016.
Stokoe graduated from the University of Central Lancashire ("Preston Poly") in 1993 with an undergraduate degree in psychology. She completed her PhD in psychology at what was then Nene College, though her PhD was accredited by Leicester University. Her supervisors were Dr. Eunice Fisher and (as external), Professor Derek Edwards. Her PhD was entitled, "Gender and Discourse in Higher Education". Stokoe collected video recordings of university tutorials, and conducted conversation analyses of the way students produced on-task talk and managed topics,[2] as well as academic identity[3] and the relevance of gender to interaction.[4] [5]
After starting her lecturing career at University of Derby (1997-2000) and University of Worcester (2000-2002), Stokoe joined the (then) Department of Social Sciences at Loughborough University in October 2002. She became a Chair in 2009.
Stokoe's research is in conversation analysis, focused on understanding how social interaction works in settings from first dates[6] to medicine[7] and healthcare;[8] from mediation[9] to police crisis negotiation[10] and emergency service calls,[11] and from sales encounters[12] to interaction in “SaaS” (Software as a Service) platforms and conversational user interfaces.[13] Much of her early research focused on how people categorize themselves and each other – and resist, challenge, embrace those categorizations – in talk and text of all kinds.[14] It examined ‘isms’[15] and the incredibly subtle as well as blatant ways in which power, prejudice, and inclusion/exclusion are made manifest in the details of social interaction. Another common thread in her work is the identification of effective and less effective interactional practices and their impact on the outcome of conversational encounters.[16] She has published over 150 research outputs, including several co-authored academic books (Discourse and Identity, 2006, Conversation and Gender, 2011, Disursive Psychology: Classic and Contemporary Issues, 2016; Crisis Talk: Negotiating with Indivudials in Crisis, 2022). She is currently a co-investigator on the Economic and Social Research Council-funded Centre for Early Mathematics Learning (2022-2027) led by Professor Camilla Gilmore.
During her 20 years at Loughborough University, she was Associate Dean Research (2013-2018) for the School of Social Sciences and Humanities, and Associate Pro Vice-Chancellor (2019-2021) for REF2021.She co-edited Gender and Language from 2011 to 2014 and was an Associate Editor of British Journal of Social Psychology from 2009 to 2014. She launched the journal Mediation Theory and Practice in 2016. Between 2008-2011, Stokoe developed the Conversation Analytic Role-play Method (CARM), an approach to communications skills training based on conversation analytic research evidence about what sorts of problems and roadblocks can occur in conversation, as well as the communicative practices that resolve them. Stokoe developed CARM as a challege or corrective to other kinds of communication training including role-play and simulation.[17] CARM won a Wired Innovation Fellowship 2015.[18]
Stokoe is passionate about translating research in conversation analysis for wider audiences and she has spoken at many science festivals and events including at Microsoft, Google, TED, Latitude Festival, and The Royal Institution, and featured on BBC Radio 4’s “The Life Scientific” and “Word of Mouth." Her book, Talk: The Science of Conversation, was published in 2018 (Little, Brown). Since 2008, she has worked extensively with external partners across public, third, and private sectors, and been a industry fellow at Typeform and Deployed. During the Covid-19 pandemic, she participated in the Policing and Security subgroup of the Independent Scientific Pandemic Insights Group on Behaviours (SPI-B), which provided independent, expert behavioural science advice to the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE). She is also a member of Independent SAGE's behaviour group.[19] She became an Hononary Fellow of the British Psychological Society, awarded for distinguished service in the field of psychology, in 2021.
Stokoe's academic publications are listed at Google Scholar:[20]