Dr Mark Taylor
School of Education
Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Methods
+44 114 222 7124
Full contact details
School of Education
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
91Ö±²¥
S10 2AH
- Profile
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Mark is Senior Lecturer in Quantitative Methods. He’s interested in cultural and creative industries, with particular focuses on social inequalities in work and in participation. His background is in sociology, but his research interests are interdisciplinary, across sociology, cultural policy, cultural studies, music, games, and other fields.
His most recent book, with Orian Brook and Dave O’Brien, is .
He's also the author of reports on the UK Games Industry Census from both and , which he delivers in participation with . He delivered a on this work at the Game Developer Conference in 2022.
Alongside his role at the SMI, he also sits on the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport's .
Mark joined the SMI in 2014. Before that, he worked at the Universities of Manchester and York, and completed his DPhil in Sociology at the University of Oxford.
A longer list of publications can be found below, or on .
- Research interests
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Mark's interested in inequalities in cultural and creative industries. Why is it that work in cultural jobs is so socially exclusive, given the way that the sector describes itself? Why is it that audiences are so socially homogeneous? How does the governance of the arts relate to inequalities?
He’s also interested in related issues, such as the ubiquity of data in everyday life, the conditions of working in creative jobs, the ways that what constitutes creative work are constructed and defined, and the overall structure of different industries.
Mark’s used a wide range of different research methods, including the collection of original survey data, analysis of existing large survey data sources, network analysis, spatial analysis, and qualitative methods. He's particularly keen on the creative use of data visualisation in research.
While most of his work is based in the UK, he's also currently working with a team at Deakin University on a about audience diversification in the arts in Australia.
- Publications
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Books
- Culture Is Bad for You Inequality in the Cultural and Creative Industries. Manchester University Press.
- Making Sense of Data in the Media. Sage.
Journal articles
- . Poetics, 108, 101946-101946.
- . Journal of Museum Education, 47(4), 414-427.
- . Leisure Studies.
- . European Journal of Cultural Studies.
- . The Sociological Review.
- . Cultural Trends, 28(2-3), 198-219.
- . British Journal of Music Education, 35(3), 255-269.
- . Sociology, 53(2), 347-367.
- . Journal of Cultural Economy, 11(3), 225-243.
- . Sociological Research Online, 22(4), 27-47.
- . European Sport Management Quarterly, 17(3), 290-311.
- . Cultural Trends, 25(4), 291-294.
- . Cultural Trends, 25(3: Everyday Participation and Cultural Value. Part 1), 169-181.
- . Sociology, 49(6), 1011-1030.
- . Sociological Research Online, 18(2), 11-21.
- . Sociology, 47(2), 219-250.
- What ifs: the role of imagining in people's reflections on data uses. Convergence.
- How people connect fairness and equity when they talk about data uses. Big Data and Society.
- Challenging assumptions about the relationship between awareness of and attitudes to data uses amongst the UK public. The Information Society.
- . Cultural Trends, 1-18.
- . Sociology, 003803852211299-003803852211299.
- . European Urban and Regional Studies, 096977642211137-096977642211137.
- . Sociological Research Online, 136078041989529-136078041989529.
- . Poetics.
- .
Chapters
- What happened to the workers? Understanding the impact of the pandemic on jobs and working hours in the cultural sector, Pandemic culture: The impacts of COVID-19 on the UK cultural sector and implications for the future (pp. 54-94).
- , Sociology of the Arts (pp. 37-55). Springer Nature Switzerland
- , The Sociology of Arts and Markets (pp. 75-96). Springer International Publishing
- Connecting epistemologies and the early career researcher In Fenby-Hulse K, Heywood E & Walker K (Ed.), Research Impact and the Early Career Researcher: Lived Experiences, New Perspectives
- The creative economy, the creative class and cultural intermediation In Jones P, Perry B & Long P (Ed.), Cultural Intermediaries Connecting Communities: Revisiting Approaches to Cultural Engagement (pp. 27-42). Bristol: Policy Press.
Reports
- Public perceptions of BBC data uses in experiments which give people more control of data
- Public perceptions of DWP’s uses of data for identity verification
- Public perceptions of sharing and aggregating health data
- Report on Living With Data Interviews & Focus Groups
- Living with Data survey report
- Public understanding and perceptions of data practices: a review of existing research
Datasets
- Teaching interests
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Mark’s teaching is focused on working with students so that they can articulate the questions they’re interested in answering, identifying the methods that are most suitable for answering those questions, and implementing those methods practically. He’s particularly interested in working with students who don’t have a background in quantitative methods or in programming who are interested in becoming more comfortable with working with data.
While working at the SMI, Mark’s taught a wide range of modules, including data visualisation, research design, and social analytics. He’s also the author, with Andy Bell, Todd Hartman, Aneta Piekut, and Alasdair Rae, of .
He’s been a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy since 2016, and a Senior Fellow since 2018.
Mark's currently serving as the SMI's Director of Education.
- PhD Supervision