Ivana Markova
Ivana Marková FBA was a Czech-born British social psychologist known for her work on language and the constructs of communication. Markova died on 1 December 2024, at the age of 86.
Education and Academic career
She was born in Czechoslovakia and studied philosophy and psychology at Charles University in Prague. In 1967 she moved to the United Kingdom. She initially worked as Research Fellow at the Industrial Training Research Unit, University of London before moving to the University of Stirling, from which she retired in 2003 as an emeritus professor. She then took up the post of visiting professor in the Department of Psychological and Behavioural Science and Research Associate in the Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Sciences at the London School of Economics. She was also a Senior Member of Wolfson College, Cambridge.She served on various national and international committees, e.g. she was a member of the Chief Scientist's Health Services Research Committee, Scottish Home and Health Department, a chairperson of the Social Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society, President of Section J of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Scientific Committee of the Academia Istropolitana, a newly established Centre of Advanced Studies in Central Europe, Bratislava, Slovakia.
Research
Her main theoretical research interests were the ontology and epistemology of theory in social psychology, and the interdependence between social thinking, dialogue and semiotics. Empirical research concerned social representations of democracy, individualism and responsibility in post communist Europe and the study of dialogues between people with impaired speech and their partners. In the 1990s she became increasingly interested in developing a dialogical approach to the study of social representations.Awards
- 2019: Honorary doctorate: University of Neuchâtel
- 1994: Honorary doctorate: Linköping University
- 1999 - Fellow of the British Academy
- 1997 - Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Fellow of the British Psychological Society