Cathie Marsh (17 February 1951 - 1 January 1993) was a British sociologist and statistician.

Career edit

She read Chinese and Social and Political Sciences at Cambridge University; worked at the SSRC Survey Unit (mid-1970s); was a lecturer at Cambridge University, and worked at the University of Manchester, where she was appointed Professor in 1992. She died of breast cancer in 1993, aged 41.[1][2]

She wrote two important books: The Survey Method, which made a case for the use of surveys in sociology, and Exploring Data, which explained statistics in a manner in which social scientists students would enjoy. This book was updated by Jane Elliott (academic) in 2008.[3]

The Cathie Marsh Institute for Social Research (CMIST) at the University of Manchester was named after her. The computing room in her old faculty at the University of Cambridge, SPS, Faculty of Human, Social, and Political Science, University of Cambridge, was renamed the Cathie Marsh Machine Room after her death.

References edit

  1. ^ Arber, Sara (1993). "Cathie Marsh 1951-1993". Sociology. 27 (3): 389–392. doi:10.1177/0038038593027003003. ISSN 0038-0385. S2CID 144492563.
  2. ^ See the CMIST website
  3. ^ Dale, Angela (1994). "Obituary: Professor Catherine Marsh, 1952–93". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A. 157 (2). Blackwell publishing: 301–302. doi:10.1111/j.1467-985X.1994.tb00571.x. JSTOR 2983365.