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Events

HASS Inaugural Lecture - Professor Neil Harrison

Wednesday, 06 May 2026 at 16:00

How do young people make decisions about the future (and why does it matter)?

Event details

The lecture will explore the processes by which young people understand their futures and how they make educational decisions that have far-reaching implications for their lives. It will pull together threads from sociology and social psychology to illustrate how decision-making is often misunderstood by researchers, policymakers and other adults, arguing that this is a 'wicked problem' for social justice.

 

Bio:

Professor Neil Harrison is a researcher and educator specialising in social justice, inequalities and education policy. His work primarily focuses on issues around access to education, especially for learners who are disadvantaged or marginalised in society. This includes topics such as decision-making processes, outreach programmes, financial support, alternative qualification routes and the factors underpinning student success.

More recently, his research has particularly focused on educational outcomes for care-experienced learners, receiving funding from the Nuffield Foundation, the KPMG Foundation and the British Academy. He has also researched around the engagement of students in internationalised universities, as well as having interests in pedagogy, epistemology, ‘expertise’ and doctoral education.

Organiser

Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences

Location