Dr Cohen Simpson

Dr Cohen Simpson

Visiting Fellow

Department of Methodology

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Languages
English
Key Expertise
Social Network Analysis; Friendship; Cooperation; Evolutionary Anthropology

About me

Cohen is a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Methodology and an Associate Member of Nuffield College, Oxford. In 2016, he also received his PhD in Social Research Methods from the Department of Methodology. He was recently a Research Fellow and British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute and a Non-Stipendary Research Fellow at Nuffield College. He has also held postdoctoral roles in the Department of Sociology at the University of Oxford and the Department of Sociology at the University of Cambridge.

Research Interests

Sitting primarily within the traditions of analytical and mathematical sociology, Cohen's research focus is network formation — i.e., where do networks come from? And he is especially interested in the emergence of social networks that span small-scale traditional human populations — i.e. microcosms wherein supportive relationships (e.g., friendship, advice, financial aid, food provision, and physical assistance) facilitate day-to-day survival by offsetting the challenges of poverty, subsistence-based living, and limited access to protective institutions (e.g. state welfare). 

Cohen also has a deep interest in evolutionary and sociological theories of human sociality (e.g., kin selection theory; structural balance theory), genetic kinship, and ecological arguments around how variation in individuals’ social and physical environments shape their (relational) behaviour. When appropriate, he makes a special effort to draw on zoological research on the social networks of non-human animals. And he is generally interested in interdisciplinary applications of network analysis and mixing social and evolutionary science.