Biography:Derek J. S. Robinson

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Derek John Scott Robinson, 1975

Derek John Scott Robinson (born 25 September 1938 in Montrose, Scotland)[1] is a British mathematician, specialising in group theory and homological algebra.[2]

Education and career

Robinson graduated in 1960 with a bachelor's degree from the University of Edinburgh and in 1963 with a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge.[2] His Ph.D. thesis Theory of Subnormal Subgroups was supervised by Philip Hall.[3] As a postdoc, Robinson was from 1963 to 1965 an instructor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. From 1965 to 1968 he was a lecturer at Queen Mary College (now named Queen Mary University of London). At the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign he was an assistant professor from 1968 to 1969, an associate professor from 1969 to 1974, and a full professor from 1974 to 2007, when he retired as professor emeritus. He held visiting appointments in Switzerland, Italy, Germany, and Singapore.[2]

Robinson's 1964 paper on T-groups[4] has over 250 citations. He was awarded in 1970 the Sir Edmund Whittaker Memorial Prize and received in 1979 a Humboldt Prize.[2]

Books

  • with S. Cruz Rambaud, J. García Pérez, and R.A. Nehmer: Algebraic models for accounting systems, World Scientific, Singapore, 2010. ISBN 981-4287-11-3[5]
  • A course in linear algebra with applications, World Scientific, 1991 ISBN 9810205686; 2nd edition 2006
  • An introduction to abstract algebra, De Gruyter 2003 ISBN 3-11-017544-4; Abstract algebra: an introduction with applications, 3rd edition 2022[6]
  • with John C. Lennox: Theory of infinite soluble groups, Clarendon Press, Oxford 2004 ISBN 0-19-850728-3
  • A course in the theory of groups, Springer Verlag, 1982, 2nd edition 1996 ISBN 0-387-94461-3
  • Finiteness conditions and generalized soluble groups, Parts I & II, Springer Verlag 1972[7]
  • Infinite soluble and nilpotent groups, London 1968
  • as editor with Phillip Griffith: The mathematical legacy of Reinhold Baer: a collection of articles in honor of the centenary of the birth of Reinhold Baer, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, 2004 ISBN 0974698601

References