Jesus Aguirre Gutierrez
Fulford Junior Research FellowThe goal of my research is to disentangle how a changing climate has impacted, is currently driving and will modify in the near future our natural forest ecosystems.
Much is still unknown about how tropical forests around the world are responding to an increasingly fast changing climate, and there may be regions that are or will experience stronger biodiversity shifts and may be in more need of protection or regulation.
Having grown-up in Guadalajara, one of the biggest cities in Mexico where not much nature is around, I decided to spend a year living with the indigenous “Rarámuri” community in Northern Mexico to learn from their vision of nature.
My research interests come from understanding the importance nature has on our livelihoods – something I learnt through my experiences with indigenous communities in Mexico and abroad.
I joined SoGE in 2017 to develop a project, at ECI School of Geography, to understand the role that plant functional characteristics play in the resilience of tropical forests. I am currently a Researcher Co-Investigator in the “Arboles” NERC funded project monitoring plant functional diversity by remote sensing in Latin American forests.
2020
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Malhi, Y., Lewis, S.L., Fauset, S., Adu-Bredu, S., Affum-Baffoe, K., Baker, T.R., Gvozdevaite, A., Hubau, W., Moore, S., Peprah, T., Zieminska, K., Phillips, O.L. and Oliveras, I. (2020) Long-term droughts may drive drier tropical forests towards increased functional, taxonomic andphylogenetic homogeneity. Nature Communications, 11(1).
2019
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Oliveras, I., Rifai, S., Fauset, S., Adu-Bredu, S., Affum-Baffoe, K., Baker, T.R., Feldpausch, T.R., Gvozdevaite, A., Hubau, W., Kraft, N.J.B., Lewis, S.L., Moore, S., Niinemets, U., Peprah, R., Phillips, O.L., Zieminska, K., Enquist, B. and Malhi, Y. (2019) Drier tropical forests are susceptible to functional changes in response to a long-term drought. Ecology Letters, 22(5): 855-865.
Carvalheiro, L.G., Biesmeijer, J.C., Franzén, M., Aguirre-Gutiérrez, J., Garibaldi, L.A., Helm, A., Michez, D., Pöyry, J., Reemer, M., Schweiger, O., van den Berg, L., WallisDeVries, M.F. and Kunin, W.E. (2019) Soil eutrophication shaped the composition of pollinator assemblages during the past century. Ecography.
Tshwene-Mauchaza, B. and Aguirre-Gutierrez, J. (2019) Climatic drivers of plant species distributions across spatial grains in Southern Africa tropical forests. Frontiers in Forests and Global Change, 2(69).
2017
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Kissling, W.D., Biesmeijer, J.C., WallisDeVries, M.F., Reemer, M. and Carvalheiro, L.G. (2017) Historical changes in the importance of climate and land use as determinants of Dutch pollinator distributions. Journal of Biogeography, 44(3): 696-707.
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., van Treuren, R., Hoekstra, R. and van Hintum, T.J.L. (2017) Crop wild relatives range shifts and conservation in Europe under climate change. Diversity and Distributions, 23(7): 739-750.
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., WallisDeVries, M.F., Marshall, L., van’tZelfde, M., Villalobos-Aramula, A.R., Boekelo, B., Barholomeus, H. Franzen, M., and Biesmeijer, J.C. (2017) Butterflies show different functional and species diversity in relationship to vegetation structure and land use. Global Ecology and Biogeography.
Gomes, S.I.F., Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Bidartondo, M.I. and Merckx, V.S.F.T. (2017) Arbuscular mycorrhizal interactions of mycoheterotrophic Thismia are more specialized than in autotrophic plants. New Phytologist, 213(3): 1418-1427.
2016
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Wallis De Vries, M.F., Marshall, L., van’t Zelfde, M., Villalobos-Arambula, A., Boekelo, B., Bartholomeus, H., Franzen, M. and Biesmeijer, J.C. (2016) Butterflies show different functional and species diversity in relationship to vegetation structure and land use. Global Ecology and Biogeography.
Raes, N. and Aguirre-Gutiérrez, J. Species distribution models under climate and landscape changes. In: Mountains, Climate and Biodiversity. Hoorn, C. and Antonelli, A. (eds). Accepted October 2016. Wiley Blackwell Publishers, Oxford.
Aguirre-Gutierrez, J., Kissling, W.D., Carvalheiro, L.G., WallisDeVries, M.F., Franzén, M. and Biesmeijer, J.C. Functional traits help to explain half-century long shifts in pollinator distributions. 2016. Scientific Reports. 6:24451.
Roger, N., Moerman, R., Carvalheiro, L.G., Aguirre-Guitiérrez, J., et al. Impact of pollen resources drift on common bumble bees in NW Europe. 2016. Global Change Biology. In Press.
Wicaksono, C.Y., Aguirre-Guiterrez, J., Nouhra, E., Pastor, N., Raes, N., Pacheco, S. and Geml, J. Contracting montane cloud forests: a case study of the Andean alder (Alnus acuminata) and associated fungi in the Yungas. 2016. Biotropica. In Press.
Lens, F., Vos, R.A., Charrier, G., van der Niet, T., Merckx, V., Pieter Baas, P., Aguirre-Gutierrez, J. et al. Scalariform-to-simple transition in vessel perforation plates triggered by differences in climate during the evolution of Adoxaceae. 2016. Annals of Botany. In Press.
Alastair Ahamed
Stipendiary LecturerI am the Stipendiary Lecturer in Law at Somerville College, teaching Contract Law and Trusts Law. After reading for the BA in Jurisprudence at Somerville I trained and qualified as a solicitor. I then read the Bachelor of Civil Law as the Bingham Scholar in Law at Somerville College. I teach on the Company Law course and currently provide research assistance to Professors Jennifer Payne and Louise Gullifer in connection with the latest edition of Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy.
Qualifications and awards
- BA Jurisprudence (First Class), University of Oxford (2019)
- White & Case Prize in Company Law (2019)
- Qualified solicitor in England and Wales (2022)
- Bachelor of Civil Law (Distinction), University of Oxford (2023)
- Bingham Scholar in Law, Somerville College (2022 – 2023)
- Law Faculty Prize for Corporate Finance Law (2023)
- Archibald Jackson Prize for Distinction on the BCL
Ahamed, “Hong Kong Airlines Ltd restructuring plan” (2023) 44(8) Comp. Law 270
Isha Ahlawat
Cornelia Sorabji Scholar reading for a Bachelor of Civil Law (BCL) (Matric Year: 2023)As a Cornelia Sorabji Scholar in the Faculty of Law, Isha aims to study and interrogate the regime governing climate change, development and human rights, with a focus on the global south.
Isha graduated with a B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) degree from Jindal Global Law School (JGLS), India where she received several awards and scholarships for her academic achievements. During her undergraduate studies, she worked on issues associated with aspects of ecology, economy, and politics of sustainable development. In future, Isha aspires to pursue a career in public policy and academia, focusing on the field of environment and constitutional law, development studies, and human rights.
She has been selected as a Don Lavoie Fellow for the 2023-24 academic year by the Mercatus Centre at George Mason University, where she will study key ideas in political economy. In Fall 2022, she assisted Professor (Dr.) Tony George as a Teaching Assistant for the Sustainable Ocean’s Law and Policy course. She has also worked as a judicial intern at the Hawaii State Supreme Court and at the Supreme Court of India in the office of Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud. Isha volunteered at the Legal Aid Clinic and at IDIA, an organization that works towards making legal education accessible to marginalized and underrepresented communities.
Naveed Akbar
Research Fellow; Associate Professor of Cardiovascular ScienceI hold a BSc (Hons) in Human Biology, followed by an MSc in Biomedical Sciences, during which I developed a keen interest in vascular biology and gained expertise in synthesizing and fabricating nanoparticles for vascular targeting.
Subsequently, I earned my PhD in Medicine and Therapeutics from the University of Dundee, where my research focused on investigating innate immune signaling cascades in vascular inflammation using in vivo imaging techniques.
As a British Heart Foundation Intermediate Basic Science Research Fellow, my research lab is dedicated to unraveling the role of extracellular vesicles (EVs) in cardiovascular and metabolic inflammation. EVs are nanoscale vesicles produced by cells, which serve as vehicles for intercellular communication. They carry potent instructions that can profoundly influence the behavior and functions of recipient cells, particularly within the immune system. My current work centers on understanding how these concealed messages trigger immune responses following a heart attack. This immune system activation plays a crucial role in exacerbating injury, ultimately affecting patient health and well-being. I am exploring the diagnostic potential of EVs to better stratify patients for post-heart attack treatment and their utility as tools for therapeutic targeting.
Public Engagement
I have actively participated in public engagement activities, particularly through the “Pint of Science” initiative (pintofscience.co.uk). Pint of Science aims to facilitate the communication of cutting-edge research to the public in an engaging and approachable manner by bringing scientists to local pubs. In Oxford, where I have coordinated our efforts for the past 8 years, we organize 19 events annually, attracting more than 800 attendees. Our festival in Oxford is entirely driven by dedicated researcher volunteers, and it has facilitated over 200 researchers in engaging with the public. This has empowered them to lead their own public engagement initiatives across the UK.
Recent Publications
- Multi-organ single-cell RNA-sequencing reveals early hyperglycaemia responses that converge on fibroblast dysregulation,
Preprint
Braithwaite AT. et al, (2023) - Prospects for Precision Medicine in Acute Myocardial Infarction: Patient-Level Insights into Myocardial Injury and Repair.
Journal of Clinical Medicine 12
Alkhalil M. et al, (2023) - Comparative and integrated analysis of plasma extracellular vesicle isolation methods in healthy volunteers and patients following myocardial infarction
Journal of Extracellular Biology
Paget D. et al, (2022) -
Rapid neutrophil mobilisation by VCAM-1+ endothelial extracellular vesicles.
Cardiovasc Res
Akbar N. et al, (2022),
Her Excellency Judge Akua Kuenyehia
Honorary FellowIn February 2003, H.E. Judge Kuenyehia was nominated by the Government of Ghana and elected as judge of the International Criminal Court. She currently serves as President of the Appeals Division.
From March 2007 until March 2009, she was the Presiding Judge of Pre-Trial Chamber 1. In March 2003, after the inauguration of the judges of the ICC, she was elected First Vice-President and was a judge in the Pre-Trial Division. H.E. Judge Kuenyehia was born in Akropong, Akuapem in Ghana and obtained her first degree from the Faculty of Law, university of Ghana, Legon. She then attended Somerville College, Oxford University, where she obtained a BCL, and shortly thereafter became the first female to be appointed as a law professor at the University of Ghana. While at the university, she taught criminal law, gender and the law, international human rights law and public international law.
She is a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Ghana and has extensive experience as a solicitor, advocate, and law teacher. Judge Kuenyehia was Dean of the Faculty of Law of the University of Ghana for seven years before her election to the ICC. Outside of the University, Judge Kuenyehia was among other things, a member of the UN Expert Committee of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), a member of the Council of Cape Coast University and the Board of Directors of Barclays Bank, Ghana Limited. She has been a pioneer advocating for equal opportunity, justice and development for women in Ghana and around the world. She is co-author of a text book on Women and Law in Sub-Saharan Africa, published in August 2003, which is currently the only comprehensive text book on the subject.
Ghaith Al Najjar
MCR TreasurerMy name is Ghaith, and I am an Msc student studying Radiobiology in the department of Oncology. As a treasurer for the MCR, I hope to help run the finances of the MCR, from handling reimbursements to managing our MCR budgets. I work closely with the rest of the team, aiming to achieve the highest level of happiness and fun in the MCR!
My hobbies include a lot of sport, squash, rowing, cycling and gyming are my current favourites. I have also recently got hooked on pool, which i play with our lovely IT and House reps (as well as various professional pool players).
Please do not hesitate to contact me should you have any questions, and many thanks!
Charlotte Albury
Clinical Non-Stipendiary Lecturer; Senior Research Fellow in Health Behaviours; THIS Institute FellowCharlotte leads a programme of research which focuses on understanding relationships between clinical communication and behaviour change.
She currently holds an EDI-Themed Fellowship, from the THIS Institute, and previously held a Mildred Blaxter Fellowship from the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness. She additionally holds research grants from the British Heart Foundation, the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), and the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office.
Her research has contributed to national guidelines, and she has advised government and policy makers. She is a member of the NICE Adoption and Impact Reference Panel, and an honorary member of the University of Oxford’s Faculty of Linguistics. In 2022 she was the Society for Academic Primary Care (SAPC) Principal Investigator of the Year.
Charlotte is an experienced teacher and educator. Alongside her teaching role at Somerville she leads research methods courses within the Primary Care department and Medical Sciences division. She hold a postgraduate certificate in Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, awarded with Distinction. In 2023 she was recipient of both the Medical Sciences Division ‘Excellent Supervisor’ award (recognising her significant contribution to supervision within the division), and the Society for Academic Primary Care Education Prize.
Key papers
- Clinician–patient communication about emergency aerial medical evacuation in case of infectious disease
- Relationship Between Clinician Language and the Success of Behavioral Weight Loss Interventions
- The importance of language in engagement between health-care professionals and people living with obesity: a joint consensus statement
Talbot, Amelia & Salinas, Maria & Albury, Charlotte & Ziebland, Sue. (2021). People with weight‐related long‐term conditions want support from GPs: A qualitative interview study. Clinical Obesity. 10.1111/cob.12471.
Robinson, Charlotte & Albury, Charlotte & McCartney, David & Fletcher, Benjamin & Roberts, Nia & Jury, Imogen & Lee, Joseph. (2021). The relationship between duration and quality of sleep and upper respiratory tract infections: a systematic review. Family Practice. 10.1093/fampra/cmab033.
Albury, Charlotte & Ziebland, Sue & Webb, Helena & Stokoe, Elizabeth & Aveyard, Paul. (2020). Discussing weight loss opportunistically and effectively in family practice: a qualitative study of clinical interactions using conversation analysis in UK family practice. Family Practice. 38. 10.1093/fampra/cmaa121.
Warr, William & Aveyard, Paul & Albury, Charlotte & Nicholson, Brian & Tudor, Kate & Hobbs, Richard & Roberts, Nia & Ziebland, Sue. (2020). A systematic review and thematic synthesis of qualitative studies exploring GPs’ and nurses’ perspectives on discussing weight with patients with overweight and obesity in primary care. Obesity Reviews. 22. 10.1111/obr.13151.
Hall, Amanda & Richmond, Helen & Bursey, Krystal & Hansen, Zara & Williamson, Esther & Copsey, Bethan & Albury, Charlotte & Asghari, Shabnam & Curran, Vernon & Pike, Andrea & Etchegary, Holly & Lamb, Sarah. (2020). Evaluating the impact of a champion on implementation of the Back Skills Training (BeST) programme in Canada: a mixed methods feasibility study protocol. BMJ open. 10. e040834. 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040834.
Danae Ali
JCR Ethnic Minorities OfficerSanah Ali
Clinical Non-Stipendiary LecturerJoel Alves
Fulford Junior Research Fellow; Postdoctoral Researcher in Evolutionary GeneticsI am a Postdoctoral Researcher at Oxford’s School of Archaeology and a Fulford Junior Research Fellow at Somerville College.
As a geneticist working in an archaeology setting, my research sits at the intersection of natural and social sciences. Most of my work uses DNA from contemporary and archaeological populations to investigate how humans and the environment have shaped the genomes of species. I am interested in a broad spectrum of topics, ranging from the process of domestication to the adaptation to novel habitats.
I am originally from Portugal, where I did my undergraduate in Biology at the University of Porto, followed by a master’s in Biodiversity, Genetics and Evolution at CIBIO Institute. I then moved to the United Kingdom to pursue a PhD at the University of Cambridge on the topic of evolution of viral resistance. In 2018, I joined the School of Archaeology at the University of Oxford where I am currently leading research projects that use Ancient DNA to investigate how humans and animals have interacted through time.
Parallel adaptation of rabbit populations to myxoma virus. Alves JM et al.; Science 2019, (DOI:10.1126/science.aau7285)
Celebrating Easter, Christmas and their associated alien fauna. Lauritsen M, et al.; World Archaeology 2018 (DOI: 10.1080/00438243.2018.1515655)
Adaptive introgression underlies polymorphic seasonal camouflage in snowshoe hares. Jones MR, et al.; Science 2018, (DOI: 10.1126/science.aar5273)
Host shifts result in parallel genetic changes when viruses adapt to closely related species. Longdon B et al; PLoS Pathogens 2018 (DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006951)
Rabbit genome analysis reveals a polygenic basis for phenotypic change during domestication. Carneiro M et al.; Science 2014, (DOI: 10.1126/science.1253714)
Susan Anthony
Retaining Fee Lecturer; Consultant RadiologistDr Susan Anthony is a Consultant Interventional Radiologist at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, where she served as Clinical Lead and Director of Radiology 2012-18.
Having qualified in 1992 from University College Hospital Medical School, London, she trained in Radiology at the Royal Free Hospital, London, before moving to Oxford in 2005.
Her specialist interests include Non-invasive Vascular Imaging, Cardiac Imaging, Intervention (including Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty, Aortic Stent Grafting and Uterine Artery Embolisation), Endovenous Laser Treatment for Varicose Veins, and Interventional Oncology (Transarterial Chemoembolisation, Selective Internal Radiation Therapy and Portal Vein Embolisation).
Suzie has an honorary senior clinical lecturer position at the University of Oxford. She teaches anatomyand radiology to undergraduate and graduate-entry medical students and enjoys introducing young doctors to the opportunities provided by image-guided intervention. Suzie has an active interest in current research and is section editor for European Journal of Radiology.
Jonas Antor
Stipendiary Lecturer- Formality in the Deligne-Langlands correspondence, arxiv:2302.11010
- Canonical bases via pairing monomials, arxiv:2308.16254
Sophie Arana
Fulford Junior Research FellowI am a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Human Information Processing Lab at the Department for Experimental Psychology.
Selected Publications
- “Is the motor system necessary for processing action and abstract emotion words? Evidence from focal brain lesions.” FR Dreyer, D Frey, S Arana, S Saldern, T Picht, P Vajkoczy, et al. Frontiers in Psychology 6, 1661. 2015
- “Sensory Modality-Independent Activation of the Brain Network for Language.” S Arana, A Marquand, A Hultén, P Hagoort, JM Schoffelen. Journal of Neuroscience. 40 (14), 2914-2924. 2020
- “Lexical frequency and sentence context influence the brain’s response to single words”. E Huizeling, S Arana, P Hagoort, JM Schoffelen. bioRxiv. 2020
- “The cognate facilitation effect depends on the presence of identical cognates.” SL Arana, HM Oliveira, AI Fernandes, AP Soares, M Comesaña. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 1-19. 2022.
- “MVPA does not reveal neural representations of hierarchical linguistic structure in MEG. SL Arana.” JM Schoffelen, T Mitchell, P Hagoort. bioRxiv. 2021
Siddharth Arora
Research Fellow; Programme Director, Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development; Parkinson's UK Early Career FellowSiddharth completed his DPhil, focused on developing statistical methods for time series forecasting, at Somerville College.
His research interests include Biomedical Signal & Image Processing, Statistical Modelling, Forecasting, and Chaos Synchronization. His work is primarily concerned with two application areas: Healthcare, and Energy.
Currently, Siddharth is investigating remote technologies for the diagnosis and monitoring of Parkinson’s disease. He develops statistical algorithms using data for voice, gait, posture, reaction times, dexterity, and tremor, collected using smartphones in a home and community setting. These algorithms are aimed at identifying patterns in the data, which can be used to discriminate people with Parkinson’s disease from healthy controls and accurately monitor the severity symptoms of the disease over time.
Siddharth is also working on a NHS funded project aimed at predicting the A&E arrivals, admissions and discharges across hospitals in the West Midlands. The algorithms developed as part of this project will be used operationally by the NHS to optimize staffing decisions, which would help reduce patient waiting times.
“Detecting and Monitoring the Symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease using Smartphones: A Pilot Study”, Parkinsonism and Related Disorders, 21, 650–653.
S. Arora, V. Venkataraman, A. Zhan, S. Donohue, K.M. Biglan, E.R. Dorsey, M.A. Little (2015)
“Forecasting Electricity Smart Meter Data Using Conditional Kernel Density Estimation”, Omega, forthcoming.
S. Arora and J.W. Taylor (2014)
“Cortical and Clonal Contribution of Tbr2 Expressing Progenitors in the Developing Mouse Brain”, Cerebral Cortex, forthcoming.
N.A. Vasistha, F. García-Moreno, S. Arora, A.F.P. Cheung, S.J. Arnold, E.J. Robertson and Z. Molnár (2014)
Synchronization of Coupled Map Lattice using Delayed Variable Feedback”, Journal of Applied Nonlinear Dynamics, 3, 245-253.
S. Arora and M.S. Santhanam (2014)
“Short-term Forecasting of Anomalous Load using Rule-based Triple Seasonal Methods”, IEEE Transactions on Power Systems, 28, 3235-3242.
S. Arora and J.W. Taylor (2013)
“Nonlinear and Nonparametric Modelling Approaches for Probabilistic Forecasting of the US Gross National Product”, Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics and Econometrics, 17, 395-420.
S. Arora, M.A. Little and P.E. McSharry (2013)
Dr Michael Ashdown
Practitioner Non-Stipendiary Lecturer in LawMichael is a barrister at Wilberforce Chambers.
Before going to the Bar, Michael spent six years as Fellow and Tutor in law at Somerville College. His research concerned trustees’ powers and duties and the remedial consequences of breaches of trust, with a particular focus on the so-called “rule in Re Hastings-Bass”, and was cited in the Court of Appeal in Pitt v Holt [2011] EWCA Civ 197. He lectured, examined and gave tutorials on the law of trusts and Roman law. He continues to teach land law to Oxford undergraduates.
As a barrister, he appears regularly in the High Court and County Court, both as sole counsel and as a junior in a larger team.
Michael’s particular interests are in all aspects of litigation and advice relating to trusts law. This encompasses both traditional private client work and pension schemes, together with professional negligence in those fields.
Recent notable instructions include:
- British Airways v Maunder. Acting for British Airways in a long-running claim against the trustees of the Airways Pension Scheme for alleged breaches of trust in the exercise of discretionary powers, culminating in a 7-week trial before Morgan J (with Michael Tennet QC and Sebastian Allen).
- Acting (as sole counsel) for a minor beneficiary in two sets of contested High Court proceedings, first pursuant to Schmidt v Rosewood Trust Ltd to obtain trust accounts and other information to explain the diminution of the trust fund, and secondly to remove and replace the existing trustees.
- Acting (as sole counsel) in High Court proceedings for a beneficiary seeking to establish his entitlement to a half share in a substantial trust fund, and to value and realise that share.
- Acting (as sole counsel) for the claimant firm of solicitors in the County Court trial of their claim to recover unpaid fees from a client for whom they had acted in Proceeds of Crime Act proceedings.
- Advising the defendant administrator on claims under the under the Inheritance (Provision for Family of Dependants) Act 1975 concerning overseas property, the validity of UK and foreign marriages and divorces by both claimant and deceased, and the recognition in England of foreign polygamous marriage.
‘English Trust Law Principles’ in S Kempster, M McMillan and A Meek (eds) International Trust Disputes (OUP 2020)
‘Disorder & delayed discovery’ (2019) 169 (7840) New Law Journal 16
‘A modern approach to fraud on a power’ (2018) 24 Trusts & Trustees 653 (with Tiffany Scott QC)
‘Professional Advice’ in PS Davies, S Douglas and J Goudkamp (eds), Defences in Equity (Hart Publishing 2018)
‘Trustee Decision Making: The Rule in Re Hastings-Bass’ (OUP 2015)
‘Laches and limitation’ (2014) Trusts & Trustees 20 (9): 958-965 (with Clare Stanley QC)
Helen Ashdown
Janet Vaughan Tutor in Clinical Medicine (Somerville); General Practitioner; Clinical Lecturer, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health SciencesDr Helen Ashdown is a GP and clinical researcher based in the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences.
Helen completed her pre-clinical training at Cambridge, before moving to Oxford for her clinical studies and post-graduate training and DPhil in academic general practice. She is now an NIHR Academic Clinical Lecturer in the Nuffield Department of Primary Care in Oxford. Her principal research interests are in respiratory disease and diagnosis in primary care, particularly the use of medical devices for diagnosis and monitoring. She also has longstanding interests in infection and child health, particularly infant feeding. Her current research uses information from large linked datasets collected from routine primary care consultations, and diagnostic prospective observational studies of novel medical technologies in primary and ambulatory care.
Helen works part-time as a GP at 19 Beaumont Street surgery in Oxford, where she is the Respiratory Lead GP.
At Somerville, Helen is the lead tutor for Clinical Medicine (Undergraduate Years 4-6 and Graduate Entry Years 2-4) and leads the team of tutors delivering clinical medicine tutorials, as well as having responsibility for pastoral care of students during their clinical years. She is passionate about teaching medicine and helping students to thrive during their time at Somerville.
1. Patel S, Dickinson S, Morris K, Ashdown HF, Chalmers JD. A descriptive cohort study of withdrawal from inhaled corticosteroids in COPD patients. Primary Care Resp J 2022;32:25. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41533-022-00288-6.
2. Ashdown HF, Smith M, McFadden E, Pavord ID, Butler CC, Bafadhel M. Blood eosinophils to guide inhaled maintenance therapy in a primary care COPD population. ERJ Open Res 2021; 8(1):00606-2021. doi: 10.1183/23120541.00606-2021.
3. Smith MC, Ashdown HF, Sheppard JP, Butler CC, Bankhead C. Statin prescription in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and risk of exacerbations: a retrospective cohort study in the Clinical Practice Research Datalink. BMJ Open 2021; 11(12):e050757 doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-050757.
4. Frazer JS, Barnes GE, Woodcock V, Flanagan E, Littlewood T, Stevens RJ, Fleming S and Ashdown HF. Variability in body temperature in healthy adults and in patients receiving chemotherapy: prospective observational cohort study. J Med Eng Technol 2019; 43(5):323-33 doi: 10.1080/03091902.2019.1667446
5. Ashdown H, Steiner M. Delivering high value therapies in COPD: the secret is in the marketing. Eur Respir J 2019; 53(4): 1900215 doi: 10.1183/13993003.00215-2019.
6. Abel L, Dakin HA, Roberts N, Ashdown HF, Butler CC, Hayward G, Van den Bruel A, Turner PJ and Yang Y. Is stratification testing for treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations cost-effective in primary care? An early cost-utility analysis. International J Technol Assess Health Care 2019; 35(2):116-125. doi: 10.1017/S0266462318003707
7. Moore A, Ashdown HF, Shinkins B, Roberts NW, Grant CC, Lasserson DS and Harnden A. Clinical characteristics of pertussis-associated cough: a diagnostic systematic review and meta-analysis. Chest 2017; 152(2):353-367.
8. Fisher RF, Croxson CH, Ashdown HF, Hobbs FR. GP views on strategies to cope with increasing workload: a qualitative study. Br J Gen Pract 2017; 67 (655): e148-e156. doi: 10.3399/bjgp17X688861.
9. Croxson CH, Ashdown HF, Hobbs FR. GPs’ perceptions of workload in England: a qualitative interview study. Br J Gen Pract 2017; 67 (655): e138-e147. doi: 10.3399/bjgp17X688849.
10. Ashdown H and Harnden A (editors). BMJ 10 minute consultations: Primary Care. BPP (London) 2016.
11. Heath L and Ashdown HF. Ask the expert: electronic cigarettes. Innovait 2016 DOI: 10.1177/1755738016654935
12. Ashdown HF, Raisanen U, Wang K, Räisänen U, Ziebland S, Harnden A, for the ARCHIE investigators. Prescribing antibiotics to ‘at-risk’ children with influenza-like illness in primary care: qualitative study. BMJ Open 2016;6:e011497
13. Moore A, Ashdown HF, Harnden A. Pertussis has low prevalence in adults with acute cough and is difficult to distinguish clinically from other causes. Evidence Based Medicine 2016. 21(3) doi: 10.1136/ebmed-2015-110353.
14. Fisher R, Ashdown H, Brettell R, McCartney D. Backgrounds and aspirations of primary care academic clinical fellows. Education for Primary Care 2015;26(6), 444-445. doi: 10.1080/14739879.2015.1101859.
15. Fisher RFR, Ashdown HF, Brettell R, McCartney D. Re: UK academic general practice and primary care. BMJ 2015;351:h4164
16. Ashdown H, McCartney D, Roberts N, Stevens R, Pavord S, Butler CC, Bafadhel M. Inflammatory biomarkers as a predictor of frequency of exacerbations in COPD: a systematic review of biomarkers applicable to primary care. PROSPERO 2015: CRD42015016879.
17. Gill PJ, Ashdown HF, Wang K, Heneghan C, Roberts NW, Harnden A, and Mallett S. Identification of children at risk of influenza-related complications in primary and ambulatory care: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Lancet Resp Med 2015 3:139-49. doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(14)70252-8.
18. Ashdown HF, Fleming S, Spencer EA, Thompson MJ, and Stevens RJ. Diagnostic accuracy study of three alcohol breathalysers marketed for sale to the public. BMJ Open 2014;4:e005811. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005811.
19. Ashdown HF, Ho LP, Haynes JE. Lumps, bumps and diagnostic stumps: a case report. BJGP 2013;63:663-664.
20. Nohavicka L, Ashdown HF, Kelly DK. Determining immunisation status of children from history: a diagnostic accuracy study. BMJ Open 2013;3:e002822. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-002822.
21. Ashdown HF, D’Souza N, Karim D, Stevens RJ, Huang A, and Harnden A. Pain over speed bumps in diagnosis of acute appendicitis: diagnostic accuracy study. BMJ 2012;345:e8012. doi: 10.1136/bmj.e8012.
22. Davis H, Mant D, Scott C, Lasserson D, and Rose PW. Relative impact of clinical evidence and over-the-counter prescribing on topical antibiotic use for acute infective conjunctivitis. BJGP 2009;59:897-900.
23. Davis H, Kennedy S, Prowse A. Endometriosis. In: Schwab M, editor. Encyclopedia of Cancer. 2nd ed. Springer, 2008.
Richard Ashdowne
Lecturer in LinguisticsI teach linguistics to undergraduates at colleges across the University, including Somerville.
I provide supervision and teaching for students doing linguistics as part of a degree in Modern Languages and Linguistics, or Psychology, Philosophy, and Linguistics.
My background is in Classics and linguistics. I read Classics as an undergraduate at New College, Oxford, and then completed a DPhil in linguistics, working on aspects of forms of address in Latin and the Romance languages, including their grammar, meanings, and uses. My main interests are in questions of how languages change in general and in the history of Latin and French in particular. Within this my research has often focused on changes that relate to semantics or pragmatics, such as the lexicography of medieval Latin and the history of T/V distinctions in romance languages.
Since finishing my doctorate, I have taught both Classics and linguistics at a number of colleges across Oxford as well as for the university. From 2004 to 2008, I was a member of the Classics Faculty Language Teaching Team and during that time he and James Morwood published Writing Latin (Bristol Classical Press, 2007), an introduction to prose composition in Latin. In 2008 I joined the faculty research project preparing the Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources, first as an assistant editor, in which role I was instrumental in developing the project’s use of technology; from 2011-14 I was the Dictionary’s final editor. Since 2014 I have been Lecturer in Classical Languages at University College, in which role I provide language teaching to the college’s classics students.
‘-mannus makyth man(n)? Latin as an indirect source for English lexical history’
2020
Chapter
The Multilingual Origins of Standard English
‘Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources’
April 2018
Book
Adams (J.N.) ‘An Anthology of Informal Latin, 200 BC – AD 900. Fifty Texts with Translations and Linguistic Commentary.’ Pp. xii + 719. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016. ISBN: 978-1-107-03977-3.
January 2018
Journal article
Classical Review
Introduction
January 2017
Chapter
Latin in Medieval Britain
‘Address systems’
March 2016
Chapter
The Oxford Guide to the Romance Languages
‘Dictionaries of dead languages’
November 2015
Chapter
The Oxford Handbook of Lexicography
Löfstedt – (P.) Poccetti (ed.) Einar Löfstedt nei percorsi della linguistica e della filologia latina. Atti del Convegno internazionale, Roma, 6–7 maggio 2004. (Ricerche sulle lingue di frammentaria attestazione 4.) Pp…
October 2009
Journal article
The Classical Review
Professor Bolanle Awe
Honorary FellowBolanle Awe (Yoruba: Bọ́láńlé (Fájẹ́m̄bọ́là) Awẹ́) is a Nigerian and Yoruba history professor and pioneer of feminist history, intersectional thought and decolonisation.
Professor Awe was born on January 28, 1933, in the town of Ilesa, Nigeria. After taking a Master’s in History from St Andrew’s, she came to Somerville to read for her DPhil in 1958. She returned to Nigeria in 1960, where she became the first woman formally appointed to academic office in a Nigerian university. Following a stint at the University of Lagos, she returned to Ibadan, where she was promoted to Professor of Oral History in 1976.
Awe’s work is ground-breaking on several fronts. Her interest in oral history has made her a pioneer in documenting the pre-colonial histories of Nigeria and the Yoruba people, as well as an early advocate for the decolonisation of African history. She is also pioneering as a feminist historian, where her use of oral history helped restore the narratives of previously overlooked or misrepresented women such as Efunsetan Aniwura.
Awe was one of those pioneering women who began to use the master’s tools of academic knowledge and power to demolish the house built on male hegemony.’
TOYIN FALOLA, HONORARY PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA
Awe was also one of the first people to critique the Western, liberal feminist position which universalises women’s subjugation under patriarchal rule. As an advocate of nuanced intersectional thought, Awe argued that we can better serve women’s causes by understanding the history of oppression from culture to culture. In 1983, Awe was made an Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. She retired from teaching and government roles in 1998. In 2005 she became the Pro-Chancellor of the University of Nigeria in Nsukka, and in 2018 she received an honorary doctorate from the University of Ibadan on its seventieth anniversary.
Ammar Azzouz
Research Fellow; British Academy Postdoctoral FellowDr Ammar Azzouz is a Research Fellow at the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and a Research Fellow of Somerville College.
He is the Principal Investigator of ‘Slow Violence and the City’, a research project that examines the impact of violence on the built environment at the time of war and peace.
Dr Azzouz studied architecture in the city of Homs, Syria, where he was born and raised. Since the start of the Syrian Revolution, over half of the neighbourhoods of Homs have been destroyed. In 2011, he moved to the UK to complete his postgraduate studies and received his PhD from the University of Bath. He has not been able to return to Homs since then.
Dr Azzouz has earned a wide recognition as a researcher, academic, architect and writer. His research on inclusive and diverse cities, queering public space, cultural heritage, architecture and war, reconstruction and forced migration has been featured in different platforms such as the New York Times, The Conversation, The New Statesman, New Lines Magazine, Middle East Eye, and also in academic journals such as Antipode, CITY, Change Over Time, Urban Studies and International Journal of Urban and Regional Research.
Azzouz’s first book, Domicide: Architecture, War and the Destruction of Home in Syria (Bloomsbury, 2023), offers fresh insights into the role of the architects during time of war. It explores how architecture is contested and weaponised during years of conflicts, and how the future reconstruction of cities should mirror the wants and needs of local communities. The book has a foreword, by Lyse Doucet, the BBC’s Chief International Correspondent.
Before moving to academia, Azzouz worked in the private sector, at Arup. There, he established and led several research projects on themes related to forced migration, destruction of cities and cultural heritage. One of his projects included interviews with displaced people impacted by wars, and also academics researching wars and cities at different times in history and in different geographies (e.g. Spain, Poland, Bosnia and Syria).
Chris Bamber
ICT ManagerChris Bamber and the IT team are responsible for maintaining and developing the College IT network infrastructure and systems and for the College computers and printers. They can also give some advice on the purchase of computers.
Chris has been with the College since December 1997 when he took up the new created position of Computing Officer. The role allowed the college to provide professional IT services to staff and students on a full-time basis.
Since then Chris and his team have kept the college’s ICT infrastructure current through one of the fastest technological growths over the last two decades.
Daniel Barker-Flores
Graduate Teaching AssistantI am a DPhil student in Politics at the DPIR, and a member of Green Templeton College.
My doctoral research focuses on state efforts to augment territorial control in urban spaces governed by organised criminal groups, and draws on cases from Mexico, Colombia and Brazil. My thesis employs qualitative methods, using data gathered through extensive fieldwork. My thesis relates to several of my core research interests, which include state building, the politics of organised crime, conflict and violence, and sub-national politics.
My research is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, as part of the Grand Union DTP, and by Green Templeton College, through the Sir David Watson Scholarship. Prior to undertaking my DPhil, I received my BA at UCL before undertaking my postgraduate studies (MSc) at Oxford. Alongside my research, I have taught the undergraduate course ‘Politics in Latin America’ at various Oxford colleges.
Grace Barnes
Clinical Non-Stipendiary LecturerProfessor Caroline Barron OBE
Honorary FellowProfessor Caroline Barron is a medieval historian whose research centres on the late medieval period in Britain.
She served as President of the London and Middlesex Archaelogical Society from 2008-2011 and as President of the British Association for Local History since 2016. She is also a former President of the Somerville Association.
She was appointed OBE in the 2019 Birthday Honours for her services to education.