Rasmus Bakken
Stipendiary LecturerRasmus is a DPhil student with an interest in the philosophy of mathematics. His main interest lies at the intersection of axiomatic theories of truth and set theory.
With his supervisor, Professor Volker Halbach, he is currently looking at ways of extending the base theory of certain axiomatic theories of truth from arithmetic to set theory. This will allow him to explore the proof-theoretical consequences of adding axiomatic theories of truth to set theory.
Rasmus has an MA (Hons) in Philosophy and Mathematics from the University of Edinburgh and an MSc in Mathematics and Foundations of Computer Science from the University of Oxford.
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.
Alice Barron
Stipendiary LecturerAlice Barron is a violinist and collaborator based in London.
She enjoys a varied career combining orchestral, chamber and solo performances with improvisatory and multi-disciplinary projects. Specialising in contemporary and intercultural musics, recent performances include projects with Nigel Kennedy, Jean-Luc Ponty, L. Subramaniam and with Sam Lee at WOMAD festival in Australia and New Zealand. Alice’s collaborative work is genre-spanning and draws on her experiences studying South Indian violin techniques.
Professor Janet Bately CBE
Honorary FellowJanet Bately is Sir Israel Gollancz Professor Emeritus of English Language and Medieval Literature, King’s College, London.
A student at Somerville College Oxford, she began her academic career at Birkbeck College London, where she was successively Assistant Lecturer, Lecturer and Reader, moving to King’s College, London as Professor of English Language and Literature in 1977. She was elected Fellow of the British Academy in 1990 and made CBE in 2000. Still actively engaged in research, her specialisms are in Old English language and literature, and bilingual dictionaries of the 16th and 17th centuries.
Anthony Bell FRS
Senior Research Fellow; Emeritus Professor in PhysicsAfter a PhD in Radio Astronomy in Cambridge, Tony Bell worked on radar signal processing with Marconi before moving to the Central Laser Facility as a laser-plasma theorist.
In 1985 he was appointed to a lectureship in the Plasma Group at Imperial College. In 2007, following two years with the Methodist Church, he moved to a joint appointment between the Clarendon Laboratory and the Central Laser Facility.
His research encompasses laboratory and astrophysical plasmas. He wrote one of four independent papers proposing the theory of cosmic ray acceleration by shocks. He showed how strong magnetic field is generated during particle acceleration and how it enables cosmic ray acceleration to high energy. He initiated the theory of non-local transport for heat flow in Inertial Confinement Fusion, explained the collimation of laser-produced energetic electrons by resistively generated magnetic field, and with John Kirk demonstrated the possibility of electron-positron pair production in ultra-high intensity laser-plasma interactions.
He has been awarded the Hoyle Prize of the Institute of Physics and the Eddington Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society
After a PhD in Radio Astronomy in Cambridge, Tony Bell worked on radar signal processing with Marconi before moving to the Central Laser Facility as a laser-plasma theorist. In 1985 he was appointed to a lectureship in the Plasma Group at Imperial College. In 2007, following two years with the Methodist Church, he moved to a joint appointment between the Clarendon Laboratory and the Central Laser Facility.
His research encompasses laboratory and astrophysical plasmas. He wrote one of four independent papers proposing the theory of cosmic ray acceleration by shocks. He showed how strong magnetic field is generated during particle acceleration and how it enables cosmic ray acceleration to high energy. He initiated the theory of non-local transport for heat flow in Inertial Confinement Fusion, explained the collimation of laser-produced energetic electrons by resistively generated magnetic field, and with John Kirk demonstrated the possibility of electron-positron pair production in ultra-high intensity laser-plasma interactions.
He has been awarded the Hoyle Prize of the Institute of Physics and the Eddington Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society.
For more information, see Professor Bell’s departmental web page.
‘Fornax A, Centaurus A and other radio galaxies as sources of ultra-high energy cosmic rays’
James H Matthews, Anthony R Bell, Katherine M Blundell, AT Araudo
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters Oxford University Press 479:1 (2018) L76-L80
‘Electron acceleration by wave turbulence in a magnetized plasma’
Alexandra Rigby, F Cruz, B Albertazzi, R Bamford, A Bell, JE Cross, F Fraschetti, P Graham, Y Hara, PM Kozlowski, Y Kuramitsu, DQ Lamb, S Lebedev, F Miniati, T Morita, M Oliver, B Reville, Y Sakawa, S Sarkar, C Spindloe, R Trines, R Bingham, M Koenig, Gianluca Gregori
Nature Physics Springer Nature 14 (2018) 475-479
‘Laboratory evidence of dynamo amplification of magnetic fields in a turbulent plasma’
P Tzeferacos, Alexandra Rigby, A Bott, A Bell, R Bingham, A Casner, F Cattaneo, EM Churazov, J Emig, F Fiuza, CB Forest, J Foster, C Graziani, J Katz, M Koenig, CK Li, Jena Meinecke, R Petrasso, HS Park, BA Remington, JS Ross, D Ryu, D Ryutov, TG White, B Reville
Nature Communications Springer Nature 9 (2018) 591
‘Turbulent amplification of magnetic field and diffusive shock acceleration of cosmic rays’
AR Bell
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 353 (2), 550-558
‘The acceleration of cosmic rays in shock fronts–I’
AR Bell
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 182 (2), 147-156
Georgina Benn
Fulford Junior Research FellowI am a Wellcome Trust early career fellow in the Department of Biochemistry. My research investigates organisation and biophysical properties of bacterial membranes.
I first started looking at the outer membrane during my PhD in the lab of Bart Hoogenboom at University College London. I then did a postdoc in the lab of Prof Tom Silhavy at Princeton University, where I learnt bacterial genetics.
In Oxford, I am looking at how and why the outer membrane of species like E. coli are kept organised and highly immobile. These are intriguing properties, since cells must be dynamic to survive. They must insert new proteins and lipids to grow, move molecules laterally to migrate, and deform the membrane to divide. I investigate these properties using atomic force microscopy, bacterial genetics and super resolution microscopy.
See full list here.
Diane Berry
Payroll OfficerLiliia Bespala
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral FellowI am a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Oxford, working across the Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics and the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences. My research sits at the intersection of linguistics, social science and applied healthcare, focusing on language aspects of clinical interactions.
With a background in sociolinguistics, my earlier work examined language variation and change in multicultural settings. Over more than a decade of teaching English and clinical communication to medical students in Ukraine, I became increasingly interested in how linguistic practices shape clinical encounters and influence the uptake of medical advice.
My research draws on Conversation Analysis and Discourse Analysis to investigate how clinicians use language to navigate sensitivities of advice-giving, maintain rapport, and support behaviour change—particularly in the context of weight management. In addition to theoretical contributions, I am involved in applied projects that translate linguistic insights into practical communication strategies for healthcare providers.
Beyond academia, I have worked as an interpreter for election observation missions with the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, supporting real-time communication in high-stakes, politically sensitive contexts. This experience has deepened my understanding of language under pressure and the ethical dimensions of communication.
I work across a range of externally funded studies. I previously held a prestigious British Academy fellowship, and I am a co-investigator on a NIHR policy research programme grant.
I am committed to interdisciplinary collaboration, international academic exchange, and public engagement, with a particular focus on improving the policies and practices of healthcare communication through linguistically informed research.
Research Interests
- Clinical Communication
- Conversation Analysis
- Discourse Analysis
- Interactional Linguistics
- Sociolinguistics
Mahek Bhatia
MCR Disabled Students RepMahek Bhatia is reading for the MSc in Criminology and Criminal Justice in the Faculty of Law. She is interested in the intersections between feminist legal theories and criminal justice, specifically within the context of marital sexual violence.
Previously, she served as an Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion Officer at Warwick Law School during her LLB, where she actively engaged with various departments and committees to represent student concerns.
As your Disabled Students’ Representative, she is interested in making available resources more accessible to students, and building a community and forum for students to voice their disability-related concerns. Please feel free to reach out to her to voice any issues you may be facing, or if you just want to chat.
Orna Ni Bhroin
Clinical Non-Stipendiary LecturerElaine Boorman
Assistant College AccountantElaine and the Treasury team are responsible for the College accounts, banking and finances, for student fees and battels, for payments to suppliers, for invoicing, for loans and grants to students including vacation and hardship grants, and for general advice on financial matters, particularly in cases of financial difficulty.
Dr Doreen Boyce
Honorary FellowDoreen Boyce (1953, PPE) is an Honorary Fellow of Somerville and former Provost and Dean of Faculty at Chatham College (1974-1980).
An influential campaigner for equal opportunities in the workplace, she was President of the Buhl Foundation (1982-2007) and founded the Executive Women’s Council to provide a source of collective support and influence for professional women.
Alfie Brazier
JCR Men's and Gender Minorities Welfare OfficerI’m Alfie (he/him) and I’m super excited to work be one of your welfare officers this year!
I am a big music fan, playing, writing, streaming, singing, going to gigs or whatever else, (did someone say top 0.5% Taylor Swift fan on Spotify?). I also love baking, so if you have cooked up any cool creations please send me pics and I will be very jealous of you for getting to eat them!
Our role as welfare officers is to make sure Somerville is a place where people can feel comfortable, welcome, and able to talk freely about any mental health issues they may be facing. Despite restrictions in England having been almost completely eased, coronavirus is still likely to impact student experience this year, so we want to make sure that you can access all support available to you. We’re here to provide non-judgmental support for any concern you might have. I have completed 24 hours of peer support training to develop the necessary skills to support students. Katie will do the peer support training in Oxford as soon as they can.
We’ll also be hosting fortnightly welfare teas where you and your peers can come and enjoy all the (free!) snacks and take some time out of your hectic Oxford life to relax. Members of the welfare team will also be there, but there’s no obligation to talk to them if you’re just in it for the free food and chill. In 5th week (aka welfare week) we’ll be hosting tons of events to help fight off those pesky 5th week blues (activities normally include a bouncy castle and having alpacas visit on the quad, a cookie fairy and much more!!).