Young Chan Kim
Clinical Non-Stipendiary Lecturer; Sir Henry Wellcome Fellow; Principal Investigator; Junior Research Fellow (Wolfson); NHS DoctorI am Sir Henry Wellcome Fellow, Principal Investigator (PI), Junior Research Fellow (JRF) at Wolfson College, and NHS doctor.
I completed a BSc degree in Biochemistry from Imperial College London and my medical degrees (BMBS, BMedSci and MRes) from the University of Nottingham. I then spent few years working in junior doctor posts before coming to Oxford to start a DPhil in Clinical Medicine. My DPhil studies focused on vaccine development against arthropod-borne viruses supported by Innovate UK funding. I was awarded highly prestigious NDM Graduate Student Prize 2020 (Overall Prize Winner) for my overall performance during my DPhil at the Nuffield Department of Medicine (NDM) and a NIHR Oxford BRC Grant to support my research as a Postdoctoral Fellow. In 2022, I was awarded the Sir Henry Wellcome Fellowship to start my independent research on vaccine development against emerging arboviruses. In 2022-2023, I have been awarded MRC HIC-VAC and MRC IAA grants to develop serological assays against typhoid and paratyphoid fever and the MLSTF grant to develop a vaccine against Chagas disease.
I am currently a Sir Henry Wellcome Fellow, a Principal Investigator (PI) at the Oxford Vaccine Group (OVG), a JRF Fellow at Wolfson College, a Lecturer in Medicine at Somerville College, and a doctor in Acute Internal Medicine in the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
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López-Camacho C & Kim YC, et al. (2019). Assessment of Immunogenicity and Neutralisation Efficacy of Viral-Vectored Vaccines Against Chikungunya Virus. Viruses, 11 (4).
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Kim YC, et al (2020). COVID-19 Vaccines: Breaking Record Times to First-in-Human Trials. NPJ Vaccines, 5, 34.
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Kim YC, et al (2020). Evaluation of Chimpanzee Adenovirus and MVA Expressing TRAP and CSP from Plasmodium Cynomolgi to Prevent Malaria Relapse in Nonhuman Primates. Vaccines (Basel), 8 (3).
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Folegatti P, et al (2021). A single dose of ChAdOx1 Chik vaccine induces neutralizing antibodies against four chikungunya virus lineages in a phase 1 clinical trial. Nat Commun. 12, 4636 2021.
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Kim YC, et al (2022). Development of novel viral vectored vaccines and virus replicon particle-based neutralization assay against Mayaro virus. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 4105.
Patricia Kingori
Senior Research Fellow; Professor in Global Health Ethics; Wellcome Senior Investigator;Professor Patricia Kingori is a Wellcome Senior Investigator at the Wellcome Centre for Ethics and Humanities, a Professor of Global Health Ethics at the University of Oxford’s Ethox Centre and a Senior Research Fellow of Somerville College.
Professor Kingori’s research explores the intersection between the Sociology of Science and Medicine. She has studied the ethical issues experienced by clinical trial fieldworkers, Ebola treatment staff, emergency healthcare professionals, and frontline responders in humanitarian crises. As a health ethicist, Professor Kingori has also advised international organisations including the WHO and the UK government’s SAGE COVID-19 advisory group.
Professor Kingori’s work also seeks to reveal the systemic inequalities persisting in today’s global society. Her Wellcome research project “Fakes, Fabrications and Falsehoods” explores notions of authenticity as a global means of perpetuating privilege, while her “After the End” project investigates who decides when a crisis is over. Her work on the billion dollar “fake essay” industry in which uncredited Kenyan scholars write academic papers for students in the Global North, was the subject of the 2025 film The Shadow Scholars, directed by award-winning filmmaker Eloise King.
In 2021, Professor Kingori made history by becoming the youngest Black woman to receive a full professorship in the history of Oxford and Cambridge universities. Patricia has also been awarded a Merit Award by the University of Oxford in recognition of the standards of academic excellence in her role. In 2015, she was awarded a place on the prestigious Powerlist in recognition of her position as among <1% of Black British female academics employed by an Oxbridge institution.
No Jab, No Job? Ethical Issues in Mandatory COVID-19 Vaccination of Healthcare Personnel.
Journal article
Gur-Arie R. et al, (2021), BMJ Glob Health, 6
A graphic elicitation technique to represent patient rights.
Journal article
McGowan CR. et al, (2020), Confl Health, 14
Structural coercion in the context of community engagement in global health research conducted in a low resource setting in Africa.
Journal article
Nyirenda D. et al, (2020), BMC Med Ethics, 21
In emergencies, health research must go beyond public engagement toward a true partnership with those affected.
Journal article
Wright K. et al, (2020), Nat Med
Dame Emma Kirkby
Honorary FellowDame Carolyn Emma Kirkby, DBE, is an English soprano and one of the world’s most renowned early music specialists.
She has sung on over 100 recordings. Kirkby was a founding member of the Taverner Choir, and in 1973 began her long association with the Consort of Musicke. She took part in the early Decca Florilegium recordings with both the Consort of Musicke and the Academy of Ancient Music, at a time when most college-trained sopranos were not developing a vocal sound appropriate for early music.
She taught for many years at Dartington International Summer School, the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, as well as the Bel Canto Summer School. In 2010 she became President of Dartington Community Choir. In 1994, she was awarded an Honorary Degree (Doctor of Music) from the University of Bath. On 21 January 2011 it was announced that Kirkby had been awarded the Queen’s Medal for Music, an award funded by the Privy Purse and given to an individual who has had a major influence on the musical life of the nation.
Thaddeus Komacek
Fellow & Tutor in PhysicsI am a planetary physicist and a Tutorial Fellow in Physics at Somerville. My research is focused on theoretical and numerical studies of the atmospheric dynamics and climate of exoplanets. This work covers a broad range of planetary climates, including the extreme atmospheres of close-in extrasolar gas giant (or “hot Jupiter”) planets, atmospheres of temperate Earth-sized rocky planets, and regimes in between. I completed my bachelor’s degrees in Geophysical Sciences and Physics at the University of Chicago and my Ph.D in Planetary Sciences in the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona. I was previously a 51 Pegasi b postdoctoral fellow at the University of Chicago and an Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland before moving to Oxford in 2024.
Dr Markos Koumaditis
University of Oxford HR Director and Additional Fellow of Somerville CollegeMarkos joined the University in September 2022 after spending three years leading the people strategy at the House of Commons. Prior to this, he spent over a decade advising on people practice and organisational development at London South Bank University, becoming its Group People Director in 2019. Throughout his career, Markos’ focus has been on improving workplace cultures, leadership capability, staff engagement and inclusion, and capability for digital transformation. Markos has a PhD in Modern European History from Kings College London, and has studied in his native Greece, as well as in Italy and the UK. He is a qualified executive coach, a Freeman of the Guild of HR Professionals, a graduate of the first cohort of McKinsey Senior Leadership Master Class for senior LGBT executives and a Stonewall Leadership programme alumnus.
Philip Kreager
Senior Research Fellow; Tutor and Lecturer in Demography, Institute of Human Sciences; Director, Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group; Research Associate, School of SociologyPhilip Kreager is Senior Research Fellow in Human Sciences at Somerville College; Tutor and Lecturer in Demography in the Institute of Human Sciences; and Director, Fertility and Reproduction Studies Group and Research Associate, School of Sociology, Oxford.
He is currently Sanofi Chair, Centre Virchow-Villermé, at the University of Paris-Descartes. He is also a Research Associate of the Department of Sociology in Oxford, Senior Research Fellow, Oxford Institute of Ageing, and Honorary Professor, Institute of Ageing, University of Indonesia.
His current research, with Professor Kevin Baird of the Oxford-Eijkman Institute in Jakarta, is Determinants of treatment-seeking behaviour and equality of access to early detection and treatment averting severe and fatal malaria in rural, impoverished settings of Nusa Tenggara Timur, Indonesia, a medical and anthropological demographic study of social structural and other impediments to malarial treatment, under the Wellcome-ISSF funding scheme. From September 2015-2018 he will be co-investigator with Professor Mark Harrison and others on a Wellcome Trust project in the history of medicine, Malaria and the Dilemmas of Development. In 2011-12 he was, with Giang Thanh Long, Sri Moertiningsih Adioetomo, P. Loyd-Sherlock, chief consultant to the National Team for Accelerating Poverty Reduction, Office of the Vice-President, Government of Indonesia (TNP2K). During 1999-2007 he was Director of Ageing in Indonesia, a multi-site longitudinal study of ageing in three communities, supported by the Welcome Trust.
‘What Graunt Did, or The Emergence of Population’ (in press). In N. Hopwood, L. Kassell, and R. Fleming, eds., Reproduction: From Antiquity to the Present, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
‘Population – A Long View’ (2015, in press) Population Studies.
‘Population and the Making of the Human Sciences: A Historical Outline’ (2015), in P. Kreager, B. Winney, S. Ulijaszek and C. Capelli, eds., Population in the Human Sciences: Concepts, Models, Evidence. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
(with B. Winney, S. Ulijaszek and C. Capelli) (2015) ‘Introduction’, in P. Kreager, B. Winney, S. Ulijaszek and C. Capelli, eds., Population in the Human Sciences: Concepts, Models, Evidence. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
(with E. Schröder-Butterfill) (2015) ‘Differential Impacts of Migration on the Family Networks of Older People in Indonesia: A Comparative Analysis’, In.Lan Anh Hoang and Brenda Yeoh, eds. Transnational Labour Migration, Remittances and the Changing Family in Asia. London: Palgrave MacMillan.
‘On the History of Malthusian Thought: A Review Essay’ (2014) Population and Development Review 40,4:731-742
(with E. Schröder-Butterfill) (2014) ‘Cultural Variations in Daughter Preference in Rural Indonesia’, Gender and Ageing: Southeast Asian Perspectives, T. Devasahayam, ed., Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, pp. 150-173.
Humanities Graduates and the British Economy: The Hidden Impact (2013), Oxford University. Also available at: www.torch.ox.ac.uk/graduateimpact
(with Giang Thanh Long, Sri Moertiningsih Adioetomo, P. Loyd-Sherlock) (2012), Social Assistance Needs of Poor and Vulnerable Older People in Indonesia. Jakarta: Government of Indonesia and Help Age International.
‘The Challenge of Compositional Demography’ (2011), Asian Population Studies 7, 3:85-88.
(with Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill) (2010) ‘Age-Structural Transition in Indonesia: A Comparison of Macro- and Micro-Level Evidence’, Asian Population Studies 6:1,25-45.
‘Darwin and Lotka: Two Concepts of Population’ (2009) Demographic Research 21: 16, 469-502.
‘Ageing, Finance and Civil Society: Notes for an Agenda’, in E. N. Arifin and A. Ananta, eds, Older Persons in Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore, 2009, pp. 361-91.
‘Aristotle and Open Population Thinking’ (2008) Population and Development Review 34:4, 599-629.
(with Elisabeth Schröder-Butterfill) (2008) ‘Indonesia Against the Trend? Ageing and Inter-Generational Wealth Flows in Two Indonesian Communities’, Special Issue on Strong Family Ties, Demographic Research 19:52, 1781-1810.
(with E. Hogervorst, T. Sadjimim, A. Yesufu, and T. B. Raharjdo) (2008) ‘High Tofu Intake is Associated with Worse Memory in Elderly Indonesian Men and Women’, Dementia and Geriatric Cognitive Disorders 26:50-57.
(with E. Indrizal and E. Schröder-Butterfill), (2008) ‘Old-age vulnerability in a matrilineal society: The case of the Minangkabau of Sumatra, Indonesia’. In The Cultural Context of Aging: Worldwide Perspectives, 3rd edition, in J. Sokolovsky, ed., Praeger Publishers, Westport.
‘Population Ageing, Political Transition, and Civil Society: A Comparison of Indonesia and Poland’, (2008), in G. Sinigoj, G. Jones, K. Hirokawa, S. Linhart, and eds., The Impact of Ageing: A Common Challenge for Europe and Asia, Vienna: LIT Press, pp.149-170.
Apoorva Kulkarni
Matric Year: 2020 – Subject: DPhil Biology – Scholarship: Indira Gandhi ScholarApoorva is an ecologist, primarily interested in all aspects of human-animal interactions and applied conservation. Her DPhil research draws from interdisciplinary fields of natural and social sciences to investigate farmer-wildlife conflict and co-existence, crop losses and livelihood interventions in transitional forest landscapes. Her research is based out of the Central Western Ghats of Karnataka, India, alongside the marginal farmers of Indo-African Siddi community, local NGOs and government stakeholders. Her study adopts the UN Sustainable Development Goal 2 Zero Hunger and Goal 15 Life on Land.
She is currently an associate at the Linnean Society of London, an honorary member of the Indigenous Peoples’ and Community Conserved Areas (ICCAs) Consortium and a steering committee member of the IUCN SSC Pigeon and Dove Specialist Group. Her past work includes community-based species conservation, animal movement ecology, bioacoustics studies and documenting traditional ecological knowledge, both in terrestrial as well as marine realms.
Apoorva holds a Masters in Ecology (2013) from Pondicherry University and is the second Indian woman to have received the Global Fellowship in Marine Conservation by Duke University. For her Master’s research, she was funded by the International Otter Survival Fund (IOSF) to study the conflict situation between Smooth-coated otters and fishermen, and associated socio-economics in the Cauvery River, India. After her Masters and stint at Duke, she received a follow-up grant by Oak Foundation to collaborate with Conservation International, Brazil and founded the Marine Conservation without Borders initiative with her colleagues at Bahia, Brazil.
On returning to India, Apoorva worked as a Research Associate at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE) on the India Biodiversity Portal project. She then went on to work as a Research Assistant at the University of Lethbridge, Canada for a year to study the acoustic communication of the endemic Adelaide’s warbler in Puerto Rico. On her return, she found the need to facilitate field research in India, engage local communities and children in field ecology studies, and thus began the Curious Naturalists Initiative in the Western Ghats. She also collaborates as a research affiliate with the Wildlife Information Liaison Development (WILD) Society in India.
Alongside research, Apoorva is also an active participant at policy based global forums such as the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity- Conference of the Parties (UN CBD-COP) and Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) COP representing youth and indigenous communities for wildlife conservation. She is also a trained Natural History Illustrator and sketches the wonders of nature, which inspire her to keep going in the midst of all the socio-ecological crisis.
Deepa Kurup
Matric Year: 2014 – Subject: DPhil International Development – Scholarship: Indira Gandhi ScholarAfter finishing an MSc at the School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies, Oxford University, and an MPhil in Development Studies at the Oxford Department of International Development, both with distinctions, I am now pursuing a DPhil in International Development.
I was awarded Somerville’s 2017 Principal’s Prize for academic excellence. My Masters at Oxford was funded by the Louis Dreyfus-Weidenfeld scholarship, while the MPhil-Dphil is supported by the university’s Indira Gandhi scholarship.
Prior to this, I worked for over 7 years as a journalist with a leading national newspaper The Hindu in Bangalore. I reported on topics ranging from higher education, technology and finance to more specialized focus areas such as the state of labour, work and wages of the vast urban working class in India. My occasional stints with reporting in rural areas got me interested in contemporary development theory. After this academic stint, I intend to return to the field of journalism with grounding and expertise in development studies. As a development expert, with the experience and know-how of mainstream journalism, I hope to be able to make vital interventions. My long-term goal is to be able to lead a team that can steer the agenda on development reporting, both in terms of grassroots reportage and incisive commentary.
My DPhil research focusses on the political economy of social protection programmes in India. It interrogates whether social sector schemes can ‘transform’ the social relations of production in village societies, and probes the determinants of such transformation. My research takes a comparative political economy approach to understanding transformative processes in rural India.
Andrea Kusec
Fulford Junior Research FellowMy research focuses on developing accessible mental health interventions for adults with different types of brain injuries, such as a stroke, traumatic brain injury, or brain tumours.
Specifically, my research aims to: 1) identify risk factors for poor mental health unique to brain injury populations; and, 2) develop and experimentally test novel mental health interventions that are accessible to brain injury survivors in light of cognitive impairments. My ultimate aim is to improve treatment options for mental health in neuropsychological populations. To achieve these goals, I use a mixture of advanced quantitative (mixed-effects models, structural equation models, risk prediction modelling) and qualitative (thematic analysis, interpretive description) methods.
After completing my Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Canada, I completed my PhD training at the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit at the University of Cambridge with Dr Tom Manly. For my PhD, I developed and evaluated an intervention for depression and low mood in adults with acquired brain injury in a randomised controlled trial.
In the Translational Neuropsychology Group, I work with Prof Nele Demeyere on developing an improved cognitive care pathway for stroke survivors. In this role, I aim to elucidate the relationship between cognitive impairments and emotional outcomes following stroke, with an eye toward leveraging cognitive strategies as a means of improving mood and vice versa.
Afua Kyei
Honorary FellowAfua was appointed Chief Financial Officer, Executive Director of the Bank of England aged 36 in 2019, making her the first black senior executive in the Bank’s 329 year history. Her tenure so far has seen the Bank handle unprecedented challenges, including Brexit, the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the September 2022 mini-budget, and the ongoing inflation and cost of living crises. Her current responsibilities include developing the Bank’s strategy and the financial governance of the Bank’s c. £1 trillion balance sheet.
Afua also serves as the Bank of England’s co-executive sponsor for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and co-executive sponsor for Climate Change disclosure. In 2021, she won CFO of the Year at the Women in Finance Awards UK, and in October 2022 she was named in the Powerlist, which profiles 100 of Britain’s most influential Britons of African heritage. She was a 2022 listee in the Kindness & Leadership, 50 Leading Lights UK campaign. Afua is a key note speaker and represents the Bank in the Community, with Businesses and at international fora e.g. International Monetary Fund, G20, World Finance Forum & COP.
Afua joined the Bank from Barclays Bank (2012-2019) where she was the Chief Financial Officer Mortgages and played a key role in Barclays’ strategic cost transformation program, TRANSFORM, whilst in the Investment Bank and in Group COO. Previously, during the Global Financial Crisis, she was an Investment Banker at UBS (2007-2012) in the Financial Institutions Group and in Mergers and Acquisitions, Group Strategic Advisory. After university, Afua qualified as a Chartered Accountant (ICAS) with Ernst & Young, London.
Afua matriculated at Oxford University one year early, gaining an undergraduate Master’s in Chemistry (2000-2004). She was awarded a Junior Research Fellowship in Organic Chemistry by Princeton University.
Of her Honorary Fellowship, Afua said, “To be invited to be an Honorary Fellow of Somerville is the greatest honour and took me completely by surprise!”
“I loved my time at Somerville. It played such an instrumental role in my career and I made lifelong friends.”
Lovers and Strangers: An Immigrant History of Post-War Britain (London: Allen Lane/Penguin Random House, 2017).
The Best Are Leaving: Emigration and Post-War Irish Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).
Dublin 1916: The Siege of the GPO (London: Profile, 2009; Harvard: Harvard University Press, 2009).
That Neutral Island: A History of Ireland during the Second World War (London, Faber and Faber, 2007; Boston, Harvard University Press, 2007).
General Editor, with Bourke, Kilfeather, Luddy, MacCurtain, Meaney, Ní Dhonnchadha, O’Dowd., The Field Day Anthology of Irish Women’s Writing and Traditions, Vols. 4 & 5. (Cork: Cork University Press in association with Field Day, 2002).
Reading Paul Muldoon (Newcastle-Upon-Tyne: Bloodaxe Books, 1998).
Improprieties: Politics and Sexuality in Northern Irish Poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1993).
Simon Kyle
Senior Research Fellow; Professor of Experimental and Clinical Sleep Research; Programme Director of The Oxford Online Programme in Sleep Medicine; NIHR Oxford BRC Senior Research FellowI have specific research interests in the etiology and management of sleep disturbance and the interaction between sleep disturbance and mental health.
This is a selection of Professor Kyle’s Key Publications. You can review a complete bibliography here.
‘Clinical and cost-effectiveness of nurse-delivered sleep restriction therapy for insomnia in primary care (HABIT): a pragmatic, superiority, open-label, randomised controlled trial’. Kyle SD. et al, (2023), The Lancet
‘The effect of sleep restriction therapy for insomnia on sleep pressure and arousal: a randomized controlled mechanistic trial’. Maurer LF. et al, (2021), Sleep
‘Amygdala responses to negative faces are not associated with depressive symptoms: cross-sectional data from 28,638 individuals in the UK Biobank cohort’. Tamm S. et al, (2022), American Journal of Psychiatry
‘Isolating the role of time in bed restriction in the treatment of insomnia: a randomized, controlled, dismantling trial comparing sleep restriction therapy with time in bed regularization’. Maurer LF. et al, (2020), Sleep, 43
‘The effects of digital cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia on cognitive function: a randomized controlled trial’. Kyle SD. et al, (2020), Sleep, 43
‘Biological and clinical insights from genetics of insomnia symptoms’. Lane JM. et al, (2019), Nature Genetics, 51, 387 – 393
‘The effect of sleep continuity disruption on multimodal emotion processing and regulation: a laboratory-based, randomized, controlled experiment in good sleepers.’ Reid M. et al, (2022), Journal of Sleep Research
‘The acute effects of sleep restriction therapy for insomnia on circadian timing and vigilance’. Maurer LF. et al, (2020), Journal of Sleep Research
‘Associations Between Sleep Health and Amygdala Reactivity to Negative Facial Expressions in the UK Biobank Cohort (N = 25,758)’. Schiel J. et al, (2022), Biological Psychiatry
‘Associations between insomnia symptoms and functional connectivity in the UK Biobank cohort (n = 29,423)’. Holub F. et al, (2023), J Sleep Res, 32
‘A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Online Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Chronic Insomnia Disorder Delivered via an Automated Media-Rich Web Application’. Espie CA. et al, (2012), Sleep, 35, 769 – 781
Jenny Ladbury
Co-Chair, 1981, Modern HistoryAditi Lahiri CBE
Senior Research Fellow; Professor of LinguisticsProfessor Lahiri’s interests are in phonology, phonetics, historical and comparative linguistics, psycholinguistics and neurolinguistics. She is also the Director of the University’s pioneering Language and Brain Lab.
Her work combines theoretical and experimental approaches to answer questions such as why sound alternations exist between different forms of one and the same word and how such words are represented in the mental lexicon, how words change over time, and how they are processed in the brain.
Recent advances from her team include the development of a cutting-edge flexible speech recognition system, Flex-SR. The technology was used to create a mobile phone app to help second language learners improve their pronunciation by analysing words and sentences spoken into the app and giving specific personal feedback. Her leadership on the project was recognised by the University with a Vice-Chancellor’s Innovation Award in 2018.
The first Indian woman to hold a professorial chair at Oxford, she helped to found Oxford University’s Faculty of Linguistics, Philology, and Phonetics. She served as its inaugural Chair in 2008, and returned to the role for a second term in 2019. In the 2020 Queen’s Birthday Honours, she was made a CBE in recognition of her services to the study of Linguistics.
In 2010, she was eleted a fellow of the British Academy, and currently serves as Vice President (Humanities) for the body. She has also been elected a member of the Academia Europaea and an Honorary Life Member of the Linguistic Society of America. She is Principal Investigator on European Research Council grants, as well as two Arts and Humanities Research Council grants, including one for a project involving Somerville Senior Research Fellow Professor Frans Plank.
Werkmann Hovart, Anna, Mariana Bolognesi & Aditi Lahiri (2021). Processing of literal and metaphorical meanings in polysemous verbs: An experiment and its methodological implications. Journal of Pragmatics 171, 131–146. DOI: 10.1016/j.pragma.2020.10.007.
Wynne, Hilary S. Z., Sandra Kotzor, Beinan Zhou & Aditi Lahiri (2020). The effect of phonological and morphological overlap on the processing of Bengali words. Journal of South Asian Linguistics 11, 25–51. [pdf]
Kotzor, Sandra, Beinan Zhou & Aditi Lahiri (2020). (A)symmetry in vowel features in verbs and pseudoverbs: ERP evidence. Neuropsychologia 143, 107474. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107474.
Wynne, Hilary S. Z., Linda Wheeldon & Aditi Lahiri (2020). Planning complex structures in a second language: compounds and phrases in non-native speech production. In M. Schlechtweg (ed.) The Learnability of Complex Constructions: A Cross-linguistic Perspective. Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs (TiLSM) 345, 91–126. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. DOI: 10.1515/9783110695113.
Kennard, Holly & Aditi Lahiri (2020). Nonesuch phonemes in loanwords. Linguistics 58, 83–108. DOI: 10.1515/ling-2019-0033.
Lahiri, Aditi & Holly Kennard (2019). Pertinacity in loanwords: Same underlying systems, different outputs. In M. Cennamo (ed.) Historical Linguistics 2015: Selected Papers from the 22nd International Congress of Historical Linguistics, Naples 27–31 July, 58–74. DOI: 10.1075/cilt.348.03lah.
Schuster, Swetlana, & Aditi Lahiri (2018). Lexical gaps and morphological decomposition: Evidence from German. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 46, 166–182. DOI: 10.1037/xlm0000560.
Lahiri, Aditi (2018). Predicting universal phonological features. In L. Hyman & F. Plank (eds.) Phonological Typology, 229–272. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. DOI: 10.1515/9783110451931-007.
Renaud Lambiotte
Fellow & Tutor in Mathematics; Professor of Networks and Nonlinear SystemsRenaud Lambiotte is a Professor of Networks and Nonlinear Systems.
His main research interests are the modelling and analysis of large networks, with a particular focus on clustering and temporal networks, and applications in social and neuronal systems. He is Associate Editor for Science Advances and a Turing Fellow. See more here.
Renaud Lambiotte has a PhD in Physics from the Université Libre de Bruxelles. Following postdocs at ENS Lyon, Université de Liège, UCLouvain and Imperial College London, and a Professorship in Mathematics at the University of Namur, he is currently Professor of Networks and Nonlinear Systems at the Mathematical Institute of Oxford University.
Selected Publications
Cabral, J., Castaldo, F., Vohryzek, J., Litvak, V., Bick, C., Lambiotte, R., … & Deco, G. (2022). Metastable oscillatory modes emerge from synchronization in the brain spacetime connectome. Communications Physics, 5(1), 184.
Devriendt, K., & Lambiotte, R. (2022). Discrete curvature on graphs from the effective resistance. Journal of Physics: Complexity, 3(2), 025008.
Bovet, A., Delvenne, J. C., & Lambiotte, R. (2022). Flow stability for dynamic community detection. Science advances, 8(19), eabj3063.
Devriendt, K., Martin-Gutierrez, S., & Lambiotte, R. (2022). Variance and covariance of distributions on graphs. SIAM Review, 64(2), 343-359.
Oliver, N., Lepri, B., Sterly, H., Lambiotte, R., Deletaille, S., De Nadai, M., … & Vinck, P. (2020). Mobile phone data for informing public health actions across the COVID-19 pandemic life cycle. Science advances, 6(23), eabc0764.
Hannie Lawlor
College LecturerHannie Lawlor holds a BA and MSt in Spanish and French from Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford and completed her DPhil on twenty-first-century Spanish and French women’s writing at Wolfson College, Oxford, under the supervision of Dr Daniela Omlor and Professor Marie-Chantal Killeen. Prior to taking up her current post at LMH and Somerville, she held stipendiary and departmental lecturer posts in Spanish at Oxford and was Lecturer in Spanish at University College Dublin.
Research Interests
Hannie’s research focuses primarily on women’s autobiographical practices in the twentieth- and twenty-first century. She is particularly interested in comparative approaches, whether it be considering works across languages and cultures or across media. Her first monograph, Relational Responses to Trauma in Twenty-First-Century French and Spanish Women’s Writing, analysed intergenerational responses to traumatic loss and her current project builds on these findings to explore what she defines as the impossible conversation as a crucial mode of narrative transmission.
Teaching
Hannie teaches the full Prelims course for students in Spanish at LMH and Somerville College and convenes Introduction to Spanish Film (XI) for students of Spanish Sole. For FHS, she teaches peninsular options in literature and film for the modern period paper (VIII) and special authors including Ramón del Valle-Inclán, Federico García Lorca, and Benito Pérez Galdós for Paper XI. She co-teaches Paper XII ‘Women Writers in Modern Spain’ and supervises extended essays (XIV), bridge essays, and master’s theses on twentieth- and twenty-first-century women’s writing, life writing, film, memory, and trauma. She welcomes expressions of interest from prospective PhD candidates working on related modern peninsular topics.
As a former first-generation student from a non-selective state school, Hannie is keenly committed to access and outreach initiatives. She is Schools Liaison representative for the Spanish Sub-Faculty and eager to receive applications from students from schools who do not have a history of sending students to Oxbridge.
Selected Publications
Relational Responses to Trauma in Twenty-First-Century French and Spanish Women’s Writing (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024)
The Autofictional: Approaches, Affordances, Forms, ed. by Alexandra Effe and Hannie Lawlor (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022)
Effe, Alexandra and Lawlor, Hannie, ‘Rethinking Autofiction as a Global Practice: Trajectories of Anglophone Criticism from 2000 to 2020’, a/b Auto/biography Studies (2024), 1–33
‘Conflicting Relations in Christine Angot’s Un amour impossible [‘An Impossible Love’]’, Journal of Romance Studies, 22.3 (2022), 311–30
Forthcoming
‘Resisting Imposed Identities in Postwar Fictions of the Self: Carmen Laforet’s Nada (1945) and Rosa Chacel’s Memorias de Leticia Valle (1945)’, in Del franquismo a la democracia: género y autoridad en las auto/representaciones de las escritoras españolas de posguerra, ed. by Raquel Fernández Menéndez and Aina Pérez Fontdevila (forthcoming 2025 in Hispanic Research Journal)
‘Post-Traumatic Transitions: Writing Women’s Lives in Dulce Chacón’s La voz dormida [The Sleeping Voice]’, in Feminine Plural: Women in Transition in the Luso-Hispanic World, ed. by María-José Blanco and Claire Williams (forthcoming 2025 with Peter Lang)
‘Montage and Narrative Mode: Hybrid Stories and Storytelling by Contemporary Women Writers’, in Montage in Spanish and Portuguese Literature, ed. by Daniela Omlor and Luisa Coelho (forthcoming 2025 in Bulletin of Contemporary Hispanic Studies)
‘Agnostic Memory and Impossible Conversations in Life Writing’, in Memory Studies in Spain and Portugal: A Handbook, ed. by Alison Ribeiro de Menezes and Ellen W. Sapega (forthcoming with Brill)
Sir Geoffrey Leigh
Foundation FellowProfessor Anna Laura Lepschy
Honorary FellowAnna Laura Lepschy is Emeritus Professor in Italian at University College London.
After studying at Somerville, she began a career in academia. In 1977 she co-published The Italian Language Today with her husband Giulio Lepschy, a reference book of the structure and grammar of contemporary Italian. She later co-edited a collection of essays titled Book Production and Letters in the Western European Renaissance: Essays in Honour of Conor Fahy.
In 1984, Lepschy was appointed a Head of the Italian Department at the University College London and founded the Centre for Italian Studies. While teaching, Lepschy co-edited a book with Verina R. Jones titled With a Pen in Her Hand: Women and Writing in Italy in the Nineteenth Century and beyond. The book was a collection of essays delivered at the Conference on Women and Writing in Nineteenth-Century Italy in February 1997. In 2002, Lepschy co-edited another book titled Multilingualism in Italy, Past and Present with Arturo Tosi.
Lepshy was awarded the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic, the Order of the Star of the Italian Solidarity and, in 2011, the British Academy’s Serena Medal for in recognition of her work.
Sophia Li
JCR Internationals OfficerShiwei Liu
Fulford Junior Research FellowDr. Shiwei Liu is Junior Research Fellow (JRF) at Somerville College. He is also a Royal Society Newton International Fellow at the University of Oxford. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin. He obtained his Ph.D. with the Cum Laude from the Eindhoven University of Technology in 2022. His research goal is to leverage, understand, and expand the role of low-dimensionality in neural networks, whose impacts span many important topics, such as efficient training/inference/transfer of large-foundation models, robustness and trustworthiness, and generative AI. His current main research interest focuses on improving the efficiency and accessibility of LLMs, making them accessible tooling to everyone. Dr. Liu has received two Rising Star Awards from KAUST and the Conference on Parsimony and Learning (CPAL). His Ph.D. thesis received the 2023 Best Dissertation Award from Informatics Europe. Personal Website: https://shiweiliuiiiiiii.github.io/
E-shen Low
JCR Suspended Students OfficerHuiqi (Yvonne) Lu
Fulford Junior Research Fellow; Daphne Jackson Research FellowHuiqi obtained her DPhil at the Industrial Informatics and Signal Processing Group, in the Department of Engineering at the University of Sussex in 2008.
During her doctoral study, she developed a commercial iris-identification system for use on mobile phones, which led to a patent and her work being presented at the House of Commons in 2007. Huiqi then worked on breast cancer research at the University of Sussex and the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, followed by research into diabetic retinopathy at the University of Liverpool and the Royal Liverpool Hospital.
Huiqi joined the Institute of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Oxford in 2018. Her current research is focussed on the development of machine learning methods for robustly tracking patient condition using home-monitoring systems for chronic disease. In 2019, she was awarded a Daphne Jackson Trust / Royal Academy of Engineering Fellowship, which supports her as an independent investigator focused on technology for maternal and child health.
Assessment of Hypertension Using Clinical Electrocardiogram Features: A First-Ever Review.
Bird K, Chan G, Lu H, et al.
Front Med (Lausanne). 2020
Mapping Hypoxia in Renal Carcinoma with Oxygen-enhanced MRI: Comparison with Intrinsic Susceptibility MRI and Pathology
Ross A. Little, Yann Jamin, Jessica K. R. Boult, Josephine H. Naish, Yvonne Watson, Susan Cheung, Katherine F. Holliday, Huiqi Lu, Damien J. McHugh, Joely Irlam, Catharine M. L. West, Guy N. Betts, Garry Ashton, Andrew R. Reynolds, Satish Maddineni, Noel W. Clarke, Geoff J. M. Parker, John C. Waterton, Simon P. Robinson, and James P. B. O’Connor
Radiology 2018 288:3, 739-747
Standardization of choroidal thickness measurements using enhanced depth imaging optical coherence tomography.
Boonarpha N, Zheng Y, Stangos AN, et al.
International Journal of Ophthalmology 2015;8(3): 484-491 2015 doi:10.3980/j.issn.2222-3959.2015.03.09
Elizabeth MacGregor
Joanna Randall-MacIver Junior Research FellowElizabeth is the Joanna Randall-MacIver Junior Research Fellow at Somerville College, University of Oxford.
She previously studied at the Universities of Cambridge and Sheffield, and, following the completion of her doctorate in 2022, she held positions with the Sheffield Performer and Audience Research Centre and the Birmingham Music Education Research Group. At present she is also an external member of the Group for Research in Music Education at Cardiff Metropolitan University, and sits on the advisory panel for the national evaluation of Arts Council England’s Creativity Collaboratives. Elizabeth is the Assistant Editor for the international peer-reviewed journal, Research Studies in Music Education, and the recipient of an Early Career Researcher Career Development Fellowship from the British Educational Research Association.
Elizabeth’s current research focusses on the notion of ‘musical vulnerability’ – our inherent and situational openness to being affected (both positively and negatively) by the properties of music-making. She is working closely alongside music teachers at three secondary schools to understand how musical vulnerability is realised in classroom teaching and learning, and how it can be accounted for through ‘pedagogies of vulnerability’. She is also in the process of developing new resources for equipping pre-service music teachers to respond to experiences of musical vulnerability in diverse settings. Her research intersects with broader issues of inclusion, access, and care in music education, and has led to related projects in areas ranging from community singing to neurodiverse concert audiences.
Monograph
MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Musical vulnerability: Receptivity, susceptibility & care in the music classroom. Routledge.
Edited Collections
Anderson, A., Cooke, C., Kinsella, V., & MacGregor, E. H. (Eds.) (forthcoming). Learning to teach music in the secondary school (4th ed.). Routledge.
Book Chapters
MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Reframing music education through the lens of musical vulnerability. In C. Philpott & G. Spruce (Eds.), Debates in music teaching (2nd ed.). Routledge.
MacGregor, E. H. (2022). Exploring performing. In C. Cooke & C. Philpott (Eds.), A practical guide to teaching music in the secondary school(2nd ed.). Routledge.
MacGregor, E. H. (2021). Repeats & refrains; Musical revisionism. In J. Finney, C. Philpott, & G. Spruce (Eds.), Creative & critical projects in classroom music: Fifty years of Sound & Silence (pp. 203–208; 217–221). Routledge.
Finney, J. & MacGregor, E. H. (2021). Propaganda, protest & politics. In J. Finney, C. Philpott, & G. Spruce (Eds.), Creative & critical projects in classroom music: Fifty years of Sound & Silence (pp. 163–168). Routledge.
Journal Articles
Axtell, I., Anderson, A., Fautley, M., MacGregor, E. H., & Nenadic, E. (forthcoming). Beowulf Opera Scenes: Classroom music pedagogy & knowledge when composing an opera with primary-school children. Research Studies in Music Education.
Kinsella, V., MacGregor, E. H., & Nenadic, E. (forthcoming). Characterising affective and situational dimensions of creativity in the primary classroom through a posthuman lens. Education 3–13.
MacGregor, E. H. & Pitts, S. E. (forthcoming). ‘I don’t care who joins my choir’: Investigating attitudes to diversity & inclusion in lower- & upper-voice choirs in the United Kingdom. International Journal of Community Music.
Abbott, E. H. R., Critten, A., & MacGregor, E. H. (forthcoming). Relaxed Performances: Supporting aural diversity & neurodiversity among concert audiences in the United Kingdom. Sound Studies.
MacGregor, E. H. (2024). Please mind the gap: Reflecting on gender inequality in music higher education, one year on from Slow Train Coming. Music Education Research, 26(1), 88–95.
MacGregor, E. H. (2024). Characterizing musical vulnerability: Toward a typology of receptivity & susceptibility in the secondary music classroom. Research Studies in Music Education, 46(1), 28–47.
MacGregor, E. H. (2022). Conceptualizing musical vulnerability. Philosophy of Music Education Review, 30(1), 24–43.
MacGregor, E. H. (2020). Participatory performance in the secondary music classroom & the paradox of belonging. Music Education Research, 22(2), 229–241.
Bate, E. H. (2020). Justifying music in the National Curriculum: The habit concept & the question of social justice & academic rigour. British Journal of Music Education, 37(1), 3–15.
Catherine Mary MacRobert
Senior Research FellowStarting from my doctoral dissertation on the history of Bulgarian syntax, my research has focused primarily on the delimitation and interaction of various Slavonic vernaculars and the medieval literary language, Church Slavonic.
My primary data are drawn from the various translations of the Psalter produced up to the fifteenth century, and my investigations touch on the origins of Old Church Slavonic, medieval translation technique, evidence for prosodic and morphosyntactic developments (e.g. in clitic use, word division, tense distinctions, mood and verbal aspect), the principles and practice of textual criticism in application to Church Slavonic material, the palaeography of Cyrillic and Glagolitic manuscripts, and Church Slavonic hymnographical traditions.
‘The multiple-author catena on the Psalms translated into Church Slavonic by Maximus Triboles’, in: Research on Psalter Catenae: Current Trends and Recent Developments, ed. C. Bandt, R. Ceulemans (Texte und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altchristlichen Literatur, 197) (Berlin – Boston: De Gruyter, 2024), 119-135.
‘A reappraisal of the Radomir Psalter’, in: Radomirov psaltir. Paleografski i tekstologičen analiz. Naborno izdanie, ed. Ieromonax Atanasij, trans. E. Dikova (Zographou Monastery, 2022), 54-127.
‘The Church Slavonic translation of the calendrical stichera and kanon by Christopher of Mitylene in MS Zographou 115 (1392): Edition of the Text’, in: Byzantinoslavica, lxxix:1-2 (2021), 196-237.
Psalterium Demetrii Sinaitici Bd. 2: monasterii sanctae Catharinae codex slav. 3/N, adiectis foliis medicinalibus, ed. H. Miklas, C. M. MacRobert, A. N. Sobolev et al. (Vienna: Holzhausen, 2021).
The Greek Source of Maksim Grek’s Church Slavonic catena on the Psalms’, in: Trudy Instituta russkogo jazyka im. V. V. Vinogradova, No.1, Lingvističeskoe istočnikovedenie i istorija russkogo jazyka, 2021, 223-232.
‘Present events: the interaction of verbal aspect and non-past tense in early Church Slavonic’, in: Medieval Temporalities. The Experience of Time in Medieval Europe, ed. A. Suerbaum, A. Sutherland (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2021), 159-82.
‘A Church Slavonic adaptation of the calendar in stichera by Christopher of Mitylene’, Byzantinoslavica, lxxvii:1-2 (2019), 76-98
‘Observations on the Liturgical Psalter in MS Canon. Liturg. 172 (Bodleian Library, Oxford)’, Slovo, lxx (2020), 77-91
‘Methodological implications of Nahtigal’s remarks on the Acrostich Prayer’, in: Rajko Nahtigal in 100 let slavistike na Universi v Ljubljani, ed. P. Stankovska, A. Derganc, A. Šivic-Dular (Slavica Slovenica, 5) (Ljubljana: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani, 2019), 111-123; https://e-knjige.ff.uni-lj.si/znanstvena-zalozba/catalog/book/172
‘Re-evaluating the Psalterium Sinaiticum: the limitations of internal reconstruction as a text-critical method’, in: Habent sua fata libelli, Poznańskie Studia Slawistyczne, xiv (2018), 149-67 (View PDF)
‘Maksim Greek in linguistic context’, in: Latinitas in the Slavic World, ed. V. S. Tomelleri, I. V. Verner (Specimina Philologiae Slavicae, 192) (Berlin: Peter Lang, 2018), 173-205
‘The enigmatic Athens Psalter (Greek National Library, MS 1797)’, in: “Slova i zolota vjaz′”. Sbornik statej pamjati V. M. Zagrebina (1942-2004), ed. Ž. Levšina et al., (St Petersburg: Rossijskaja Nacional′naja Biblioteka, 2016), 273-81 (https://vivaldi.nlr.ru/bx000008288/view) (athens_psalter.pdf)
‘The place of the Mihanović Psalter in the fourteenth-century revised versions of the Church Slavonic Psalter’, Studia Ceranea, vi (2016), 75-99
‘The place of Dimitri’s Psalter (MS Sinai 3N) in the early transmission of the Church Slavonic Psalter’, in: The Bible in the Slavic Tradition, ed. Svetlina Nikolova et al. (Studia Judaeoslavica, 9), (Leiden-Boston: Brill, 2016), 89-106
‘Maximos the Greek: Imprisoned in Polemic’, in: Polemic. Language as Violence in Medieval and Early Modern Discourse, ed. A. Suerbaum, G. Southcombe, B. Thompson (Ashgate, 2015), 165-80
‘On the headings and marginal notes in the two Glagolitic psalter manuscripts in S. Catherine’s Monastery on Mount Sinai’, in: Philology Broad and Deep: In Memoriam Horace Gray Lunt, ed. Michael S. Flier, David J. Birnbaum, Cynthia M. Vakareliyska (Bloomington, IN: Slavica, 2014), 175-85
‘The problem of the negated imperative in Old Church Slavonic’, in: Miklosichiana Bicentennalia. Zbornik u čast dvestote godišnjice rođenja Franca Miklošiča, ed. J. Grković-Mejdžor, A. Loma (Belgrade: SANU, 2013), 277-91
‘The competing use of perfect and aorist tense in Old Church Slavonic’, Slavia, lxxxii:4 (2013), 387-407
‘The linguistic peculiarities and textological importance of the Novgorod antiphonal psalters’, Slovene, ii:2 (2013), 31-51
Bosanski Psaltir iz izbornika Hvala Krstjanina, ed. Lejla Nakaš (Forum Bosnae, 60/12) (Sarajevo: Međunarodni Forum Bosna, 2013), afterword, 263-82; shorter English version: ‘How well did Hval know the Psalter?’, Bosanskohercegovački slavistični kongres. Zbornik radova (knjiga 1. Lingvistika) (Sarajevo: Slavistički komitet, 2012), 109-117 (http://www.slavistickikomitet.ba/)
‘On Using P. A. Gil’tebrandt’s Spravočnyj i Ob”jasnitel’nyj Slovar’ k Psaltiri’, in: Schnittpunkt Slavistik. Ost und West im wissenschaftlichen Dialog. Festgabe für Helmut Keipert zum 70. Geburtstag. Teil 1: Slavistik im Dialog – einst und jetzt, ed. I. Podtergera (Bonn: V&R unipress, Bonn University Press, 2012), 473-482
‘Slavonic Manuscripts at Sinai’, in: St Catherine’s Monastery at Mount Sinai: Its Manuscripts and their Conservation. Papers given in memory of Ihor Ševčenko, ed. C. and M. Mango (Saint Catherine Foundation, 2011), 61-8
‘The textual peculiarities of the Luck Psalter of 1384 (Acquisti e Doni MS 360, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Florence)’, Ricerche Slavistiche, New Series, viii (liv) (2010), 101-25
’ “Remember me in your prayers”: Reading the Church Slavonic Psalter as an act of commemoration’, in Aspects of the Performative in Medieval Culture, ed. M. Gragnolati, A. Suerbaum, Trends in Medieval Philology, ed. I. Kasten, N. Largier, M. Schnyder, vol. 18 (Berlin — New York: De Gruyter, 2010), 39-59
‘The impact of interpretation on the evolution of the Church Slavonic psalter text up to the fifteenth century’, in Congress Volume Ljubljana 2007, ed. A. Lemaire, Supplements to Vetus Testamentum, vol. 133 (Leiden – Boston: Brill, 2010), 423-440
‘A Hymnographical Curiosity: Troparia Composed for the Psalter’, in Bibel, Liturgie und Frömmigkeit in der Slavia Byzantina. Festgabe für Hans Rothe zum 80. Geburtstag, ed. D. Christians, D. Stern, V. S. Tomelleri, Studies on Language and Culture in Central and Eastern Europe, 3 (Munich – Berlin: Verlag Otto Sagner, 2009), 243-266
Anne Makena
Honorary FellowDr Anne Makena (2012, DPhil Chemical Biology) is Co-Director of the Africa Oxford Initiative (AfOx), a vibrant platform for all things Africa at Oxford.
The goal of Dr Makena and her AfOx colleagues is to make Africa a strategic priority for the University of Oxford by facilitating equitable, sustainable and impactful collaborations between Oxford and African institutions.
Working with partners across 30 African countries, AfOx facilitates academic and research partnerships by supporting activities including a travel grant scheme, visiting fellowships for African academics, high quality research engagement meetings and financial, academic and mentorship support for African students and research staff in Oxford. AfOx has an ambitious, but justified, aim to increase the number of African graduates at Oxford from 3 to 10%.
Dr Makena is responsible for developing and implementing AfOx’s overall strategy, as well as leading on fundraising and stakeholder engagement, and supporting the delivery of core AfOx programmes. Under Dr Makena’s guidance, AfOx is making strides to support the creation of a culture-shifting cohort of emerging African leaders whose experiences and passion can be practically addresses to some of the most pressing challenges in Africa, recognising moreover that Africa is the most rapidly changing continent whose future demographic and economic growth will have a major influence globally.
Dr Makena holds a DPhil in Chemical Biology from the University of Oxford and an Executive MBA from the Said Business School. She was made an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College in June 2025.
Shivani Malik
Matric Year: 2015 – Subject: DPhil Plant Sciences – Scholarship: Indira Gandhi ScholarMy DPhil in Plant Sciences, under the guidance of Professor (Dr.) Renier van der Hoorn, aims to understand the evolution of mechanism of extracellular perception of pathogens in the Solanaceae plant family, including important crops such as, tomato and potato.
Subsequent to perception, plants actively resist infection by most pathogens via deployment of multiple defense pathways. Since plant pathogens pose a huge challenge to crop production, enhanced understanding of how plant disease resistance is achieved will open novel avenues for plant protection methods. This eventually holds the potential of simultaneously addressing the many crises related to agriculture, including, global food security.
I am truly grateful to have received an IGS award, and I hope that OICSD, through inter-disciplinary collaborations, will provide necessary support to translate my research findings into effective solutions to crop losses.
Prior to Oxford, I attended the University of Delhi for my B.Sc. degree in life sciences and M.Sc. in Botany. During my post-graduation, I spent a summer at the Institute of Life Sciences, Odisha, as an Indian Academy of Sciences’ Research Fellow. Over the last few years, I have worked with various Non-governmental organizations in India, working on education and agriculture-related concerns.
Alastair Mallick
Head GardenerAlastair Mallick joined Somerville College as our new Head Gardener in 2022. With 15 years of horticultural experience behind him, across everything from organic farming to his most recent post as Head Gardener at Queen’s College (2017-22), Alastair is keen to build on Somerville’s legacy of sustainability, biodiversity and beauty.
Building on a life-long love for plants and the natural world, Alastair progressed into gardening through a passion for growing his own food. After volunteering on many organic farming projects around the world and spending many hours tending to his allotment, he realised that he loved the process of working with plants. A professional pathway soon followed: Alastair ran his own successful gardening business before, in 2017, taking the jump into the the world of the university as Head Gardener at Queen’s in 2017. Here, he found that he loved the Oxford college environment, and was therefore thrilled when our former Head Gardener Sophie Walwin suggested he consider taking on the excellent work she began during her time at Somerville.
Alastair has big plans for the Somerville gardens. Refeshing the borders, bringing in lots of beautiful and unusual plants to lift Sophie’s great existing planting, adding new structure to the rest of the garden through shrubs and trees – the list goes on. Alastair is also deeply involved in the conversations to create a new pond as a source of additional biodiversity (and potential research for our plant scientists!). Some other plans being considered are a new perennial meadow for the empty bed in front of the Maitland building and an alpine rock garden in front of Park. However, Alastair also has a continued focus on developing garden spaces that are resilient to the pressures of climate change and that work for local fauna as well as for us. This will be achieved through measures such as the pond, but also bird boxes, bee hotels and drought-resistant, locally-sourced planting.
Vicky Maltby
Foundation FellowVicky was born in London to Hungarian-born parents. She was educated at South Hampstead High School, one of the Girls’ Day School Trust group of schools. She read History at Somerville, matriculating in 1974.
At Somerville she was active in the JCR, serving as Treasurer. Both the GDST and Somerville celebrated their centenaries shortly after she completed her time with them, reminding her of the importance of the campaign for equal access to education.
She subsequently qualified as a solicitor and practised first commercial and consumer law, and subsequently charity, trust and probate law.
Vicky’s passion is for education at all levels, both for what it can contribute to society and civic life, and for its enrichment of each individual life.
As part of that commitment, she served from 1995 to 2007 on the Council of the Girls’ Day School Trust, which is the largest group of independent schools in the UK, comprising 25 schools educating nearly 20,000 students aged 4 to 18 throughout England and Wales. Vicky also trained and worked as an adult literacy teacher in West London.
From 1985 to 1988 Vicky lived in Geneva, where she represented an NGO at the UN and its member organisations.
Vicky and her husband Colin returned permanently to Geneva in 2008. From 2008 to 2014 she was on the Board of the International School of Geneva. She has a daughter and a Somervillian son. She is happy to have shared with all her family her love of literature and the dramatic arts.
Aaron Maniam
Senior Associate; Fellow of Practice and Director, Digital Education Transformation, Blavatnik School of GovernmentAaron Maniam is an alumnus of Somerville (PPE 1998) and current Senior Associate, a position equivalent to Senior Research Fellow but for individuals whose contributions lie outside traditional academia.
In 2023, Aaron became Fellow of Practice and Director, Digital Education Transformation at the Blavatnik School of Government. Aaron’s work at the Blavatnik School focuses on issues connecting technology, public policy and public administration. He teaches on the School’s Master of Public Policy and executive education programmes, and convenes its digital “thematic cluster”, bringing together scholarship and practice on digital issues. He co-chairs the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on the Future of Technology Policy and is a member of the OECD’s Expert Group on Artificial Intelligence (AI) Futures.
He was previously a senior civil servant in the Singapore government, including being the founding Head of its Centre for Strategic Futures. Most recently, he served as Deputy Secretary (Industry & International) at the Singapore Ministry of Communications & Information, overseeing the ministry’s work in the digital economy, digital literacy and inclusion, and digital diplomacy – with a concurrent cross-government role coordinating Singapore’s strategy in global branding, soft power and public diplomacy.
At Somerville, Aaron will supervise graduate students interested in public policy and development issues. He will support the College’s career guidance programmes, particularly for students keen on government careers. As a trained facilitator of inter-religious dialogue, he will also contribute to the College’s multi-faith chapel programme.
Jessica Mannix
Director, Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust and Campaign DirectorAs Director for the Margaret Thatcher Scholarship Trust, Jessica oversees the financial aspects of the Trust and ensures that the objects of the charity are met. She works closely with the Director of the Thatcher Scholarship Programme, the Principal, Development Director, Trustees and Patrons in the execution of her role.
As we enter a new phase of fundraising to meet the College’s five-year strategy, Jessica has taken on the role of Campaign Director, working closely with the Development Director and Principal on the fundraising strategy, developing campaign messages, setting goals and developing the projects and tools that will allow the team to achieve the ambitious targets.