Professor Dame Angela McLean
Honorary FellowProfessor Dame Angela McLean DBE FRS is a professor of Mathematical Biology in the Department of Zoology at Oxford University and Director of The Institute for Emerging Infections of Humans.
She was appointed as the Chief Scientific Adviser for the Ministry of Defence and in September 2019 and served as Deputy Chief Scientific Adviser during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Angela’s research interests lie in the use of mathematical models to aid our understanding of the evolution and spread of infectious agents. She is also interested in the use of natural science evidence in formulating public policy and has co-developed the Oxford Martin School Restatements: an activity which restructures and presents the evidence underlying an issue of policy concern or controversy in a short, uncharged, intelligible form for non-technical audiences.
Angela established Mathematical Biology at the Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council’s Institute for Animal Health in 1994. Before this, Angela was a Royal Society Research Fellow at Oxford University and a Research Fellow at the Institut Pasteur in Paris.
In 2009 Angela was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society. She has been awarded the Gabor Medal in 2011 and the Weldon Memorial Prize in 2018. She received her damehood in the 2018 Queen’s Birthday Honours List.
Norma MacManaway
Emeritus FellowLois McNay
Shirley Williams Fellow & Tutor in Politics; Professor of Theory of Politics; Vice-PrincipalProfessor McNay’s interests are in continental social and political thought and feminist theory.
She has a particular interest in the work of Michel Foucault, Pierre Bourdieu and the Frankfurt School Critical Theorists.
Professor McNay is currently Vice-Principal of Somerville College.
Anita Mehta
Academic Visitor and ConsultantAnita Mehta is an Academic Visitor and Consultant at the Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics.
Professor Mehta is a theoretical physicist of complex systems: in addition to her current research on the modelling of speech perception, she is working on heterogeneities in granular media, mechanisms of long-term memory (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVH1djSzspg&feature=youtu.be ), agent-based modelling of risk and optimisation schemes for NP-complete problems.
A Rhodes Scholar (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NojaK4hTDQ), she did her MA and DPhil in theoretical physics at Oxford, and subsequently worked in Cambridge, Birmingham and India. She was a Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard in 2006-7, an EPSRC Fellow at the Clarendon Laboratory in Oxford in 1998-9, and a Leverhulme Visiting Professor in Oxford in 2018-2019.
A Fellow of the American Physical Society, her other interests include writing (fiction and non-fiction), languages (she speaks English, Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi and French with native fluency, can get by in Italian and has a basic knowledge of Spanish) and Western classical music (she is a pianist and music critic, see, e.g. https://serenademagazine.com/author/anita-mehta/).
Anita Mehta (2018) ‘Storing and retrieving long-term memories:
cooperation and competition in synaptic dynamics’, Advances in Physics: X, 3:1, 755-789
Ebadi H, Perry M, Short K, Klemm K, Desplan C, Stadler PF, et al. (2018) ‘Patterning the insect eye: From stochastic to deterministic mechanisms.’ PLoS Comput Biol 14(11): e1006363.
Indu Dhiman, Simon A. J. Kimber, Anita Mehta & Tapan Chatterji (2018) ‘A neutron tomography study: probing the spontaneous crystallization of randomly packed granular assemblies’
Malina Mielczarek
JCR Womens Officer.
Quentin Miller
Lecturer in Computer ScienceDr Quentin Miller teaches computer science topics to Somerville’s students in the Computer Science and Mathematics degrees.
His research interests include the design and implementation of programming languages, and language support for parallel processing. He is on the programme and steering committees of the High-Level Parallel Processing series of international symposia, which he instigated at l’Université d’Orléans in 2001.
He is also currently developing software tools for creating electronic editions of medieval manuscripts — see http://www.snark.myzen.co.uk/diplomat/.
He received the University Award for outstanding contribution to learning and teaching in 2009, and the Oxford University Student Union award for best tutor in maths & sciences in 2017.
Mobile Web Services Trend Perspectives
Pat Narendra, Ephraim Feig, David Heit, Quentin Miller, Timo Burns
September 2006SCC ’06: Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Services Computinghttps://doi.org/10.1109/SCC.2006.70
BSP in a lazy functional context
Quentin Miller
January 2002Trends in functional programming
Melhi K Mistry
Foundation FellowMehli K Mistry is a noted philanthropist and a Shareholder and Director of the over 80-year-old M. Pallonji Group (India).
Mr Mistry has a rich experience of running and managing all the M Pallonji Group companies, with diverse business interests that include industrial painting, dredging, marine transport, shipping and insurance.
Mr Mistry is also a philanthropist who sits on the board of multiple trusts. His philanthropic work includes an unswerving focus on girls’ education as well as helping to manage India’s largest philanthropic Trust, of which he is a permanent Trustee.
Finally, Mr Mistry is a champion of the arts, currently serving as a trustee of the National Centre for the Performing Arts (NCPA), the Indian equivalent of the Lincoln Center of New York.
Somerville College is grateful to have enjoyed a long and meaningful friendship with Mr Mistry, a man of rare integrity whose vision for the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development chimes deeply with our own. In recognition of these many years of friendship, Somerville College was pleased to extend a Foundation Fellowship to Mr Mistry in 2025.
Mrinalini Mitra
Matric Year: 2021 – Subject: MSc Modern South Asian Studies – Scholarship: Indira Gandhi-Radhakrishnan ScholarMrinalini is passionate about art history, visual culture, and urban architecture. During her time at Oxford, she proposes to study the role of Mughal gardens as landscapes and settings in miniature paintings. More specifically, she is interested in examining Mughal gardens as places of production and storing wealth and not merely aesthetic environments.
Mrinalini graduated from Denison University with honours (Magna Cum Laude) and as a Phi Beta Kappa member in 2020. As a Classicist, she has spent hours tracing the cultural consciousness of ancient communities by studying their art, architecture and philosophy; exploring the processes of identification and reification that produce the imagined landscape of cities (such as Athens and Rome) as locations of culture, history, and memory of communities. The interdisciplinary nature of her liberal arts education allowed her to undertake summer-long research as a Woodyard Scholar in the city of Ayodhya in India, which sparked her interest in urban architecture in South Asia.
Mrinalini is also a recipient of the Davis Projects for Peace Prize and runs her non-profit organisation, Panthalassa that works in women healthcare, education, and sustainable energy alternatives.
Professor Michele Moody-Adams
Honorary FellowMichele Moody-Adams is currently Joseph Straus Professor of Political Philosophy and Legal Theory at Columbia University, where she served as Dean of Columbia College and Vice President for Undergraduate Education from 2009-2011.
Before Columbia, she taught at Cornell University, where she was Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education and Director of the Program on Ethics and Public Life. She has also taught at Wellesley College, the University of Rochester, and Indiana University, where she served as an Associate Dean.
She has published on equality and social justice, moral psychology and the virtues, and the philosophical implications of gender and race. She is also the author of a widely cited book on moral relativism, Fieldwork in Familiar Places: Morality, Culture and Philosophy. Her current work includes articles on academic freedom, equal educational opportunity, and democratic disagreement. Her next book, coming out in late 2021, is entitled Making Space for Justice: Social Movements, Collective Imagination and Political Hope. She is also working on a project entitled Renewing Democracy and a book on the thought of Martin Luther King, Jr. Moody-Adams has a B.A. from Wellesley College, a second B.A. from Oxford University, and earned the M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from Harvard University. She has been a British Marshall Scholar and an NEH Fellow.
Ishani Mookherjee
MCR Welfare OfficerIshani is a candidate for the D.Phil. in Law at Somerville College. Her doctoral research aims to evaluate the present paradigm on disability-selective abortions in India and develop an ‘indigenous’ normative and legal framework for governing such abortion in India. In contrast to sex-selective abortions, which are prohibited in India, disability-selective abortions are positively sanctioned under the Indian legislative and judicial framework. She seeks to underline how the present paradigm reduces women to ‘gatekeepers of perfection’ and disregards the State’s duty of non-discrimination and reasonable accommodation towards disabled people. Given the unique context of evolution of reproductive rights and disability rights in India, she will attempt to highlight the limitations of Western intellectual tradition and develop an ‘Indian’ framework to address this debate in India. In doing so, she will endeavour to fill a theoretical gap in Indian feminist and disability-rights scholarship and make appropriate recommendations for legal reforms.
Ishani is keenly interested in analysing rights-based frameworks through feminist and critical legal scholarship and undertaking comparative and inter-disciplinary study of human rights and corresponding State obligations. Prior to the DPhil, Ishani read on the Bachelor of Civil Law programme at the University of Oxford as a Cornelia Sorabji Scholar. She opted for public law courses, like Medical Law and Ethics and Comparative Equality Law. She also graduated with the B.A. LL.B. (Hons.) degree from Jindal Global Law School, India.
As the Welfare Officer, she hopes to make the MCR a more comfortable, welcoming and inclusive space for all members of the MCR, through different events, initiatives, and schemes. If there is anything that the MCR can support you with, please feel free to reach out to her.
Elizabeth Morris
Retaining Fee Lecturer; Wellcome Trust Doctoral Research Fellow; Clinical Non-Stipendiary LecturerI am a practising GP, and a Clinical Lecturer involved in medical student teaching at Somerville College.
My primary research interests are focussed on developing and evaluating dietary and health behaviour change interventions for patients with type 2 diabetes in primary care.
I recently led the DIAMOND study which demonstrated that it is feasible for practice nurses to deliver and support a low-calorie, low-carbohydrate dietary and behavioural intervention for patients with type 2 diabetes, with promising short-term clinical improvements.
‘Parents’ concerns and beliefs about temperature measurement in children: a qualitative study’
Journal article
Morris E. et al, (2021), BMC Family Practice, 22
‘What proportion of people have a follow-up biopsy in randomized trials of treatments for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis? A systematic review and meta-analysis’
Journal article
Koutoukidis D. et al, (2021), PLoS ONE
‘The effect of the magnitude of weight loss on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis’
Journal article
Koutoukidis DA. et al, (2021), Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental, 115
‘Non-contact infrared thermometers compared with current approaches in primary care for children aged 5 years and under: a method comparison study’
Journal article
Van den Bruel A. et al, (2020), Health technology assessment (Winchester, England), 24, 1 – 28
‘Diabetes and COVID-19: Risks, Management, and Learnings From Other National Disasters’
Journal article
Hartmann-Boyce J. et al, (2020), Diabetes care, 43, 1695 – 1703
Helen Morton
Emeritus FellowBoris Motik
Senior Research Fellow in Computer Science; Professor of Computer ScienceBefore coming to Oxford, I worked in the Information Management Group, School of Computer Science, University of Manchester.
I got my PhD from the University of Karlsruhe under supervision of Prof. Rudi Studer. While in Karlsruhe, Germany, I was employed at the Research Center for Information Technologies (FZI). I have worked with companies including EDF and Samsung.
I am interested in developing algorithms and techniques necessary for realizing advanced applications in the Semantic Web. In the past, my research is focused around the ontology language OWL. More recently, I became interested in applying ontology techniques to data management problems in databases and big data. Specifically, I am investigating ways in using variants of datalog — a language at the intersection of logic programming and databases — to represent and access data, and I am studying the related theoretical and practical problems, such as efficient evaluation of datalog programs and efficient maintenance of datalog materialisations. My research involves the development of tools that demonstrates the techniques I am working on.
You can view a complete list of my publications with downloadable papers here.
Awards
- Distinguished Paper at the 2017 International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence for the paper “Foundations of Declarative Data Analysis Using Limit Datalog Programs”
- Best Applications Paper at the 2016 International Semantic Web Conference for the paper “Semantic Technologies for Data Analysis in Health Care”
- The 2013 Roger Needham award by the British Computer Society (BCS) for “a distinguished research contribution in computer science”
- Selected as one of “2008 AI’s 10 to Watch” by the IEEE Intelligent Systems magazine
- The 2007 Cor Baayen award by the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM) for “a most promising young researcher in computer science and applied mathematics”
- Best Paper at the 2005 International Semantic Web Conference for the paper “On the Properties of Metamodeling in OWL”
You can view a complete list of my publications with downloadable papers here.
Sanghamitra Mukherjee
Matric Year: 2018 – Subject: DPhil Economics – Scholarship: Indira Gandhi ScholarMy research interests are in financial inclusion and sustainable agricultural development. I seek to understand the constraints that hinder the adoption and effective usage of savings and loans amongst smallholder farmers in developing economies.
My academic training is shaped by a Masters in Economics, Delhi School of Economics and a Masters in Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley. Keen to work on the intersectionality of sustainable development and finance, I focus on applied econometrics and development economics.
My tenure at Goldman Sachs cultivated my interest in financial markets, and also motivated me to apply my skills to the developing country context where issues of credit constraints, barriers to savings and missing insurance markets are very pertinent.
My experiences led me to appreciate that development policies do not operate in a vacuum but are fundamentally dependent on the social and institutional contexts in which they are devised. I received the Global Development Fellowship from USAID to undertake research on the “Enterprise Development Program” run by SaveAct in South Africa. I have experience as a researcher in the Economics department at U.C. Berkeley, working on randomized control trials in Kenyan maize markets. As a Project Manager at the Center for Effective Global Action, I worked with USAID in Uganda to design sustainable policies for solar waste management.
Academic Publications
Enterprise Development: A Deeper Understanding – Spring edition, 2018 of the Berkeley Public Policy Journal
Winner of the PBPPJ Prize for Outstanding Editorial Collaboration
Medha Mukherjee
Matric Year: 2022 – Subject: DPhil in Geography and the Environment – Scholarship: Oxford-Indira Gandhi ScholarMedha currently examines the intersections of politics, public policy, governance and finance in the delivery of essential services, such as safe drinking water to every household in rural India. Focusing on inequalities and intersectionality, she is interested in how inclusive and sustainable outcomes can be reached through national, state and individual choices. Gathering extensive and in-depth empirical evidence is a critical component of her work. She grounds her academic research in the lived experiences and narratives of communities, government decision-makers, political leaders and anyone in between. In 2023, she became the first Indian woman to receive the Frederick Soddy Postgraduate Award from the Royal Geographical Society – Institute of British Geographers.
Growing up in India, Medha has been sensitized to the juxtaposition of excess and inadequacy, in both rural and urban settings. Travelling across India’s diverse landscape, particularly the Himalaya, has shaped her perception of the delicate balance that exists between humans and the natural world. Her study of the Ethics and the Classics, as an English Literature undergraduate, has been pivotal in informing her research interests. Her five-year background as a writer in the film industry, especially for documentaries, contributes to her diverse methods which include photo-documentation, semi-structured interviews, surveys, multi-sited ethnography and archival research. She remains a strong advocate of transcending disciplinary boundaries, and is happy to engage in any discussion, academic and beyond, to further inclusivity.
Previous Qualifications
- Master of Science in Water Science, Policy and Management (with Distinction), University of Oxford, UK
- Bachelor of Arts (with First Class Honours) in English Literature, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India
Previous Scholarship
- Felix Scholarship for MSc in Water Science, Policy and Management, University of Oxford, 2020-2021
Grants and Awards
- Travel and Special Project Grant awarded by Somerville College, University of Oxford, 2024
- Scholar Development Award from the Oxford India Centre for Sustainable Development, 2023
- Frederick Soddy Postgraduate Award from the Royal Geographical Society-Institute of British Geographers, 2023
- Catherine Hughes Grant awarded by Somerville College, University of Oxford, 2022
Publications
Peer-Reviewed Research Article
- Mukherjee, M. (2023) Power, paralysis and action: understanding flood risk management in Kerala, India. Environmental Hazards. pp. 1-32.
Working Paper
- Hope, R., McNicholl, D., Mukherjee, M. and Dickinson, N. (2023) Keeping piped water flowing in rural India. Uptime Global and Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford.”
Research Article
- Mukherjee, M., 2023. Power, paralysis and action: understanding flood risk management in Kerala, India. Environmental Hazards, pp.1-32.
Working Paper
- Hope, R., McNicholl, D., Mukherjee, M. and Dickinson, N. (2023). Keeping piped water flowing in rural India. Uptime Global and Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford.