Monday, May 19, 2025
Blog Page 127

Hundreds gather at vigil for peace organised by Oxford community leaders

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Several hundred attendees attended a vigil for peace on Broad Street last Sunday evening in light of ongoing violence in Israel and Gaza. Local community leaders organised the gathering to share comforting words and observe a moment of silence. The gathering condemned violence from both sides of the conflict.

The vigil was attended by University Vice-Chancellor Irene Tracy, as well as representatives from the city and county, elected MPs, and faith leaders representing Muslim, Jewish, Hindu, Sikh, and Buddhist communities. The crowd included councillors on Oxford City Council who resigned from the Labour party last week after Party leader Keir Starmer appeared to suggest that Israel has “the right” to withhold energy and water from Gaza. 

Imam Monawar Hussain, who co-organised the event alongside the Bishop of Oxford Rt. Rev. Dr Steven Croft, told Cherwell that its purpose was to “get faith and community leaders together so we can have one voice that promotes understanding, love, and peace in our community.”

“People are looking for opportunities to come together in a way which stands for peace and doesn’t take one side or another,” Croft told Cherwell. “It’s been very helpful to the people who have to process so many different images on screens over the last few weeks to actually come together in-person.” 

President of the Oxford Jewish Congregation, Martin Goodman, said in a statement: “We join this call for all in our county to come together to assert, in the face of the terrible events in Israel and Palestine, our shared determination to preserve the strong friendship between our communities in Oxfordshire which has been built up over so many years.”

An Oxford resident and member of the local Jewish community told Cherwell: “Our best hope for peace [is] nonviolence, not taking sides, and acknowledgement of each other’s suffering.”

Is art a form of political propaganda?

Art has been employed throughout history as a political tool to propagate ideas of power and ideology and challenge them. However, art is a medium for political discourse rather than an all-encompassing feature. To understand political art we have to assess the different intentions behind various artworks: the context art was produced, who by and the purpose it served.

Art was a political tool used by individuals or institutions to assert their power and ideologies. For example, the baths of Caracalla (AD 212/11–216/17) acted as a symbol of power and reputation reflective of the emperors Septimus Severus and Caracalla, the state and the might of Rome.[1] Its deliberate architectural design and iconographic choices–such as the colossal monolithic columns, imperial insignia, military scenes and material allusions to the empire–contributed to a standardised visual language of art and architecture correspondent with the centralised aims of the empire and its leader.[2]

Similarly, Elizabethan royal portraiture became a political tool to assert Tudor power by diminishing criticism surrounding the queen regarding marriage, succession and legitimacy claims. In 1594, royal portraiture assumed a ‘Mask of Youth’ developed under the supervision of Nicholas Hilliard.[3] The idea was to promote an immortal image of Elizabeth I aiming to resolve her accountability by shifting focus towards her strength as monarch rather than the flaw in her rule.[4] The Hardwick portrait (c. 1590–99) is the perfect example. The magnificence of Elizabeth’s dress and jewels highlighted the glory of the nation, pearls symbolised her innocence and virtue and the noticeable red and white flowers in the background invoked the Tudor Standard.[5]

Let us consider how art asserts institutional power and ideology. During World War II,  the proliferation of anti-Fascist ideology coincided with the systemisation of coherent information and propaganda by the American Office of War Information in the 1930s and 1940s.[6] Leo Rosen wanted to illuminate the brutality and war crimes of the Axis powers–Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy and Imperial Japan–through his 1943 exhibition, “Nature of the Enemy.”[7] Rosen placed sculptures outside the Rockefeller Centre in New York reimagining America under Nazi rule, juxtaposing Fascist values as the antithesis of American values and norms.[8]

This was an ironic display considering the systemic/systematic racism and prejudice which prevailed in the United States during this period. However, efforts made by the American government to diminish social and political antagonisms–race, gender, class, religion and ethnicity–by counterimaging Nazi diatribes against minority groups suited their democratic aspirations.[9] These efforts can be seen in posters like “United We Win” (1942) depicting a black soldier working alongside a white soldier to give the illusion of racial harmony with the image of the flag behind them acting as an assertion of patriotism.[10] Here art walks a fine line between propaganda and censorship.

Not all art served a political purpose in its pictorial form but in its material form. The patronage and collection of art became a method to assert power among local and international social or political hierarchies. The Hermitage of Catherine the Great was a tool to showcase Russia as a civilised and pseudo-democratic society to the rest of Europe despite its autocratic rule.[11] Catherine was inspired by her husband and predecessor, Peter the Great, to collect art but she maintained a disinterest in it until much later in life[12] They simply borrowed the idea from Louis XVI, who similarly fabricated his image as the enlightened ‘Sun King’ to present the French monarchy in a more favourable light.[13]

Catherine’s efforts were effective as the foreign visitors who attended Hermitage assemblies left Russia with an improved image of it as a civilised and enlightened place, propagating positive Catherinian myth-making.[14] We see similar parallels elsewhere in the Elizabethan royal court in which subjects wore images of the monarch to promote her political image and signal their loyalty to her;[15] or in Nazi Germany where it has been suggested art collections served as a reflection of political standing.[16] Art was ascribed political importance based on its material worth instead of its subject.

Art and architecture have been used throughout history to convey political thought and assert power and ideology. Art absent of political ideology was still valuable in its physical form, used by individuals and group organisations as a system of asserting power through a hierarchical structure of cultural elitism. Art has always served as a form of political propaganda.


[1] Maryl B. Gensheimer, Decoration and Display in Rome’s Imperial Thermae (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), 145.

[2] Gensheimer, Rome’s Imperial Thermae, 114.

[3] Amy Moore, “‘The Cult of Gloriana’ and the challenges it faced.” Vides 5 (2017): 63. https://www.conted.ox.ac.uk/mnt/attachments/vides_2017.pdf.

[4] Moore, “‘The Cult of Gloriana’,” 63.

[5] Moore, “‘The Cult of Gloriana’,” 64.

[6] Decker, Christof, “Imaging Axis Terror: War Propaganda and the 1943 “The Nature of the Enemy” Exhibition at Rockefeller Center,” Amerikastudien/American Studies 65, no. 1 (2020): 86. https://doi.org/10.33675/AMST/2020/1/8.

[7] Decker, “Imaging Axis Terror,” 86-7.

[8] Decker, “Imaging Axis Terror,” 92.

[9] George H. Roeder, The Censored War: American Visual Experience During World War Two (New Haven; London, 1993), 154.

[10] Roeder, The Censored War, 76.

[11] Katia Dianina, “Art and Authority: The Hermitage of Catherine the Great,” The Russian Review 63, no. 4 (2004): 632. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3663984.

[12] Dianina, “The Hermitage of Catherine the Great,” 632-33; 635; 638.

[13] Dianina, “The Hermitage of Catherine the Great,” 632-33; 635.

[14] Dianina, “The Hermitage of Catherine the Great,” 252.

[15] See Moore, “‘The Cult of Gloriana’,” 64.

[16] Petropoulos, Jonathan, Art as Politics in the Third Reich (Chapel Hill; London: University of North Carolina Press, 1996), 5.

World Cups – On-Field Festivals, Off-Field Frustrations

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World Cups are the highlight of many a sporting fan’s calendar, sporting festivals that are exceptional global adverts for their respective games. In recent times we have been blessed with two fantastic tournaments in the sporting world, the ICC Cricket World Cup in India, and the Rugby World Cup in France, which are rumoured to have viewing figures of 2.6 Billion and 850 Million people respectively. A few weeks ago I found myself in an Irish Bar in the centre of Madrid, full of South African, English, Irish and Spanish fans enjoying a tightly fought semi-final broadcast from the Stade de France. World Cups are truly global events.

On the field these tournaments are packed full of exceptional performances, thrilling encounters and shocking upsets; the types of moments that become etched into the folklores of the two games. In India, we have already seen Afghanistan’s triumph over the holders England, Glen Maxwell’s 40-Ball Hundred, the Netherlands upsetting South Africa again and the imperious dominance of Virat Kohli in India’s batting lineup. In France, the quarter-finals produced some of the most thrilling contests imaginable, as Argentina dispatched Wales, the All Blacks toppled top-ranked Ireland, and the Springboks sent the hosts out of the tournament by a single point. Portugal achieved their first RWC victory over Fiji in the group stage, and the final proved to be a tense affair crowning South Africans as the most decorated nation in RWC history. However, whilst fans have been treated to these exceptional moments and matches that inspire and build the games, off the field these tournaments have had a tendency to leave something to be desired. 

The rugby has largely been a storming success. Aside from issues with ticketed entry to games at the opening weekend in Paris and Marseille, which caused complaints from fans unable to reach their seats, the organisers have been quick to respond to any early issues. The stadiums have been healthily packed out for all the games by neutrals and partisan fans alike, creating a mood around the tournament of a great adoration and celebration of the game, which is exactly what a world cup should be. It is a game’s biggest marketing tool, a festival of that specific sport, and that has been the sentiment emerging from France this autumn. World Rugby have provided a fantastic fan experience, and will be confident of the growth the game will experience in the aftermath of the tournament, especially in countries such as Portugal. 

The criticism levied has been down to the clampdown on sharing highlights and clips off the official channels, a result of strict licensing and broadcasting agreements. Referee Wayne Barnes had a post taken down on X showing a humorous moment from a match he officiated, and viewers in France can’t access highlights on YouTube. How can the game reach new and keen to learn fans when its viewership is being actively restricted? Planet Rugby lamented that “This video is not available in your location” and “This media has been disabled in response to a report by the copyright owner” are two quotes that will live in the memory of fans who tuned in for this World Cup.”

In India, off-field the tournament has attracted a substantial amount of criticism around ground quality, empty stadiums, ticketing issues and more. Despite being an ICC tournament, the world cup is managed day-to-day by the host nation, and the BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket in India), the most powerful national governing body in world cricket. The opening game of this tournament was between the finalists of 2019’s exceptional tournament, England and New Zealand, in the Modi stadium in Ahmedabad, and it immediately gave us a sign of what has become a major talking point amongst fans. Where are the crowds? 

Admittedly, this game was played in an extraordinary 132,000 capacity venue, which meant even the record 40,000 reputed tickets sold for a tournament opener would struggle to hide the vast empty swathes of the stadium. But it created a game devoid of the incredible crowd atmosphere so often associated with cricket in India. Around the country, in considerably smaller capacity stadiums, it has become an unfortunately and underwhelmingly common theme; if India aren’t playing, the crowd isn’t there in force. 

There are a number of contributing factors here. Firstly, it is generally understood that Indian fans are rarely ‘cricket fans’ but rather Indian cricket fans, meaning a game between neutrals won’t attract the same levels of interest from home fans. This is not a rule of thumb, and there are exceptions such as the England vs Afghanistan game, but it has generally held true. Additionally, the start time of 2pm does make it difficult for locals to attend games until the working day is over. Ticketing issues have also hurt the event, with complaints of websites showing the exorbitant tickets to be sold out, but stands remaining vacant. Furthermore, the release of fixtures only 2 months before and tickets 6 weeks prior to the start of the tournament has made it difficult for home and away supporters to plan their attendance, something BCCI officials have recognised to be a huge mistake. On arrival in India, some fans have had to travel across different cities to collect their tickets.  

Visas have also been hard to come by, a problem most clearly seen for Pakistan’s fans, left largely unable to be part of the world record 132,000 crowd at the India vs Pakistan game due to ongoing political tensions, which meant the crowd was incredibly one-sided beyond what could be deemed “home advantage”. And inside these empty stadiums, the quality of the grounds has left a lot to be desired. Dharamsala’s outfield has been so poor to the point of dangerous for the players, and the pitches offer some one-sided matches. 

Whilst it is the players who put on the shows we remember, it is the organisers who curate the experience. If these are to be festivals of sport then fans at the venues and around the world should be treated to the best possible experience, which would certainly serve as a positive force for growing the games worldwide. World Cups live long in the memory, and these two tournaments should offer many lessons in the Do’s and Don’ts of these global events. If future hosts can successfully offer the best to both players and fans, then we will be treated to some very special World Cups. 

A care leaver’s note on Oxford’s whacky traditions

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This week is National Care Leavers Week. The act of dedicating a week to raise awareness for a cause is a PR strategy as old as this university. Now, barely a calendar date can pass  by without a charity demanding attention. So if this landmark passes you by, you’ll be forgiven. However, there comes a point where awareness weeks shift from a PR campaign to a tradition. 

The word tradition literally means the transmission of customs or beliefs from generation to generation. Now in its 21st year, Care Leavers Week has finally reached the point where it has crossed generations and become a tradition. Every year, during the October holidays, the country is asked to give attention to those who grew up in the state’s care. To celebrate their achievements. To amplify their voices. To raise awareness of their challenges. But this is not one we should be proud of and not one I will pass down to my children. This got me thinking: are traditions important? 

This university is famous for its whacky, arcane traditions, from setting clocks wrong to swearing not to light a fire in the Bodleian library. Last week, I saw one of the most public Oxford rituals: matriculation. The ceremony that confers a student’s place here. An induction into the family. Acceptance into this strange world. 

But traditions scare me. I’ve never really experienced them in the way most people have. In the care system, we don’t have any family traditions, let alone any school ones. I didn’t receive a birthday cake until I left the system, and I won’t horrify you with our Christmases. So, when I got an email from the university demanding I participate in this one, every rebel bone in my body was triggered. 

My gut reaction was to run away. To convince myself that this was some outdated, posh rhubarb that didn’t need me. The truth was, I was scared. To take part in a tradition, you must feel part of the thing that is being celebrated. That’s a feeling I’m not used to. Care leavers are used to being ignored, overlooked, and demeaned. By definition, we’re not usually seen as ‘part of the family’. We’re used to broken promises from institutions. Scars like that are hard to heal. 

Some say the Oxford traditions go against everything we have learned about being progressive, productive, creative, and innovative, and they are just not inclusive. But is that really the case? 

Traditions form a collective identity. They touch us, connect us, expand us. As much as I hated being paraded down the street in a silly hat, gown, and white bow tie, for once, I felt included. 

The moment when the Sheldonian Theatre was filled with black and white TV static was unique. For that moment, all the differences in background, area of study, interests, or personalities no longer mattered. At that moment, as the static froze and the Latin was spoken, we were all the same. We were unified in the collective experience of officially becoming students at the University of Oxford. Finally, I felt part of something. 

Are traditions important? I come from a world where traditions didn’t happen, leaving my life as unstable as a Mento in a Coke bottle. But as Oxford opens up to more people from diverse and low-income backgrounds, they will be touchstones that make us feel part of the university. They give us permission to be part of something. 

Image credit: Paul Chapman / CC BY-SA 2.0 DEED via Geograph.

Oxford Majlis criticised over Russian ambassador invitation

The Russian ambassador to the UK is scheduled to return to Oxford for an event hosted by the Oxford Majlis on the 29 November. Originally, the event was intended to be filmed by Russia’s main state-controlled channel, Russia 1, raising safety and propaganda concerns. However, the Oxford Majlis stated that this was no longer happening. Both the Ukrainian Society and the New Russian Society have nonetheless heavily criticised the invitation, fuelled by the ambassador’s previous denial of Russian atrocities in Ukraine.

Andrey Kelin, who has served as Russia’s ambassador to the UK since 2019, has blamed “militant [Ukrainian] nationalism” for the ongoing conflict and spread misinformation about the war itself. He previously called the Bucha massacre, a murder of at least 458 Ukrainian civilians and prisoners of war, “fake” and has claimed that he has evidence that UK special forces have directly attacked Russian fleets in the war.

Kelin was last in Oxford for an event in May hosted by the Russian club, at which he said that Ukrainian students “may return to their country“.

The Oxford Majlis, a society “dedicated to the revival of sophisticated thought through discussion and cultural exchange”, told Cherwell that they “truly believe that the ability to speak personally with the Russian Ambassador will allow a greater level of comprehension of the ongoing conflict to be reached.” 

They further said that the idea to have Russia 1 present was initially proposed during meetings with the ambassador and that “all dialogue and questioning [would be] permitted” in front of the channel. Earlier today, however, the Majlis told Cherwell that they were “just informed” that Russia 1 would no longer film the event. 

The New Russian Society noted that hosting the ambassador could pose a “[v]ery real and imminent danger” to their members and their families in Russia, including a maximum of 15 years imprisonment for protest and dissent.

In response, the Majlis stated that they have “assurance from the Russian embassy” that no passport checks or other means of intimidation will occur, adding that they “will do everything within [their] power to ensure the safety of all who attend the event.” 

They also suggested that “everyone should be granted an audience no matter how decrepit and evil they may be, as a charity to the world that some wisdom may be found in such dialogue.” Consequently, they invited members of the New Russian Society to attend the address and question the ambassador.

Dr Jade McGlynn, a research fellow at King’s College London specialising in Russia under Putin, told Cherwell: “The idea there could be any free speech possible either from the Ambassador or from Russian students attending is bizarre. Would you speak freely if the Russian security services just took your details and your family were still there?”

When asked whether students would be able to meaningfully challenge the ambassador, McGlynn told Cherwell that “senior journalists have struggled in interviews with Kelin, [so] the idea some student society will be the ones to hold him to account or get him to debate in good faith is ambitious, to put it politely.”

She added that the last invitation to Kelin “was splashed across Russian news as evidence that students at such a prestigious university want to hear the Russian view on the war.” 

Following the Russian Club event in May, the Russian Embassy in the UK had tweeted that the guests “had an opportunity for themselves to establish the real reasons for #SpecialMilitaryOperation and its main objectives,” stating that the audience “displayed a keen interest for Russian foreign policy positions.” 

The Embassy further stated the event “demonstrate[d] the demand for the Russian point of view on current international processes to be heard, in spite of British media’s attempt to stifle it in every possible way.”

The New Russian Society said that they “call on everyone to join our protest” if the event goes ahead as planned.

Sir Philip Pullman receives the Bodley Medal

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Sir Philip Pullman has been awarded the Bodley Medal in a ceremony at the Sheldonian Theatre. 

The medal is awarded by the Bodleian Library “to individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the worlds of books and literature, libraries, media and communications, science and philanthropy”. Speaking to Cherwell, Sir Philip said that receiving the award meant “A great deal! I’ve been using the Bodleian Libraries for fifty-odd years now, so I really am humbled.” 

Philip Pullman is a celebrated author, having been named as one of “The 50 greatest British writers since 1945” by The Times in 2008. He is most notable for the His Dark Materials trilogy and has received various other awards, including the Carnegie Medal in 1995. Sir Philip is also an Oxford alumnus (Exeter 1965), and when asked about his time at Oxford he told Cherwell: “Things have changed enormously since I was a student. You had a grant to live on, there were no fees, it was a time when this country was civilised and they thought it was a good idea to send people to university. Now you’re in debt for your whole lifetime. I felt privileged to be here.” 

There was a discussion by a panel that included authors Erica Wagner and Cressida Cowell, academics Dr Philip Goff and Dr Margaret Kean and the former Archbishop of Canterbury Dr Rowan Williams. In 2004, Dr Williams notably praised a National Theatre production of His Dark materials, which received backlash at the time from those who perceived it as ‘anti-religious’. Sir Philip was then joined in conversation by Richard Ovenden, Bodley’s Librarian. They talked about Sir Philip’s life, his work and views on the importance of literature. 

When asked if people still treasure books as much as they should, Sir Philip told Cherwell that “people who do will always treasure the books they have, and probably always have since they were first able to hold a book in their hands and make out what it was saying. There’s a magic about that which you don’t get from any other media.”

He was quick to emphasise the importance of library access, an issue he has campaigned on in the past, arguing that “the most important thing” is to “make sure that books are available in every school from the smallest primary school to the largest secondary school, with a decent library that’s properly funded and looked after by a qualified librarian”. He added that “we need to read books for pleasure but you can’t do that if the books aren’t there”.

On the subject of counteracting the decline of the country’s public libraries, Sir Philip told Cherwell “Don’t vote Conservative, it’s that simple. It’s all part of the general tendency that’s been around since the 70s that ‘public is bad and private is good’, but we must change that, I think it’s changing and people are seeing it.”

The conversation followed by an audience Q&A before Sir Phillip was presented with the Bodley Medal. The Bodley Medal is the Bodleian Libraries’ highest honour, and previous recipients have included Zadie Smith (2022), Sir Kazuo Ishiguro (2019) and Sir David Attenborough (2015). The original medal was struck in 1646 in honour of Thomas Bodley, and 100 replicas were struck by the Royal Mint, using the copper from the old roof of Duke Humfrey’s library. The first of these was awarded in 2002. 

First digital atlas of human fetal brain development published by Oxford

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A research team led by the University of Oxford published the first digital atlas of human fetal brain development. It depicts the way the fetal brain develops between the 14th and 31st weeks’ gestation period. Its main findings involved the development of asymmetries earlier on in the gestation period than previously thought. 

The atlas was established using data from Intergrowth-21st, an international project with over 300 researchers and clinicians in 18 different countries whose work is coordinated by the University of Oxford. Its focus is on improving perinatal health care globally and decreasing infant mortality rates.

The atlas itself was created using 3-dimensional ultrasound brain scans which were then analyzed using artificial intelligence (AI) and image processing tools. This use of AI makes the atlas unique in its depiction of how the fetal brain matures throughout pregnancy. 

Professor Ana Namburete, the first author whose research developed the methods of machine learning, said: “Uniquely, our atlas captured patterns of brain growth from as early as 14 weeks’ gestation – filling a 6-week knowledge gap in our understanding of early fetal brain maturation. 

“We also revealed significant asymmetries in brain maturation: for example, in the region associated with language development, which peaked at 20-26 weeks’ gestation and persisted thereafter without any differences between the sexes.”

Data from the study was collected in the Intergrowth-21st Project, which involved 2,194 fetuses in eight geographical locations. Co-principal investigator of the Intergrowth-21s Project, Professor José Villar said: “This is the latest step in the systematic study of early human growth and development that confirms, using the most advanced research methodology applied to a large number of fetal brain scans, the similarities of growth and development of humans across the world,” highlighting the importance of the international nature of the study. 

The studies findings were consistent with previous results studied by Intergrowth-21st Project, on a baby’s skeletal growth and infant neurocognitive development. These previous findings helped produce the international standards for fetal development and postnatal growth, which are used internationally for research and clinical practice. 

Attention is drawn towards the importance of the mother’s health, nutrition, education, and environmental needs which are vital factors in a babies’ health and development. It also showed that asymmetries in brain development can be observed from as early as 14 weeks, with peak asymmetries in regions concerning language development maturing between 20 and 26 weeks’ gestation. 
Moving forward the atlas can be used to help investigate the origins of neurodevelopmental disorders, allowing scientists to compare the extent of deviations from the development of healthy fetal brains. Professor Stephen Kennedy, co-Principal Investigator of the Intergrowth-21st  Project, explained that “the atlas will help scientists answer complex biological questions about the fetal origins of cognitive function in childhood, such as how language is acquired.”

World Cup Madness

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FIFA recently announced the winners of the 2030 World Cup Bid, Morocco, Spain, Portugal..and Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina. In a shock move, FIFA has set the tournament to be played in three continents, with six teams qualifying automatically.

The initial bid was unconventional from its inception – the World Cup has never been played on more than one continent let alone more than one country, and although the next stage is set to be the US and Canada, there is no way to determine if this format will be successful. The bid was initially for Spain, Portugal, and Ukraine in a demonstration of hope that did not last long. Morocco joined in March and complicates things further as the weather variation increases. Despite the insecurities and unknowns about the host nations, the prospect of sharing the prestigious tournament with 3 football-crazy countries is at least an idea that promotes unity and collaboration. But to add 3 more? And for those to be in South America, the other side of the world?  Players will sweat in Rabat and freeze in Montevideo.

Although the reasoning may be “logical”, commemorating the centenary of the World Cup in Uruguay in 1930, it begs the question why not just give Uruguay, Paraguay and Argentina the hosting honour? there is no doubt the interest is there, especially in a nation that just won the World Cup. The decision has shocked climate groups, as the carbon footprint of FIFA events seems to grow; flying to a game across the ocean will have a significant toll on the climate, and monetarily on fans alike.

Legally everything gets even more complicated. Say we had another Rubiales, an alleged crime committed during the World Cup in a country that the offender is not from. In order for this to be prosecuted in the offender’s home country the act must be criminal where it was committed. So, if the crime occurred in Uruguay but was committed by a French person it would have to be prosecutable in both countries in order to go to trial in France. FIFA regulations would then have to be consulted as they craft their response, and each jurisdiction would have to consider their own laws if they were to support…… It makes for a much more difficult case. 

All in all, it reads as a money grab from FIFA, able to exploit World Cup fever in 6 different countries all at once. It fits their track record, as Qatar’s carbon dumping proves,  but questions the integrity of football’s greatest competition. Essentially ensuring a Saudi World Cup in 2034, will change the World Cup as we know it.

Image Credit: Alex-David Baldi // CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 DEED

Oxford’s term structure needs to change – here’s why it won’t

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You, reading this, are probably an Oxford undergraduate. Or at least you’re an Oxford undergrad some of the time. It might seem obvious, but Oxford students are only really Oxford students for less than half the year. We spend eight weeks at college, before the world of bops and essay crises, union hacks and Najar’s, dissipates again and we have to return home. Like many of us, I’ve always found the structure of Oxford terms to be profoundly disorientating; once I’ve adapted to the pressure-cooker environment of this place, the term is suddenly finished and I’ve got to adapt to the dull monotony of the vacation again.

Why on earth does Oxford University persist with this ridiculous term system? There’s a reason that Oxford is just about the only university in the world, apart from Cambridge, that uses it. If you want your students to learn as much as possible, obviously it makes sense to keep them in university for as long as possible. That’s why almost all UK universities have term lengths around 32 weeks; across the pond, Yale and Harvard – the two academic institutions most comparable to Oxbridge – keep their students for around 40 weeks of the year. Modify term structure a bit, even just by slotting in a reading week or two, and you’d save students enormous amounts of stress, while helping prevent some of the disorientation that lurching between term and vacation causes. Worst of all is how Oxford’s unusually short terms primarily hurt underprivileged students – if the vacation gives you an opportunity to saunter off to your Swiss ski chalet, maybe you don’t see the problem, but those who suddenly go from ancient banquet halls to council homes, from a world of privilege to a world of poverty, probably do.

One answer given for Oxford’s short terms is the need to give students the opportunity to gather work experience and pursue internships. That argument is hardly convincing. For every hour I spent adding to my CV during the last vacation, I spent many more lying in bed – and you were probably the same.

Having a structure of three eight-week terms used to be the norm in Britain – but over the course of the last century, university after university has abandoned them. Why hasn’t Oxford? There are two answers to that question, two answers that can serve as the solution to almost any question you might have about this place – tradition, and money.

Tradition is the more obvious answer to outline. Oxford’s three terms are based around the religious calendar, the Feast of St Michael, The Feast of St Hilary and Trinity Sunday. But I had never heard of the Feast of St Hilary before beginning this article; Hilary term certainly isn’t being modified out of fears of offending a Catholic bishop that died over a millennia ago.

Instead, one of the main reasons Oxford’s terms haven’t changed, no matter how little sense they might make for the 21st century, is because of Oxford’s bizarre system of governance. The authorities of Oxford University are set up like something from The Trial, like how Brexiteers imagine the EU to run, authority divided and subdivided between dozens of different institutions, whose authority is then divided and subdivided even more. In practice, the Vice Chancellor does most of the heavy-lifting for the central university, but the Congregation, Council, Pro-Vice Chancellors, Divisions, Departments and countless committees also play a crucial role – and that’s not even mentioning all the colleges, who hold most of the real power, all with their own labyrinthian bureaucracies too. In practice, this means that trying to bring about change, especially radical change, in Oxford University is a difficult, usually fruitless, task. When do you think, for instance, Oxford’s last all-male educational institution began admitting women? The answer is 2016, when St Benet’s Hall finally wrapped its head around gender equality, at least several centuries after the rest of us. The dictates of reason or logic, whether around term structure or anything else, mean nothing when they fall on the deaf ears of an endless bureaucracy.

What about money, then? Oxford University’s financial structure is about as impossibly complicated as its governance. The long and short of it, however, is that students, and undergrads especially, aren’t really that profitable for the university – its coffers are instead mainly filled up with a steady stream of income coming from investments and land. Indeed, it’s much harder making money when undergrads are here than when they’re away. According to the university, a home student at Christ Church can expect to pay around £15,000 a year in course fees, accommodation and utilities combined – around £750 a week. Spending a week at Christ Church as part of ‘The Oxford Experience’ – a residential program run during the vacation – costs more than twice that, as much as £1895 for a single week. Weddings and other receptions rake in even more money than residential –a wedding reception at the Bodleian Libraries goes for as much as £12,000, more than the cost of an entire year of undergraduate studies made in just one night. The vacations are also the major period for DPhil students and fellows to complete their research. Giving students more term time would mean higher workloads, and therefore higher wages, for academics – and considering the payment for a tutorial is often as low as £25, we know how much Oxford dislikes giving money to its workers.

Oxford University’s term structure is rubbish – but next time you find yourself overwhelmed by the pressure of termtime, or twiddling your thumbs during the vac, bear in mind that, unless you’ve got several billion pounds along with the powers of persuasion to bring several whole bureaucracies along with you, things probably aren’t going to change.

Oxford launches new study to improve COVID-19 and flu vaccines

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Oxford University’s Vaccine Group has launched a study on lymph node responses to vaccines in younger and older individuals. The trial may potentially improve vaccine design for different age groups.

The study (LEGACY03) receives £1.95 million of funding from the Medical Research Council and is enrolling volunteers. Participants must be between 18 and 45 years old or over 65 during screening. The enrollment lasts three months, based at the Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine, Churchill Hospital Oxford.

As people age, their immune systems change, and so do their vaccine responses. Understanding such changes allows vaccines to be better tailored for efficacy and protecting the vulnerable. 

The study’s Principal Investigator, Dr Katrina Pollock MRC, a Clinical Scientist at the Vaccine Group, characterised two challenges in adult vaccinology, namely, “the diversity of responses to vaccines in different people” and “making vaccines for targets that rapidly evolve, like COVID-19 and HIV”. 

The innovative study looks at immune responses at the cellular level, allowing the tailoring of “future vaccine design to get a better outcome for patients across the board”. 

Participants in the study will receive two licensed-for-use vaccines: an mRNA COVID-19 booster and a seasonal flu jab. Cells from the lymph nodes will be sampled using a technique called fine needle aspiration (FNA). A needle extracts cells and fluid from the lymph node. 

After vaccine administration to the arm, white blood cells go to the injection site and transfer some of the vaccine to lymph nodes in the armpit, where the response occurs. Instead of using antibodies in the blood to measure the vaccine’s output, the study visualises lymph nodes with ultrasound scanners and takes small numbers of cells from lymph nodes to observe their response. Scientists can then establish in detail how different vaccines work when paired with information on what happens in the blood.