Sunday, May 18, 2025
Blog Page 130

Oxford researchers develop AI tool that can help predict viral outbreaks

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In a groundbreaking study published in Nature, researchers at Oxford and Harvard have unveiled EVEscape, a state-of-the-art AI tool designed to predict the emergence of new viral variants. The study highlights the tool’s ability to anticipate variants solely from the data available at the start of an outbreak, aiding in preventative measures and vaccine design.

EVEscape combines a deep-learning model with a comprehensive collection of viral sequences. This synergy empowers the tool to forecast which viral variants are most likely to evolve, providing invaluable insights for vaccine and therapeutics developers.

The study’s co-lead author and DPhil student at Oxford, Pascal Notin, emphasized the value of EVEscape in pandemic tracking and vaccine development: “Our study shows that had EVEscape been deployed at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, it would have accurately predicted the most frequent mutations and the most concerning variants for SARS-CoV-2.”

Researchers also tested EVEscape’s versatility by feeding it data to predict mutations across various viruses. EVEscape successfully forecasted the mutations for viruses including influenza, HIV, and pandemic-potential viruses like Lassa and Nipah.

From Oxford’s Applied and Theoretical Machine Learning group, Associate Professor Yarin Gal shed light on what set EVEscape apart from its previous iterations: “We developed new AI methods that do not have to wait for relevant antibodies to arise in the population.”

The origins of EVEscape can be traced back to its predecessor, EVE (Evolutionary Model of Variant Effect). Initially designed to predict genetic mutations on non-contagious diseases such as cancer and heart diseases, EVE had already proven its mettle. However, the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic galvanized efforts to leverage its potential for predicting viral variants.

For now, the researchers are monitoring COVID virus strains in real-time with EVEscape, providing biweekly updates on new variants and sharing their data with global entities like the World Health Organization (WHO). The complete code for EVEscape is publically available online.

With the potential to aid in designing resilient vaccines and treatments, EVEscape may soon play a vital role in predicting and mitigating the effects of both well-known viruses and lesser-known, yet potentially devastating ones.

Oxford report reveals enduring inequalities underlying maternal mortality

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Oxford’s scientists from the Population Health’s National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, in collaboration with MBRRACE-UK, have published a report which helps identify improvements needed in the maternity sector. 

The study, Saving Lives, Improving Mothers’ Care report, comprehensively outlines the number of expecting women who died during, or up to a year after, pregnancy between 2019 – 2021. The report is unique in terms of covering the period of time in which the Delta variant of COVID-19 was most wide-spread and could have had an effect on maternal deaths.

The report carefully analyses and evaluates the care received by the women who died, and simultaneously suggests solutions to prevent deaths in the future. The data also draws attention to the underlying fact that disparities in maternal health currently endure.

The report highlighted racial factors, indicating that in the peak COVID-19 period (2019 – 2021) women from Black ethnic background were four times as likely as White women to die during or up to six weeks after their pregnancy. Additionally, compared to their White counterparts, women from Asian ethnic backgrounds were subjected to an almost two-fold increase in the rate of maternal deaths.

Data from the report has also revealed the impact of economic factors. Indeed, women living in the most deprived areas of the UK were twice as likely to die in comparison to women living in the least deprived regions. Further, 40% of maternal deaths can be associated with mental health related causes with maternal suicide remaining the main cause of direct deaths between in the period.

In addition, 12% of women who died during pregnancy, or up to a year after, were at several of multiple disadvantages. The report shed light on the concern that maternal healthcare staff were often expected to care for women with multiple vulnerabilities or complex medical conditions without proper training, which meant that specific care needs were not met. 

Between 2019 – 2021, the leading cause of maternal deaths, in excess of any other cause, was the COVID-19 virus. Vaccine hesitancy, confused and uncertain medical messaging on risks, coupled with being denied access to basic treatment for COVID – 19 were likely contributors to mortality figures.

Women were often uninformed when making choices regarding medication and care. In order to ensure better maternal care, the report’s key recommendations include that pregnant women must be included in medical and vaccine research, the need for tailored postnatal care and access to training resources in order to promote collaborative decision making on medication use during and after pregnancy.

Professor of Maternal and Child Population Health at Oxford Population Health, and maternal reporting lead, Marian Knight MBE, said: “This report shows persistent inequities impacting the care of pregnant, recently pregnant and breastfeeding women. Improvements in care may have been able to change the outcome for 52% of the women who died during or up to a year after pregnancy. This demonstrates an even greater need to focus on the implementation of the recommendations within this report to achieve a reduction in maternal deaths.”

Fallen Angels? Investigating Victoria’s Secret’s redemption arc

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Simultaneously iconic for its glorious displays and notorious for the impossible beauty standards it perpetuates, the Victoria Secret Fashion show was a cultural staple of the fashion world. From The Weeknd and Bella Hadid’s tense mid-runway reconciliation in 2016 to Gisele Bundchen in a $15 million jewel encrusted bra, it seemed the phantasmic allure and sex appeal of Victoria’s Secret held no limits. The first live streaming of the show in 2001 garnered over 1.5 million viewers and crashed the website. And at the centre of it all were the brands’ “Angels”, a heavenly set of models – all, of course, tall, tanned and toned – flaunting the latest designs and topped off with a set of wings.

However, facing a global closure of 250 stores and a 33% decrease in sales in
recent years, the lingerie house has since been forced to undergo a major rebrand,
cancelling their runway show and shifting their marketing to focus on promoting inclusivity and diversity. The crumbling of a once megalithic pillar of both fashion and pop culture begs the question: why did the Angels suddenly fall from grace?

Originally founded in 1977, Victoria’s Secret began as an outlet for men to purchase
lingerie in a more ‘comfortably masculine’ environment. From the 1990s onwards,
however, the pivoted from its boudoir-esque roots toward captivating an audience of
young women with its annual fashion show. The hook of Victoria’s Secret lay not in
their affordable, trendy lingerie, but in the myth building around these products. The
glitz, glamour and association with A-list faces that encircled the brand’s models
continued to draw in a younger audience. And even though it was no longer men
doing the fantasising, the heavenly image had not changed. The illusion that by
buying into the brand would somehow magically transform a customer into an Angel
propelled the brand to stardom. To millions, the Victoria’s Secret Angel epitomised
an impossible level of sensual, feminine beauty. And even as other lingerie brands
seemingly left behind Y2k’s body standards to reflect their audience’s growing desire
for inclusivity – Fenty x Savage, for example, saw queer, trans, and non-binary
models grace its first catwalk – Victoria’s Secret still seemed reluctant to expand its
tightly curated image. In a 2018 Vogue interview, Chief Marketing Officer Ed Razek
justified his aversion to body diversity by describing the show – which was cancelled
that same year – as ‘a fantasy…a 42-minute entertainment special”.

After a 5-year hiatus, the Victoria’s Secret fashion show has returned to our screens in a manner of speaking. Self-described as ‘part documentary, part fashion fantasy’, the new show premiered on Prime video earlier this month under the name “The Tour
23”. In the process of carving out a sleeker, more Gen-Z adjacent brand, elements
needed to be shaken off; there is a clear feeling that the essence of the original show
has been receded into a hazy, hyperfeminine dream. Instead of sporting the newest
designs, Gigi Hadid hosts a spotlight focusing on global independent designers
creating looks about what it means to be a woman in an ‘imperfect’ body.

Not only was the traditional format dropped, but the title “Angels” has been swapped
out for “VS Collective”. Self-consciously bridging the gap between old and new,
original Angel Naomi Campbell walked alongside Winnie Harlow, drag superstar
Honey Dijon and all-American soccer icon Megan Rapinoe. And while the
supermodels might not have graced the runway in wings, the show retained some of
its previous luxe allure with A-List faces on the carpet and a performance from
Rapper Doechii. This balancing act between retention and evolution makes it clear
Victoria’s Secret is being built anew- at least at surface level. Clearly, marketing has
realised the need to keep up with the “unbridled inclusivity” that Business Insider
described as Savage x Fenty’s USP. But it’s difficult to shake off a controversial past,
particularly when any success remains in part indebted to the lingering shadow of its
high-kitsch beginnings. And, during this rebranding saga, another- more problematic question:

if the brand’s original allure was premised on an unattainable vision, what
marks it out from the competition now? If the show now offers us a reality over
fantasy, will the audience be willing to buy in? Only time will tell if their revamping
successfully walks the tightrope between maintaining its allure whilst also moving
towards inclusivity.

Oxford Council’s Local Plan acknowledges housing shortfall

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Oxford City Council approved the first draft of the Local Plan 2040 on 18 October, acknowledging that they can’t meet the housing demand of the next 17 years. The plan aims to tackle the climate crisis, build more affordable homes, and “make Oxford’s economy work for all residents”.

Following the Council’s approval, the Local Plan will go to public consultation between November and January, after which a final draft will be prepared for public inspection. The Local Plan could be adopted in the summer of 2025, making it the legal document that governs decision-making on all planning and development applications in Oxford, replacing the existing Oxford Local Plan 2036.

Investigations for the Plan identified a need for 26,400 homes in Oxford before 2040. However, the Plan only identifies 9,612 available sites for new homes within the city’s boundaries.

Oxford City Council has asked neighbouring districts to accommodate more than 2,500 of these homes, on top of the 14,300 homes that the districts have already agreed to.

The Local Plan includes new approaches to tackling housing issues in Oxford, including allowing homes to be built on all types of employment sites for the first time and continuing to limit student accommodation to the city centre, district centres (including Cowley Road, Summertown, and Headington) and land adjacent to existing University campuses.

This decision to ask neighbouring districts to take on thousands of extra homes has been criticised by local MPs including Layla Moran, who commented: “Oxford City Council repeatedly decides to use sites in the city for retail and employment rather than housing, and then claims that it can’t deliver the housing the city so desperately needs.”

This is not the first cross-council issue over housing that arose in the drafting stage. The Plan was initially expected to accompany the Oxfordshire Plan 2050 but councils across Oxfordshire were unable to agree on how many houses would be built and where in the county.

Additionally, the Local Plan 2040 only allocates 40% of developments over 10 properties as affordable housing, compared to the 50% it previously set in Local Plan 2036. 

The City Council’s Website states that this is because “residential use now has a lower land value than offices and lab space … Therefore, without this change it is very likely that developers would choose not to use land for housebuilding and there would be fewer affordable homes built in the future.”

The Plan also hopes to balance these housing goals with the council’s climate goals including requiring all new homes and businesses to be Carbon Zero by 2030.

Local Plan 2040 is the result of years of investigations as well as input from the local community with 1,730 Oxford residents’ and organisations’ comments having been considered as part of this draft.

Devolution and Unionism: Labour’s Achilles Heel?

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Fifty-six years ago, in Hamilton, Winnie Ewing won the SNP its first Westminster seat, with 46 per cent of the vote. A landmark in Scottish politics, the 1967 by-election gave the Scottish question momentum. It welcomed the SNP to the political mainstream and forced Labour and the Conservatives to articulate their vision of Scotland in the UK.

Fast forward to 2023, and the momentum is with Labour, who are keen to frame as “seismic” their by-election victory over the SNP in Rutherglen and Hamilton West earlier this month. With 58.6 per cent of the vote, it was a remarkable win. Writing in the Times, Prof. John Curtice projected a similar swing could increase Labour’s Scottish MPs from 2 to 40 in a general election.

As the first by-election defeat the nationalists have suffered at Westminster, Rutherglen plays into a narrative of SNP decline. Amidst investigations into party finance and a lacklustre leadership in Nicola Sturgeon’s vacuum, the lack of enthusiasm amongst members debased Scotland’s governing party to outsource leafleting to a private firm. Having long mastered their role as a Janus-faced government of opposition, the SNP’s machine is running on empty.

At Labour’s conference, Keir Starmer was triumphant, emphatic that “Scotland can lead the way to a Labour government.” Which is just as well, because the route to Downing Street demands Labour gains north of the border. But with talk of 40 MPs, “seismic” change, and a Scotland “at the heart of a Britain built to last,” is Labour getting ahead of itself? Absent at conference was any articulation of Scotland’s constitutional future under a Labour government. This poses a problem, as despite the SNP’s political woes, support for Scottish independence remains high, hovering between 45 to 48 per cent.

Yet this stasis in the polls obfuscates a shift in nationalist thought. In 2014, there was a thin divide between nationalism and unionism. Both sides shared a vision of a strong welfare state, membership of the EU, and greater Scottish control of Scottish affairs. Stressing continuity, Alex Salmond located Scotland within six unions: political, monarchical, monetary, defence, European, and social. Independence was to sever the first of these, but to leave the others intact. 

Just as the SNP has lurched left-ward in government with the Greens, however, so it has become more separatist. Not only the political union but now the monarchical, monetary, defence, and – thanks to Brexit – the European and social unions would alter. As the SNP move towards republicanism in Europe, requiring membership of Schengen and calling into question free movement within the British Isles, independence has less in common with unionism than ever before. In turn, the Scottish Tories have moved in a unitary direction to bypass Holyrood and interfere directly from Westminster in devolved matters. All the while, Scottish Labour are yet to articulate an answer to the Scottish Question beyond a vapid promise to “protect devolution and stand up for Scotland’s role in the UK.”

It has now been a year since Gordon Brown published his committee’s report on the UK’s future, imagining a “reunited kingdom.” Brown’s key recommendation, to abolish and replace the House of Lords with a democratically elected Assembly of the Nations and Regions, has yet to translate into Labour policy. Coupled with Brown’s recommendations on increased fiscal power for devolved administrations and “double devolution” from Westminster and Holyrood to local communities, this would be the seismic change Labour desperately needs. 

It would give voice to a de-centralising unionism that makes permanent and enhances the devolution settlement, whilst building consensus in a polarised Scotland. For Brown’s recommendations bear striking similarity to Alex Salmond’s ‘Council of the Isles’ proposed during the 2014 independence referendum: bringing together the UK’s four nations to work collaboratively on issues that affect everyone. Such policy would reinvigorate Donald Dewar’s “independence within the UK,” and reclaim Labour’s place as champions of devolution. It would see a return to the spirit of 1707 unionism, which sought to safeguard Scottish nationhood and civil society, whilst joining with our larger neighbour to pool resources and work collaboratively on issues that affect us all. Labour’s history of progressive collaboration – on the welfare state, the NHS, social housing – make the unionist arguments most likely to sway Yes voters. James Callaghan’s argument for devolution in 1976 still stands, that “national identity and a United Kingdom are not competitors or rivals,” but rather “partners, each enriching the other”.

But without firm policy on devolution or “levelling up,” Labour risks peddling a unitary unionism that bursts at the border; riding the polls only whilst Scottish voters prioritise the cost of living above independence. This unitary unionism bears the spectre of Thatcherite misunderstanding in red, white, and blue; wary of difference, rendering devolution as “separation by degrees.” It risks returning to Labour’s pre-1970 scepticism of devolution as anathema to socialist solidarity: to a centrally planned economy, nationalised industries, and full employment.

Each of these strands of unitary unionism were evident in Keir Starmer’s keynote speech to conference. Standing in front of a huge Union Jack, with the slogan ‘Britain’s future’ on his podium, Starmer echoed Margaret Thatcher in 1984, with a patriotic rebranding designed to appeal to English Conservative swing voters. Likewise, the tricolour placards happily brandished at the by-election wins in Tamworth and Mid Bedfordshire enjoined “Let’s Get Britain’s Future Back.” By contrast, there were no Union Jacks (or Saltires) on the placards at Rutherglen, where Michael Shanks and Anas Sarwar campaigned for “the change Scotland needs.”

Starmer’s speech made no reference to the United Kingdom, or its constitutional future, but mentioned Britain forty-five times, working up to Labour’s central policy for “Great British Energy,” a publicly owned green energy company. The difference between the United Kingdom and Britain may seem semantic – the difference between four nations and one – but points to a fraction between Westminster and Holyrood in unionist thought and campaigning. A general election fought with UK Labour’s British branding may not resonate with Scottish voters or deliver the success of Rutherglen. The Union Jack may have been conceived to combine symbols for Scotland, Ireland, and England, but for many Scots it is now synonymous with ‘British’ identity, set against Scottishness.

If this really is “a changed Labour party,” as Starmer declares, it needs a better policy on Scotland’s future. A general election focused on the economy and the poor governance of the Tory party might just land Labour more seats north of the border. But to sustain a lead over the SNP and to win control of the Scottish Parliament in the 2026 elections, Labour needs an answer to the Scottish Question, and to deliver change for Scotland within the first term of a Labour government.

As far as there is a ‘settled will’ of the Scottish people, we are still split right down the middle. If Labour seeks not only to win power but to retain it, the party needs to articulate a deliverable vision for Scotland’s future within the UK – one that can reclaim the constitutional centre ground.

Image Credit: Keir Starmer/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0 via Flickr

Oxford tourism numbers rebound after the pandemic

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Oxford tourism numbers are now surpassing pre-pandemic levels, after having been among the most reduced in the UK during COVID. Eight and a half million visited the city over the summer, according to the council’s data.

The city centre has defied the nation-wide trend, with a 14.6% increase in summer visitors compared to the UK’s average 0.3% decrease. The council has attributed these changes to the City Centre Action Plan, which was introduced last year in an attempt to strengthen the city centre. 

The Covered Market has had consistently improved levels of activity. To meet and help fuel increased demand, the Market introduced longer opening hours which were warmly received in the 2022 consultation. The Council’s redevelopment plan also includes refurbishment to the structure and a potential pedestrianisation of Market Street which is set to be trialled next spring. 

Compared to other cities, Oxford has a drastically lower vacancy rate of 5.6%. This is less than half of the southern average and nearly a fifth of the northern. While still above pre-pandemic levels, the numbers are going down rapidly, at 32 available units from 49 this time last year. 

Councillor Susan Brown is optimistic about the future of the city centre, saying: “This summer’s rise in footfall shows Oxford city centre continues to be a thriving destination, despite national trends and despite the challenges of the Botley Road Bridge closure. 

“It’s been wonderful to see the city’s streets and businesses busy over the summer and we have a lot of exciting projects planned – including the redevelopment of the Covered Market and the Clarendon Centre – that will help to keep the city centre vibrant.”  

The City Centre Action Plan is set to be completed in 2030. Part of the plan includes diversifying activities available, making the city safer and, controversially, limiting congestion. The council has expressed its hope  that Oxford will continue to grow as a tourist destination and a desirable place to live, with an aim to improve the local economy and retain talent.

Oxford study discovers source of largest ever Mars quake

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An Oxford led team of scientists have recently revealed the results of a unique collaborative project which looked to explore the source of the greatest recorded seismic event on Mars.

The study indicated that the quake was a consequence of enormous tectonic forces within Mars’ crust and ruled out the possibility of a meteorite impact.

This seismic event (S1222a) was recorded by NASA’s InSight lander last year, on Wednesday 4th May 2022. NASA recorded the marsquake’s magnitude of 4.7 which caused the planet to vibrate for at least six hours.

While Mars is smaller than Earth, it still has comparable land surface area as it has no oceans. To survey this vast amount of ground, 144 million km2, Oxford’s project lead, Dr Benjamin Fernando from the Department of Physics, sought contributions from different space agencies around the world.

In an unprecedented fashion, it is believed that this is the first time that all missions in orbit around Mars have worked together on a single project. This included assistance from the European Space Agency, the Chinese National Space Agency, the Indian Space Research Organisation, and the United Arab Emirates Space Agency.

On Mars, InSight (co-designed by Oxford) recorded at least eight seismic events caused by meteoroid impacts, forming craters that reached up to 150m in diameter. Eventually, after several months, scientists concluded that S122a could not have been caused by a meteoroid, as no fresh or larger crater was found. Instead, it is thought to be from interior tectonic forces, which indicate the planet is much more seismically active than previously believed.

This study, drawing on global expertise, has highlighted the potential of collaborative work on scientific discovery and knowledge. Oxford’s Dr Benjamin Fernando said: “This project represents a huge international effort to help solve the mystery of S1222a, and I am incredibly grateful to all the missions who contributed. I hope this project serves as a template for productive international collaborations in deep space.”

JSoc condemns Intifada chants at student protests

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The Oxford University Jewish Society (JSoc) released a statement condemning “anti-Semitic incitements to violence” used by students during recent protests. In particular, the student society condemned the refrain “From Oxford to Gaza / Long live the Intifada,” writing that “during the last Intifada, thousands of people were killed in random acts of terror.” While JSoc “hoped this call to violence was an aberration,” the statement said “it has now become clear that it is being used frequently at protests.”

The protests in question have been organised by several Oxford societies over the past three weeks. Other recurrent chants from protestors have included “From the River to the Sea / Palestine will be free” and “One, two, three, four / Occupation no more.” The next demonstration is expected to take place on 1 November and will consist of a march from Manzil Way to Bonn Square.

JSoc emphasised the importance of distinguishing between the state policy of Israel and the Jewish diaspora in such protests. It urged the Oxford Palestinian Society (PalSoc) and the Oxford Marxist Society to recognize this distinction, writing “we call on these groups to publicly acknowledge that Jews in the UK are not responsible for the conflict in the Middle East, and that any attempts to assert our responsibility are inherently anti-Semitic.” 

JSoc also called on the two other student societies to “cease using the chant and unequivocally condemn anti-Semitism.”

According to the announcement, JSoc has reached out to these groups through private channels and asked them to publicly condemn anti-Semitism, but neither society has responded to the requests. 

A previous social media announcement from JSoc was posted in response to an attack on an Oxford mosque and read as follows: “We are saddened and disturbed by the Islamophobic attack on a mosque in Oxford yesterday morning. The targeting of Muslims in the UK due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East is unacceptable, and we stand with our Muslim neighbours during this difficult time.”

The Oxford Palestine Society has been approached for comment.

An Introduction to Oxford Drama

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The drama scene at Oxford is vibrant and thriving – in fact, the Oxford University Dramatic Society (or OUDS as everyone calls it) is the biggest university drama society in the country. However, because of its size and the way it runs it can be a little tricky to navigate at first, so we’ve put together this easy to follow guide which explains how to put on a show in Oxford. If you came to our OUDS introduction event in fresher’s week this may sound a little familiar, but for those who couldn’t make it I hope it’s of some use!

How to get involved with OUDS:

Get onto the OUDS portal on Facebook! This is where all upcoming auditions and crew calls are posted by individual productions companies within the drama society. Along with these will always be a link to a Google Drive with all the information you will need to apply. For a crew position (ie anything other than acting!) this will usually just be filling in a google form with your personal details, any experience you have and why you want to join the show. Crew positions can be anything from lighting design to assistant stage managing, and there are lots of assistant roles available for which you don’t need any experience – just an interest in theatre and lots of enthusiasm! If you want to learn a particular skill or just how a show in Oxford works, you can also sign up for one of the shadowing opportunities also advertised on the facebook portal. These have no application process, you can simply sign up using the form on the facebook, and you will be able to attend rehearsal and production meetings to get a sense of how Oxford theatre works.

For auditions, there will also be extracts or monologues for you to have a look at. You will then either need to send a self tape or attend an in person audition slot. There should also be links to additional advice on preparing for an audition and filming a self tape.

How to put on a show:

If you’re keen to put on a show yourself as a director or producer, we’d recommend you join a show this term in an assistant or shadowing position first . 

Once you’ve got an idea of how a show in Oxford works, you’ll want to find another person to start a production company with. Starting a production company means you’ll be able to put on a show in Oxford within the drama society. This involves setting up a bank account and registering on the OUDS website. If you have questions about this you can reach out to any of the OUDS committee members, or your college drama rep. You will then put out your first crew call on the facebook page for your core crew members. This includes: a marketing manager, a lighting, sound, and set designer, and a welfare rep.

Once you have your crew and have chosen a show (and secured the rights if it’s not out of copyright – reach out to the committee if you’re unsure on how to check this!), you then need to go through a process called ‘bidding’ for one of the venues in Oxford. For a first production, both the BT studio and the Pilch theatre are really good options as they aren’t too expensive or big to fill. Theatres will advertise their bid application dates later in term, usually around 4th or 5th week, and you will need to submit an application with a budget, created using the OUDS budget template, and include statements from heads of department. You will then have an interview with the venue, who will tell you whether or not you have secured a slot. 

After that, it’s pretty self explanatory! You will need to hold auditions by putting a casting call on OUDS, and maybe another crew call if you need additional crew members like assistants. You will also need to secure funding for your production, which most shows get from OUDS and a variety of other funding bodies whose details you can find on the OUDS website. You will need to send them your budget and sometimes have an interview about what you’re going to do with the funding. 

Some shows, especially if they are in the first half of term, will cast actors the term before, but lots of shows also leave it to the term of the performance. Once you have a cast, it’s simply a question of rehearsing, having production meetings to discuss design elements and practicalities, and marketing your show to sell tickets. 

I realise this was a lot of information in one go, and I promise being part of OUDS isn’t all admin and Facebook posts! The main piece of advice I would give anyone wanting to get involved is to start somewhere – it doesn’t matter if it’s a role you’ve never done before or a show you’ve never heard of. Everyone in Oxford drama is incredibly friendly and we all share a love of (some might say obsession with…) theatre, so you’re sure to have something in common with everyone you meet. The OUDS committee will also be hosting socials for Halloween and Christmas so do come along to those if you want to meet some friendly faces before diving in to a show. I look forward to seeing you there!

Marking 50 Years since Chile’s Coup

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It’s been a good year for rugby, despite how much it hurts to admit it as an Irish rugby fan. Supporters have been absolutely spoiled. This isn’t just owing to the massive, heavyweight match-ups but also comes from a blurring (an exploding, in some cases) of that boundary of supposed ‘tier-one nations’ versus lesser-known ‘tier-two nations’. But of all the upsets (Portugal-Fiji) and matches going either way (France-Namibia), I think there was only one eighty-minute game which managed to steal my attention from start to finish. On the 30th of September, Nantes hosted the first ever South American derby in a world cup: Chile v Argentina. 

Playing the South American derby, Chile’s first international test match was also against Argentina. In 1936, the result was the same: just as then, Argentina won a resounding victory. The Chileans, determined to prove their place on the international field, fought for every inch. Today, some players have quit their jobs, even sacrificed personal relationships to beat the world cup. A booming rendition of the Canción Nacional set the pitch for lung-busting carries, selfless tackles, heart-pounding breaks. It wasn’t enough.

I start with this game of rugby because I think it captures something about Chile and their fight for certain values. This includes the current nation, not just its rugby team. There is a similar self-critical but determined struggle underway in the country to challenge cynicism about its past and, despite impairments, strive for improvement. 

This September, Chile marked the fiftieth anniversary of an infamous coup – arguably the acme of this struggle for values. Elected President by the Chilean Congress in 1970, Dr Salvador Allende was murdered, his administration and the democratic process were betrayed and dismantled by General Augusto Pinochet and his soldiers.

The shame of this episode cannot be borne exclusively by the domestic perpetrators, with the overthrow having been anticipated and even partially orchestrated by foreign powers. The kidnapping and subsequent murder of Chile’s General, René Schneider, who bravely resisted pressure to involve the military in politics, was criminally endorsed, consecrated by Henry Kissinger and the United States security apparatus. More than 40,000 people were to be executed, disappeared, interned, or tortured until democracy was restored in 1990. The Chilean people and their representatives were not permitted to choose their own future. Instead, their government was to become a ventriloquist for irrelevant Cold War politics and a laboratory for ‘neo-liberal’ Chicago Boys ideologues. 

The process of unearthing sinister crimes continues to this day. Just this summer, new evidence arrived which finally demonstrates that Pablo Neruda – Chile’s second Nobel Prize winning poet, and confidant of Dr. Allende – was likely poisoned to death by the bacterium clostridium botulinum. Do not believe the apologists and reactionaries: Pinochet’s coup was not just about economics.

During a conflict about a decade after events in Chile, Mrs Thatcher made the curious claim that Pinochet’s regime was a key ally for Britain in fighting Galtieri’s Argentina. One regime of extrajudicial murder and thuggery required to defeat another regime of extrajudicial murder and thuggery. Apart from the ignorance of the claim itself (Chile, Pinochet or not, would always have been eager to agitate against Argentine expansion), the greater damage was an overwriting of a richer tradition of shared values between the UK and Chile. The official campaign in Britain for Chilean independence, the closeness between both countries’ maritime culture, Chile’s uniquely anglophile political tradition; these nuanced bonds – not to mention the small but courageous campaign for solidarity with Chile – became subordinate to an alliance with a jumped-up despot.

The British effort for solidarity with Chile is, in itself, an apt illustration, a sort of photographic negative, revealing an instance of brief resistance to the slow decline of internationalist values in Britain. Apart from a brief resignation by cabinet minister Eric Heffer over British military exports, it was largely through the individual efforts of MPs Judith Hart and Neil Kinnock that the anti-Pinochet campaign, including support for victims and exiles, was sustained in both Westminster and Brussels. 

This era was also witness to some last vestiges of a radical, internationalist tradition in the British labour movement. Perhaps most famously, Scottish workers at the East Kilbride Rolls-Royce factory flatly refused to work on jet engines intended for export to the Chilean Air Force (the airmen of which bombed Santiago into submission in 1973). 

Conciliatory though these acts were, the values of internationalism they espoused did not easily track vertically. In what could have extended the effort of solidarity from the factory floor to the highest courts, the UK arrested the elderly Pinochet in 1998 citing human rights violations brought forth by Spain’s highest criminal court. In response, Thatcher came up with another painful ironism. The investigations into Pinochet were “circumstances that would do credit to a police state”, she said while giving credit to a police state.The entire affair ended up setting major precedent not only for British law but general legal theory on state immunity and national-universal judicial boundaries. This was the first major arrest of a former head of state, in a foreign court, for international crimes. 

Britain could have secured the best example since Nuremberg of a former despot tried on the basis of universal human dignity, rather than laws protecting a specific nation’s citizens. After three separate rulings, the Supreme Court finally ruled that Pinochet was not immune from state prosecution as accusations against him were so heinous. He nonetheless could not be tried for acts taking place before 1988. 

In March of 2000, the Home Secretary set the ageing dictator free from house arrest. Upon his arrival at Santiago de Chile airport, having been released on the basis of ‘ill health’, Pinochet miraculously stood up from his wheelchair to the elation of his supporters.

The internal struggle going on in Chile, a struggle to unearth and overcome its history, can be interpreted as a fight to preserve certain values and oppose others. The events in Santiago were never outside the purview of the UK and its own values: this struggle extended internationally. The old and modern fight for certain values in Chile was never just spectated. It always reverberated through to Britain. That old metaphor of Donne’s applies similarly to values as it does to ‘men’: no value is an island, entire of itself – they always inform a larger conversation, a struggle which implicates us all.

The upshot of all this is an obligation of sorts. A participant in this history, there is so much the UK can both contribute to and learn from this anniversary of reflection. Chile reveals to us how the UK was changing as a country, what different people aspired for it to become, and now allows its inhabitants to reflect on how the country was in fact changed. Archives and collections about the UK’s response, such as those exhibited this year by the People’s History Museum and London School of Economics, are crucial in this process. By no means are the lessons purely theoretical; there is a practical, prescriptive bent to these matters. For example, I can picture how many activists campaigning for similarly abused and displaced peoples in modern conflicts may take inspiration from the example of the Chilean Solidarity Campaign, in particular from their independence and third-way persuasion against the influence of invasive political forces. 

The path of Chile’s democratic reconstruction has come from the painful but thorough re-examination of its own recent history. There has been a refusal to bury past crimes, instead pursuing them on the basis of the values of democracy and free expression. Chile is a model for mature self-examination. We could all learn from Chile’s critical time of reflection and re-evaluation.