Saturday, May 10, 2025
Blog Page 1557

Longing and Urbanity

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Xchanging integrity for champagne

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Institutions don’t come much more oddly traditional than Oxford University. From subfusc to collections, crew dates to bops, we do things a bit differently round here, and that’s how we like it. We know this place simply wouldn’t be the same if we lost our silly outfits, our silly jargon and our silly social activities. The past is everywhere round here and I, for one, react fairly angrily when I sense that this is coming under threat. And this week I am angry.

This weekend showed the magic of the FA Cup at its very best. With Luton beating Norwich, Oldham beating Liverpool, MK Dons beating QPR and Leeds beating Spurs, there were upsets all across the draw. It is with this sense of hope that Hertford went into the 2nd round of Cuppers on Tuesday, only to be cruelly defeated on penalties. I won’t dwell on that. It’ll all get a bit emotional.

You might think I’ve just segued completely between two random points, but I promise you I’m about to link them in an extremely clever, journalistic style. The thing is, I actually made a factual error in that last paragraph. Hertford didn’t get knocked out of ‘Cuppers’, but rather ‘Xchanging Cuppers’. A new sponsorship deal has been reached which sees both the football and cricket Cuppers tournaments supported by the company Xchanging. I wanted to know what they did, but I’ve read their description on their website over and over and I still don’t quite understand. In the company’s own words, Xchanging “provides business, processing, technology and procurement services internationally for customers across multiple industries.” Clear as mud.

On this issue, I, for once in my life, stand with Liverpool fans. A banner they prepared to take into the Emirates Stadium on Wednesday declared that they were ‘against modern football’, and if we add ‘and cricket’ to the end of that, I couldn’t agree more. Such commercialisation at a grassroots level seems fairly unnecessary and it is, to me at least, saddening. The term ‘Cuppers’ has been used since 1882 at both Cambridge and Oxford, and the first football Cuppers tournament was contested here in the 1882/3 season, and was won by Magdalen College. The competition has a rich history, and is in fact the second oldest cup competition in the entire world. Its new title almost completely dissolves such a rich history, and instead makes it seem like some sort of game in which teams swap mugs.

Oxford University Blues footballer Edd Hermes agrees: “It seems like Cuppers is starting to lose its traditional charm. Perhaps it’s going the same way as the League Cup which has lost a bit of its magic ever since the likes of Worthington, Carling and now Capital One became involved.” One can’t help but feel that the heart is being ripped out of this famous old tournament.

It sometimes seems like everything in Oxford is merely a sponsorship opportunity for graduate employers. Not only do Xchanging now have their name attached to the tournament, but it seems like both OUAFC and OUCC are being asked to promote them at every possible opportunity. And for what in return? The winners of OUCC’s ‘MVP’ award will now receive a luxury prize, most probably branded champagne, on behalf of the sponsors. I’m thoroughly underwhelmed.

Blues cricket captain Sam Agarwal has a different view: “No, I don’t think the Xchanging sponsorship of OUCC’s Cuppers competition sees college sport moving into a more corporate world. It adds an extra spice to the competition, giving winning sides the prospect of toasting their victories in style with a case of champagne.”

Agarwal argues that “it also gives Xchanging access to a broad range of students who may be interested in pursuing a graduate career with the company – significantly different to big corporate sponsorships which pay large sums of money just to see their name attached to a team or competition.”

This is an interesting point of view, but not one I can agree with. Arguably, Xchanging are sponsoring Cuppers for the same reason as Carling sponsored the League Cup and Wonga now sponsor a number of professional football clubs: to exploit their target market. I know sport can be a fairly soulless beast, but I’ve always looked at college sport, and Cuppers in particular, as a bastion of a better time, when batsmen would face 90mph bowlers without a helmet and a physical assault wouldn’t even get you a free kick.

Unfortunately, this new deal reveals something rather depressing: Oxford sport will sell its soul for a few bottles of booze.

Photo Competition Winner – ‘Snow’

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Congratulations to NADIA BRENT, the winner of this week’s photo competition on the now-distant memory of ‘Snow.’ Here’s the winning image:

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Thank you to everyone who entered! We had so many brilliant entries that this week we decided to have a Highly Commended runner-up. So congratulations also go to ERIN HWANG for this witty wintry shot:

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Next theme is ‘NEGATIVE SPACE – please send your entries to[email protected] by Wednesday of 4th week!

All winners will also be featured on our Flickr page!

 

Students are a boost to UK economy

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Falling undergraduate numbers in 2012-13 might lead the UK economy to lose £6.6 billion over the next forty years, according to a report recently published by a university think tank.

Based on application forecasts from London Economics, an economic consultancy, the think tank Million+ estimated that the change in fees and funding arrangements would result in a reduction in first-time undergraduates of approximately 30,000.

Oxford offers 3,000 places every year, for which over 17,000 people have applied during each of the last three years. Application rates to Oxford had previously been increasing year on year for at least a decade.

The Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) released figures on Wednesday showing that the total number of applicants after the 15 January deadline for admission in 2013 is 3.5 per cent up from last year.

Oxford University has not yet released admissions figures for 2013 entry.

The Chief Executive of UCAS, Mary Curnock Cook, commented, “This is an encouraging report, with no double-dip for applications and continuing improvements for disadvantaged groups. Young people from disadvantaged backgrounds are 80 per cent more likely to apply than a decade ago.

“However, there remains a stubborn gap between application rates for young men and young women. This is most pronounced for disadvantaged groups where young women are 50% more likely to apply than young men.”

OUSU’s Vice-President (Access and Academic Affairs), David Messling, commented, “University education is a great investment, both for individuals and nationally, and it’s encouraging to see that, for the moment, this message is getting through, and there hasn’t been a large drop in applications to Higher Education. However, Oxford still faces the challenge that students are put off applying – not just because of finance, but due to school history, media stereotypes, and perceptions that Oxford is not for them. Set against an overall backdrop of applications staying steady, Oxford must continue to keep finding new ways to encourage those with the talent to apply. It’s not enough to look at steady applications – the challenge is to aim for what those application figures would look like if every student with the ability to be here was applying.”

The report on the impact of falling undergraduate numbers on the UK economy, published by the think tank Million + and London economics, found that the Exchequer gains £94,000 from financing an undergraduate degree, equivalent to a rate of return of 10.8 per cent, and that it gains £62,000, or a 25.0 per cent rate of return, from a master’s degree.

A second year PPE undergraduate, Adam Ward, commented, “If accurate, these figures [on the loss to the economy] are worrying… However, I have been really impressed by the outreach programmes provided by Oxford, and am pleased to read that application numbers haven’t fallen at the University.”

A University spokesperson commented, “We believe applicants recognise the world-class education Oxford provides and the great benefits of the collegiate system, and that the steady applications over the last two rounds reflect an understanding that, in the new fees regime, Oxford is outstanding value, is no more expensive than any other university, and offers an exceptionally generous financial support package for lower-income students.”

Messling further commented, “Million+’s report touches only briefly on postgraduate study, yet this is an area where the UK is lagging internationally, and many students are prevented from pursuing postgraduate education by lack of finance – an issue spanning both justice for the individual, and the future of the UK economy.”

The report also found that the average net earnings premium for one person educated to undergraduate level is £115,000 over a working lifetime, and that a master’s degree increases the figure by approximately £59,000.

The report additionally established that the average international undergraduate brings £11,988 per year into the UK economy on top of tuition fees of £7,088, and that the corresponding figure for postgraduates is £14,666, with tuition fees of £8,204.

University water usage falls

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Last week, Oxford University announced that its mains water consumption fell 8.2 percent last year, a 29 million litre curb. Indirect carbon emissions from energy required to abstract, process, and transport mains water have fallen 8.2 percent as a result.

This information was published in the University of Oxford’s 2011-2012 Annual Review. The University contributed the achievement to its recently introduced Water Management Strategies, which have overseen bathroom and science laboratory renovations and will effect the construction of new buildings such as the Kennedy Institute, the Nuffield Department of Medicine, the New Mathematics Institute and Radcliffe Humanities.

The University of Oxford’s Water Security Network, a global spearhead in water sustainability, hopes its research and achievements at home will set an eco-friendly example for the international community.

Oxford cramming is not the road to academic success

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Five years ago, Guardian journalist and ex-Mertonian Tanya Gold wrote a piece entitled “Oxford is hellish”. The article resurfaced, courtesy of Twitter, last year and was met with the inevitable excoriation it de- serves from current Oxford students. Much of what Gold said about Oxford as a “bitter, lonely rather boring place” was surely wrong, but one of her phrases stuck with me. She argued that despite Oxford priding itself on intellectual rigour and academic excellence, in reality, “no- body was learning. We were cramming”.

 

Now, as a second-year student with four Ox- ford terms behind me, I find myself actually agreeing with Gold – however annoying that might be. When I was at school, teachers would passionately extol the virtues of the Oxford education and its famed tutorial system: the opportunity for deep intellectual thought and stimulation. In short, I would really be made to “think”. It was certainly a challenge I looked forward to when I got my offer.

 

But now I question whether I really have been able to seriously “think” through essays and tutorials. In reality, and most will surely attest to this, essays have been nothing more than a product of desperately skimming bulky volumes, furiously typing up unimaginative arguments and copying out ridiculous rafts of information in an almighty attempt to hit the dreaded upcoming deadline.

 

Concomitantly, once the tutorial is over, we heave a great sigh of relief, thank God it’s over and forget all the information we hurriedly stuffed our brains with the night before. In short, we are not really learning but cramming, thanks to a never-ending succession of essay titles and deadlines. Even if we wanted to really engage with our essay subjects, there simply isn’t enough time to do so.

 

Is this really why we came to Oxford? Speaking to friends at other universities, it surprises me how superior their grasp of similar subject matter is compared to my own. Now, the answer isn’t (I hope) that they are more intelligent than me. More likely it is the longer-term times and fewer outlandish deadlines that they are faced with. It allows, if they are so inclined, to actually absorb information, understand and engage with it.

 

Many say they like the intensity of Oxford and pride themselves on surviving an academically more rigorous experience. But intensity for intensity’s sake does little for learning. If the university were to implement longer terms and spread deadlines further apart, then an environment more susceptible to actual learning could surely grow. Students would have more time to prepare for tutorials and would pro- duce essays that don’t just read like botched all-nighter products. I am not saying university is just about learning: Oxford with its bops, balls, punting and halls is, of course, so much more. But if we want to call our city one of the world’s great centres for academia, surely we must focus on teaching academia properly.

 

Interview: Sam Adams Award-Winner Thomas Fingar

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On the morning of a controversial event at the Oxford Union, Professor Thomas Fingar already knew that a certain speech made by video-link from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London was going to overshadow his own address.

Fingar, a Stanford academic, former Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Analysis and Chairman of the National Intelligence Council, is the 2012 recipient of the Sam Adams Award for Integrity in Intelligence. The accolade acknowledges his part in the 2007 Nation- al Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran, which found that the country had halted key parts of its nuclear weapons programme. The estimate reached a different judgment than the 2005 report, which had concluded that Iran was going ahead with “building the bomb”. A US led war on Iran seemed to be looming, but thanks to Fingar’s new intelligence work, the calls for military action died down. 

Wednesday night saw the Sam Adams Award ceremony take place at the Oxford Union. Several former recipients were due to speak, amongst them WikiLeaks founder and ‘political asylee’, Julian Assange.

Fingar said he was “pleased to be recognised” by the Sam Associates. However, Fingar added that “the televised address (by Julian Assange) is a juxtaposition that I had not anticipated.” As an intelligence professional and, crucially, as one who is considered to have shown integrity within that system, Fingar is critical of the robbery of US government documents, which were then posted on WikiLeaks. “Is it harmful? Unquestionably.” Fingar particularly pointed to the revelation of sources as “damaging to the entirety of the [intelligence] profession,” and considers the theft to be a criminal offence. “You’ve got a crime that was committed here. A theft, hundreds of thousands of documents, and a break-down in procedure that didn’t catch it earlier.”

According to Fingar, the effect will be “a degradation of information available. Where people provide the information they’ll provide it with more restraints.” “I suspect for a time there will be less detailed information supplied to diplomats (and others working with the government).” He stresses the impact this will have on intelligence analysis. “Those attempting to act with full understanding will be worse off than before. So it’ll be harder to do the job that I used to do.” It was no surprise that when asked by an undergraduate at the Union whether he had “warm words” for Assange, Fingar replied, “Good luck.”

Fingar stands in contrast to many of the whistle-blowers and campaigners with whom he shared the stage on Wednesday. He does not “equate integrity with whistle-blowing,” and firmly believes that his highly praised work on the NIE was nothing out of the ordinary. In his acceptance speech, he also sought to persuade his audience that integrity in intelligence is far from unusual.

“The quality of the work – the objectivity – is not rare, it
is the norm, by design
and reasons of pro- fessionalism,” he
had asserted ear-
lier in the day. “I
didn’t depart
from normal
procedures in
doing this.”

Fingar faces down the skepticism of many who argue that intelligence analysis is influenced by policy-makers. He says that intelligence has come a long way from the infamous 2002 report made on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction. Damningly, he describes it as being “cobbled together in extreme haste, and reading like a legal briefing, trying to “prove the guy’s guilty. It’s a different purpose than asking, where do the facts go?”

Indeed, Fingar believes that the task “should have been redefined by George Tenet,” who was then Director of Central Intelligence. They were being asked to “tell me everything you know, not assess reliability.” It was a “data dump”, which “subordinated the role of analysis.” Despite dissenting voices on the “key nuclear information,” the “Iraq WMD paper had zero effect on policy.” And as he stresses, the point of intelligence is to supply policy-makers with the truth.   “The understanding in policy circles is that an intelligence community that doesn’t tell you the truth is completely pointless.”

He views the position of the intelligence community as “in-house experts. We’re not an opposition party, or an op-ed writer, or an out- side scholar who thinks they’re smarter than all these dumb politicians. It’s the way the system is supposed to work.” Following the debacle of the Iraq WMD paper, Fingar and others set about making sure it could not happen again. Analysts were to be specifically trained in the importance of objectivity. Draft pieces of analysis work had to undergo peer review by other analysts before being submitted to policy makers. The existence of different analytical judgments must be conveyed to policymakers, and public versions of classified documents must accurately reflect the original text. All that would be redacted was sensitive information about sources and methods of gaining information, and diplomatic process.

These procedures were firmly established by the time all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies began to compile the Iran NIE. And when it became apparent that new intelligence persuaded the Intelligence Community that it would be necessary to change a key judgment on Iran, Fingar was unconcerned about what the reaction might be. “It’s not something that we ever talked about or ever worried about. We’re not in the popularity business. Our obligation was to call it as we see it.”

Were there any negative reactions from policy staff? “No, to the contrary… Even from the president…I got a very very positive message from the president.” But Fingar was subjected to harsh attacks by certain sections of the press. Labelled as ‘hyperpartisan’ and ‘anti-Bush’, commentators called his political allegiances into question, and slandered his objectivity. Fingar dismisses this as “silly,” and points out the “comical aspect”: why would President Bush have appointed him if he was indeed anti-Bush? “Why did he put him in charge of the briefing that he gets every day? There was a factual nonsense in this. I felt no need to respond.”

The estimate had concluded that Iran had ended its weaponisation programme as early as 2003, because of pressure and scrutiny from the international community. “Diplomacy had worked. That was the conclusion that the critics clearly didn’t like.” Their attitude was, “Don’t deal with the judgement, deal with these evil miscreants in the state department. I knew that was going to have no effect on me. I did worry about the NIO (National Intelligence Officer, Vann Van Diepen), because he was younger. It probably prevented him from being nominated for a confirmable position in the State Department.”

Sitting in his Stanford House office (Fingar is teaching at Oxford this term), with snow falling outside and classical music coming from his computer, Fingar sounds his first note of regret. But his overall optimistic assessment of intelligence practices serves as a balance to the pessimistic experiences of British whistle-blowers like Annie Machon, forced to go into hiding after revealing wrong-doings by intelligence agents. The consensus amongst these former award winners? We need more Tom Fingars to help keep integrity central to intelligence.

Desert Storm? The War on Terror in Mali

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When David Cameron announced the War on Terror in North Africa would “last decades”, he was less stating a fact than describing a policy. Defence analysts the world over pricked up their ears at the news that North Africa was likely to be this young decade’s theatre of war. Mali’s ongoing conflict has made sporadic appearances in international news, most notably when the rebels seized Timbuktu in May 2012. However it dramatically returned to our news feeds as the French intervention in Mali coincided with the hostage crisis in the Amenas Gas Field in Algeria. These events set the confrontational tone for many news outlets analysis of North African conflicts, casting a simple narrative of Islamists fighting local Governments. In reality, this narrative will serve only to undermine efforts to resolve Mali’s complex conflict and address the broader questions of Terrorism in North Africa.

 

This oversimplification of Mali’s conflict into a simple story of Islamist aggression may be an effective way to sell newspapers, but is fundamentally flawed. First it ignores the role that longer history to Saharan independence movements. Following decolonisation Tuareg groups found themselves divided between Mediterranean Arabic states and West African Sahel states, often badly underrepresented in governments. Independence movements, such as the MNLA, are comparatively secular and are willing to negotiate on some form of devolved government for Malian Tuaregs. Second it treats all Islamic groups as homogenous. Not only are their considerable splits in provenance between groups such as Ansar Dine, which represent home grown Islamism and are heavily focused on Malian issues, and AQIM, which is more influenced by Al Qaeda influence. To talk of a single rebellion neglects the significant infighting between groups and misses opportunities to negotiate with and understand the differing goals of Mali’s groups.

 

Second France’s intervention with the support of the UN community and ECOWAS does not represent a fully planned and considered operation. France’s hand was forced by the rapid successes of rebel groups in Mali. Faced with intervention or the total victory of rebel groups, France was rushed into an intervention. It now privately admits militia groups have proven to be better equipped, disciplined and motivated than expected. It may well prove successful in driving the rebels from town they have captured, but stamping out the insurgency in this vast desert is an entirely different prospect. Moreover the comparative weakness of the Malian army and state calls into question the efficacy of an extensive US Military aid programme. North Africa following the Arab Spring and the fall of Gadhafi has become a considerable area of relatively lawless desert with the free movement of arms and experienced rebels. These factors significantly diminish the ability of Western nations to project influence in a sustained manner through military force.

 

These two points underline the contradiction at the heart of the West’s policy and new coverage of Mali’s “War on Terror”. While media narratives and political statements may not appear significant, in reality they have committed to a particular view of Mali’s rebels, as international Islamic extremists oppressing Mali. As such they are unwilling to negotiate with them. In so doing western government have significant limited their ability to manoeuvre and recognise the legitimate and complex questions of sovereignty in the Sahara. Combine this narrow political strategy with a daunting military problem in subjugating and controlling Northern Mali, and the narratisation of Mali’s war becomes even more significant. Even as defence establishment’s around the world consider the difficulties of the War on Terror’s second decade in North Africa, they have already tied one hand behind their back.  

Join the (singles) club!

When did it suddenly become the norm for strangers to hand out misguided, rather offensive advice? Did I miss that memo from Life? 

Clearly I did because I certainly wasn’t expecting the pep talk I received from the sales guy in Paperchase last week. I was buying place cards – something that can be done for a variety of events – when the most obtuse man on the other side of the counter pipes up…

“Are you getting married?”

“Uh…. No.”

“You seem shocked.”

“I am a little.”

“Why’s that?”

[Yes, I really did have to explain to him why I was a little surprised at firstly his forwardness and secondly, his stupidity.]

“Well, you see, I don’t have a boyfriend, let alone a fiancé. In fact, I’m not really even at that stage in my life yet I don’t think.”

“Maybe you should join a singles’ club.”

Wowowowowow … I didn’t say ‘I can’t get a boyfriend’. I said ‘I don’t have a one!’ Two very different things, my fine friend, and if I wanted your advice I would have asked, you prick.

There’s no rest for the wicked though is there?

“I mean, if you don’t have a boyfriend, who do you go to the cinema with? Or dinner?”

I said I was single. Not friendless.