The Refugee Studies Centre, a division of the University of Oxford’s Centre for Development Studies, has this month been awarded £2.5 million in government funding. The cash will be used to enable the furthering of several initiatives to increase public awareness of refugee issues.The centre applied for the support from the Conflict and Humanitarian Fund, a newly formed scheme of the Department for International Development, in April. The request was successful due to the RSC’s position as the only academic programme in the UK devoted to understanding the causes and consequences of conflict and forced migration in developing countries.The funding will be used to expand the Centre’s public information services such as the thrice yearly Forced Migration Review, published in three languages and distributed to 177 countries, as well as online. The periodical has a reputation as the leading practical journal on refugee and displacement issues.The RSC works closely with policymakers in government and international agencies, and intends to use some of the cash to employ a senior policy officer to make findings from research projects more easily accessible to these groups. It also aims to build partnerships with other researchers working on forced migration at universities in Africa, Asia and the Middle East.According to Professor Stephen Castles, the Director, of the RSC, the funding was awarded to the Centre “in recognition of the RSC’s position at the forefront of knowledgedevelopment, analysis and understanding on forced migration issues.”He added: “It is our aim to listen to the voices of refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced people, and make sure that their needs and interests are not forgotten.We look for long-term solutions that help empower people, so that they can become independent and self-supporting. This funding will help us in our work.”Oxford has been a target for much of the controversy surrounding asylum seekers due to the existence of the Campsfield Refugee Detention Centre in Kidlington, six miles from Oxford. Protests against the treatment of asylum seekers there are ongoing.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Oxford women secure tight league victory over Tabs
Oxford 59-Cambridge 56: The Oxford Women’s Basketball team got their season off to a positive start in the University League with a close victory over Cambridge. The first two minutes of the game were indicative of what was to follow and despite Cambridge taking the initiative with the opening score, Oxford came back with a three. So when the end of the first quarter arrived and the score was within two points, the match was evidently going to be compelling. The second quarter saw a continuation of an interesting competition withgood outside shooting from Oxford players.Aclose match throughout, the Cambridge team kept Oxford on their toes, with Vicky Lister becoming the Light Blues’ top scorer. Cambridge worked hard but were unable to overcome the efforts of Oxford players. Tal Ofek of St Peter’s was Oxford’s top scorer with 25 points, with Mariel dator and Steph Topp also scoring well with 14 and 12 respectively. The game was aggressive and each team was very determined. There were some unfriendly clashes, but this is indicative of a game that ran so close, with the scored tied at 39-all at the end of the third quarter. Oxford played impressive full court press and during the fourth quarter took a runaway lead. an evidently exhausted Cambridge put a hard full court press on in the last two minutes, regaining seven points to break Oxford’s lead down to three. However, the Cambridge team, consisting of 90% new players, often lacked awareness as a team, resulting in opportunities for Oxford to steal balls. Cambridge also seemed confused over some of their own plays and their performance was not enough to beat a more organised Oxford.Both Oxford and Cambridge’s build-up and set plays were carefully calculated, although not always well orchestrated on the Light Blues’ part. The final score promises to make their next meeting on 30 an interesting game, with each team exemplifying communication skills and team spirit that adds another dimension to the sport. With four more away games before the two meet again, Oxford are expecting victory over their academic counterparts when they convene again at Iffley Road. However, Cambridge also have an opportunity to use this time to perfect what appeared to be a good game plan. Cambridge’s performance was all the more impressive considering they were playing their first competitive match together as a team, promising an interesting fight for Oxford next time they meet.Overall, the match was exemplary in displaying what makes competitive sports entertaining: the close final score and the varsity competitiveness all provided for a good forty minutes of entertainment. ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Corpus/Somerville win relegation battle with Exeter
Corpus/Somerville kept themselves in top flight rugby for at least another week with a 35-8 win over Exeter in a high quality relegation dogfight. eight, led by Guy Baker’s devestating charges. Behind the scrum, Lawrence Harris was a constant menace, combining with a physical and skilful centre pairing of Tom Charlick and Luke Bennett. The foundation for the win was laid by the Corpus/Somerville pack which excelled to secure the lion’s share of possession from a larger Exeter From close in, the strapping midfielders were too much for exeter, powering over from short range for a brace of tries each, to which Harris added another, together with five conversions. Corpus/Somerville must now beat struggling Queen’s to ensure their safety. Exeter can still secure another season in the top division but will have to overcome high-flying St Catz to do so.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Lax girls smash Cardiff
The second quarter, however, saw the Blues settling down in attack and creating some good scoring opportunities, and at half-time they led 6-1. With the defence working hard, they stretched to a comfotable victory. The high point of the match came in the second half when a Cashman-Eevans link up assissted Goulty an excellent goal.After a narrow victory in their first match against Cambridge, Oxford’s women’s lacrosse team gained confidence and united as a team in an 11-3 victory over Cardiff.The game got off to a slow start with Oxford only 1-0 up in the first quarter with a goal from fresher Michelle Goulty.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Netball Blues run Birmingham to a standstill
Oxford’s netballers secured their second consecutive win of the season with another impressive performance.an outstanding defensive effort saw Birmingham’s attackers flounder in a quagmire of turnovers. Going forward, the Blues’ initially struggled with Birmingham’s huge defenders, trailling 8-9 after 15 minutes. However, the Blues’ superior skills and fitness soon had Birmingham on the rack. They led 18-14 at half-time, and, as Birmingham tired, stretched out to a comfortable 32-22 victory.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
England’s asset is continuity against an unsettled Pakistan
Michael Vaughan’s men have arrived in Pakistan for the first leg of their subcontinental tour, relying on their established backbone in the pursuit of a seventh consecutive series victory. Pakistan is a testing destination. A role call of retiring talent includes Wasim Akram, Waquar Younis and Saeed Aanwar. Not only does the current crop lack a talisman of Wasim or Waquar’s proportions, but also the frustrating blend of world class and schoolboy cricket that has always infuriated Pakistan supporters continues to undermine progress.In the absence of genuine world beaters, Captain Inzamam-ul-Haq recognises that each one of his men must stand up and be counted: “Aall eleven have to contribute; one or two players will not be able to swing it for us.” But the identity of his team remains uncertain. England have the established pairings of Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss and Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard, both of which have been proven in the Test arena. Pakistan have tried six different opening batsmen and eight different opening bowlers in the last four years. Woolmer may revert to the combination of Imran Farhat and Yasir Hameed at the top of the order but the bowling attack is proving more problematic. Shoaib Akhtar and Mohammed Sami have usually been first choice and no one questions their capacity for extreme pace and hostility, but neither seems to be able to stay fit for a sustained period, to the coach’s increasing irritation. Woolmer is thought to have issued an ultimatum to Shoaib; if he doesn’t knuckle down and regain fitness, he won’t feature. If they fail to shape up, the leading candidates are Shabbir Ahmed, a 6ft 5in pace bowler with an action newly cleared by the ICC, and Nnaved-ul-Hasan, whose reverse swing Sussex fans enjoyed last season. As if this were not enough, there is also a uncertainty surrounding the identity of the fifth bowler, to back up the openers and second string of Abdur Rrassaq and Danish Kaneria; Shoaib Malik and Shahid Aafridi are spinners who can bat and, although Mushtaqu Aahmed has been called up for a practice match, Malik and are ahead in the pecking order.The embryonic nature of their team and relative disorganisation has contributed to Pakistan’s failure to win any of their last five Test series, a statistic only emphasised when contrasted with new found success. Eever the diplomat, Michael Vaughan insists that “Pakistan are a dangerous team and it will be a tough test”. His appraisal may be correct, if conservative. Bob Woolmer’s pre-series rhetoric, in contrast, is provocative, and even hints at sour grapes from a man who turned down Dduncan Fletcher’s job six years ago: “The series was wonderful. I wouldn’t say England were the better side, but they prevented Australia from playing well”. Its present disarray suggests Woolmer was not too busy trying to whip his team into shape to pay careful attention to summer dominance, but he continues: “I want to see whether Kevin Pieterson can handle the limelight.” If his own house were in perfect order, then Woolmer could justify baiting, but it emphatically is not.If can acclimatise to the subcontinental wickets, while Pakistan’s players are still getting to know each other, the series will be a triumph of continuity over change.Eengland’s lauded Aashes heroes will be confronted by the unfamiliar at every turn, not least because they have not faced a Pakistan Test team since 2001, but consistent selection and team spirit should provide a measure of confidence in extremis.In stark contrast, hosts have endured inconsistency to match their local climate since the teams last met.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Time to move on
When they were handing out sports journalists, the British rugby community must have been in the toilet. The Blacks arrive today for their first tour of all four Home Unions since 1983, attempting a Grand Slam achieved only once in a century of Black rugby. But British newspapers have largely responded to the biggest event of international rugby the UK can provide outside a World Cup with hyperbole about an incident from four months ago. That Mealamu and Umage went unpunished by touch judge, referee or match commissioner, is galling. But O’Ddriscoll himself said in a recent BBC interview, “It is time to move on.” He actually went much further, adding “I don’t have any grudges against Tana or Keven… I would have no problem having a beer with Tana.” O’Ddriscoll knows these things are part of rugby. His injury, at least, had no effect on the outcome of the series. But in the 2003 World Cup semi-final, Nnew Zealand’s hopes were ended when Aaustralian flanker George Smith took out their best player Justin Marshall, with a late tackle. The 2001 Lions’ fortunes turned when their key player, Richard Hill, was taken out by a flying elbow from Nathan Grey. Nneither Grey nor Smith were banned.Rrugby simply has an institutional problem in dealing with foul play of this sort. There is a citing procedure in place, but the match commissioners responsible for applying it bottle it when it comes to the biggest incidents. Who would be the man to ban the Black Captain during a Lions series in Zealand? Or a key Wallaby from the World Cup final in Sydney? It isn’t just southern hemisphere players who get away with it; in 2001 Martin Johnson all but shattered McRrae’s ribcage, stamping and knee-dropping a man half his size: he was banned precisely until the day before the Six Nnations started. The O’Ddriscoll incident has given this problem unprecedented attention. But it has been wasted, centred on the wrong offenders. Umaga and Mealamu were reckless, but it is their job to be aggressive rugby players. Touch judge Cole, who saw their actions from metres away and failed to even inform the referee, and match commissioner Willem Venter, who somehow decided there was no case to investigate, were there to guard against foul play and their abject failure to do so makes them the real villains of the piece.With an upcoming IRB conference focusing on foul play, here was an opportunity to finally tighten up the citing procedure and cut down on foul play. But it has been lost, as those with a voice about rugby concentrated on immature mud-flinging. rugby fans, we really do deserve better.Even worse, the only likely long term effect of this hysterical ranting is to create more, not fewer, such incidents.The incident, of course, is Lions’ captain Brian O’Ddriscoll’s ongoing injury, inflicted by Blacks’ Keven Mealamu and Captain Tana Umaga. I’m not defending them – picking up, flipping over and dumping players onto the ground is illegal and dangerous precisely because it can cause such serious injuries even when it isn’t intentional. I have little patience with ex-Blacks like Zinzan Brooke, so keen to put the incident in the past that they forget to condemn it.ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Favourites through
Jesus 2-Brasenose 5; Balliol 2-Worcester 3: ‘To err is human; to forgive, divine,’ said Alexander Pope, but Jesus fans will be likely to disagree after Friday’s Cuppers match. despite standing toe-to-toe with Brasenose for ninety minutes, the home side were floored by two moments of humiliating disaster, rendering their Cuppers dreams lifeless for another year.This was a match defined by Jesus’ calamities. The first came in the opening five minutes as keeper Joe dicoco allowed a deflected cross through his legs. While Jesus recovered from this mishap, the second, just after half-time, was a death-knell. The goalkeeper was again at fault, punching a harmless ball straight to the feet of a Brasenose forward. The devastation of the green shirts at the final whistle revealed the impossibility for this side to forgive two short but devastating seconds of complacency.From the start it appeared as though Jesus’ concentration was not quite complete. Brasenose’s Jack rutherford bullied through two non-tackles played a one-two with John ditchburn before firing it into the six yard box, where it deflected off the knee of Jesus’ Jans Ibur, and past the keeper. Brasenose’s tails were up, and Jesus were lucky not to leak another. It took twenty minutes for Jesus to rouse themselves from their coma. On the half-hour mark they forced a series of corners, the third of which was handled on the line by dave Harling. Graham Parrot converted the spot kick and the comeback was complete.That was until dicoco’s moment of madness; miscuing an attempted punch and providing Harling with the easiest goal of his career. It was the final demoralising blow for brave Jesus. 15 minutes later Tom Brown fired in from the edge of the box before capped a fine performance smashing home from ten yards to make it four. Jesus attempted a late flurry through a ryan West goal, but the resurgence was brief. The earlier errors had taken too much out of the home side and restored the three-goal lead minutes later to seal the win. Meanwhile, another fancied side were finding life much more difficult. Balliol, despite holding the Cup, were relegated last season and are currently pointless a month into the season. But they challenged high-flying Worcester despite a lack of class. Worcester scored 11 goals in their opening two matches and throughout this match showed their class. with counter attacks and swift passing that left Balliol dazed at best and utterly broken apart at worst.Yet it was Balliol who took the lead on 28 minutes. andrew James fighting off Worcester challenges to head in a James doree throw-in. Calmly, the visitors drew level ten minutes later when Sam rowlands crossed from the left for Vince Vitale to head in. Before long Worcester had turned the tie around. Alex Toogood dipossessed James, darted to the byline and cut back a low cross into the area for to flick into the right-hand corner. Julian rose’s Balliol just would not lie down, however, as daniel Lennon pulled back an unlikely equaliser after 66 minutes. Charlie Sheldon felled Lennon inside the area and suffered the punishment when the striker himself fired the penalty down the middle of the goal past Wrigley.As both sides tired, chances came at either end. It was Worcester who stole the glory with 15 minutes to go as Toogood, under pressure from a crowd of defenders, lost possession in the box, but the ball broke to Hoddiss on the right of the spot to sweep into the Balliol net. Balliol searched for another equaliser, but it was not to be. "I’ve got high hopes providing we can hold on to a few players," said Hobbiss, whose college finished third in the Premier division and fell in the Cuppers quarter-finals last time round. "I think we should do very well. Last season we were top at Christmas and then fell away, so [we hope to] put it together for a whole season. That’d be nice." ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Hertford blast past Keble
Keble 0Hertford 1: On the afternoon of Halloween, Keble and Hertford dished up a spectacle of football that was more treat than trick. In this one-goal thriller, Hertford triumphed in the battle for leadership of divsion One . It was rip-roaring stuff right from the off, with pint-sized Hertford keeper, John dowie, flicking over an early free kick from richard Craig. Soon after, Keble’s Tom Collins motored forward down the left, with his attempted lob floating inches wide. Hertford were soon involved, and their effervescent football dominated the rest of a breathless first half. In the 20th minute Tom Parker powered a free header over the goal, while the Hertford midfield were dictating play effectively.Then came the turn of the woodwork. In the 27th minute one of many excellent corner deliveries by Craig was flicked to rich Capper who powered the ball towards goal, only for dowie to divert it onto the bar. The Keble post was in action moments later as a Hertford through ball was controlled by striker Constantin albot who lifted the ball over goalkeeper Southern, only to see it rebound off the woodwork. as bonfire night approaches, this was the wood fighting back.After half-time, the fireworks soon restarted, with Hertford taking the lead on 50 minutes. a Keble back pass gave Hertford an indirect free kick just five yards out. The ball was tapped to Hertford captain, John Creighton, who smashed an uncompromising piledriver which flew past the mass of defensive bodies and past the goalkeeper. Keble piled forward to preserve their status as division leaders. But their attacks were too direct and were gobbled up by the superb David Beatham in defence. There was more method in the Hertford attacks, with Okusaga and Pete Meiklejohn on the wings and rob Knight up front picking their way through the Keble defence. The latter had a shot well saved by a sprawling Southern when clean through in the 80th minute. The only Keble attack of note was a disallowed goal from a Craig free kick, ruled out for a push in the area. players tired, the game deteriorated and Hertford held on for the win. ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005
Peter’s cruise past careless Catz
St Peter’s 30St Catherine’s 13"Back with the old" was the St Peter’s cry as they crushed St Catherine’s, the new kids on the block at the top of college rugby. Catz, on the back of a win over Cuppers holders St Edmund Hall, were looking for a follow-up win over the League holders which would have effectively made them the new champions. However, they were swept away by a fired-up St Peter’s side which displayed some scintillating handling and support play. Peter’s now face a title decider against Hall next week, while Catz are reduced to chasing a cricket score against exeter in the hope results elsewhere will go in their favour.The manner of victory will have warmed the heart of the Peter’s old guard. Catz were passionate, physical, and at times highly creative and imaginative in attack. early on, a classic looked on the cards as Catz made the most of their opportunities to take an early lead. However, as so often in the past, Peter’s oustanding fitness, desire and precision in attack put the game beyond their opponents; Peter’s scored three tries in the second half, turning a potential nail-biter into a more than comfortable victory.Peter’s showed they had their big game heads on early on, taking first blood with a try in the corner after only five minutes of the match. However, Catz have proven this season an early deficit does not rattle them. Fullback Tom reessoon had Catz on the scoreboard, a dazzling run from fly half by Henry Haslam forcing a penalty which he cooly converted from the touchline. With conditions perfect for running rugby, Peter’s looked to assert themselves on the game, the pack dominating posession, the defence squeezing Catz in midfield, and pivot rob Unwin finding numerous holes in the Catz defence. But Catz held firm, Timmy Carpenter and danny O’driscoll combining to prevent what seemed a certain try on the 20 minute mark. Then, almost against the run of play, they took the lead. a box kick from scrum half richard Godfrey pushed Peter’s onto the back foot; at the ensuing scrum, a huge Catz shove allowed tireless flanker James Menzies to charge down and score. Unwin converted a penalty with the last kick of the half, and sent Catz in 10-8 ahead of their rival. The second half began in Catz’s favour as Peter’s poor discipline allowed rees to put his side 13-8 ahead. at this point, Peter’s seemed to step up a gear, attacking relentlessly through some superb offloading in the tackle and support play. Though the Catz backline held out the barrage for some time, Peter’s eventually barrelled over under the posts, gaining a 15-13 lead with Unwin’s conversion. They soon had another, as the pack charged down the blindside, releasing their right winger down the touchline and under the post. another outstanding offload in attack assured Peter’s fourth try, and the lead was 27-13. Unwin then effectively ended the contest, kicking a penalty to put Catz needing three tries. Only some spirited objections to the somewhat overzealous St. Peter’s scrum half punctuated the remaining period before an inevitable win was confirmed. Peter’s were deserved winners, having displayed strength and control throughout the team. The Catz side, who played well in patches, will rue the unforced errors that plagued their game and preventing making a more persistent challenge.Catz Captain Fergus O’Sullivan, summed up their disappointment: "When so much was at stake we just couldn’t find our composure. It wasn’t for a lack of spirit – we just didn’t really find our rhythm today." For St Peter’s, the next game against St Hall represents the final hurdle to a perfect season. Victory there will seal a convincing defence of their division One title and one can only wait with baited breath to see if any team can muster the reserve to topple this side from their perch. ARCHIVE: 4th week MT 2005