Tuesday, April 29, 2025
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Hillary Clinton among six to receive honorary degrees from Oxford University

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Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton will be among six honourands to receive an honorary degree from Oxford at the annual Encaenia ceremony on September 22nd.

Secretary Clinton is being honoured for her five decades in public service as an “advocate, attorney, activist, and volunteer, First Lady of the United States, First Lady of Arkansas, the 67th United States Secretary of State, and presidential candidate.” During her time as First Lady and Senator for New York she championed human rights, democracy, and opportunities for women and girls as she travelled to more than 80 countries before becoming the first woman to earn a major party’s presidential nomination ini 2016. She went on to receive 66 million votes. 

She will be honoured alongside Professor Dame Sally Davies, Professor Linda Colley CBE, Professor Anna Deavere Smith, Baroness Ruth Lister CBE, and Jeanette Winterson CBE.

Professor Dame Sally Davies was “installed as 40th Master of Trinity College, Cambridge in 2019, following a distinguished global career as a clinical academic and public servant.” She has served in roles within the World Health Organisation, the United Nations, and the UK government as Chief Medical Officer, championing combatting antimicrobial resistance throughout her work. She’s also known for establishing the National Institute of Health and Genomics England Ltd. She has been named both Dame Commander of the British Empire and Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath.

Professor Linda Colley CBE is an “award-winning historian, Princeton’s Shelby M.C. Davis 1958 Professor of History, and a Fellow of the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study.” She has written seven books in addition to having delivered the Trevelyan Lectures at Cambridge University, the Wiles Lectures at Queen’s University Belfast, the Robb Lectures at the University of Auckland, and the Prime Minister’s Millennium Lecture. She has received the Wolfson Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the CBE for her services to history. 

Professor Anna Deavere Smith is a “renowned access, playwright, teacher, and author.” She pioneered the style of ‘verbatim theatre,’ which consists of perceiving current events through the interpretation and performance of interviews. This has earned her the status of a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and a nominee for a Tony Award. She has won two Drama Desk Awards, a MacArthur Award, and a National Humanities Medal from President Obama, and can be seen in Nurse Jackie, The West Wing, and, most recently, Notes from the Field.

Baroness Ruth Lister SBE serves as Emeritus Professor of Social Policy at Loughborough University. She has, throughout her career, fought poverty and inequality, publishing “influential social texts” and serving on “several prestigious commissions, such as the National Equality Panel.” She remains Honorary President of the Child Poverty Action Group and has served as a Labour peer since 2011. 

Jeanette Winterson CBE is an acclaimed British Writer. Her first novel, Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit, won the Whitbread Prize and went on to win a BAFTA for its BBC adaptation. Her memoir, Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal?, is an international bestseller, and her latest novel, Frankisstein: A Love Story, was long listed for the 2019 Booker Prize. She has recently published a collection of essays entitled 12 Bytes at Al: How we got here and where we might be going next, and is currently working on a television adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s Orlando. She read English at St Catherine’s College, Oxford and is currently Professor of New Writing at the University of Manchester. 

Image: Gage Skidmore/CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

University announces plans for review of mitigating circumstances policy

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Oxford University has announced plans for a review of their mitigating circumstances policy and process this academic year. 

A spokesperson from the University told Cherwell: “The University’s Taught Degrees Panel is due to consider in Michaelmas Term plans for a review of the MCE policy and process. This will involve consultation with all stakeholders including student representatives.” 

Following the publication of a Cherwell investigation which outlined students’ concerns about the process, the spokesperson said that under the current policy for considering notices, “exam boards only have a limited range of options available to them at results stage”.

“It is natural for students to be disappointed when they do not achieve the grades that they had hoped, and the University has sympathy for anyone currently in that position”, they said. 

Students from across the University have continued to share their experiences of submitting mitigating circumstances applications as well as their opinions on how issues with the process can be addressed. 

David Tritsch, a recent PPE graduate, noted how finalists could be forgiven for questioning how “well intentioned” the University’s mitigating circumstances policy was this year but that “there is only so much examiners can do when confronted with a framework that was never designed for a global pandemic”. 

He said students were “disproportionately punished for factors out of their control” and that through their handling of this year’s applications, the University has proven “it is more interested in appeasing the grade inflation hawks among its governing body than offering a genuinely level playing field”. 

However, he concluded that “the damage to an entire cohort of young graduates is done” and added: “The only way to undo some of it is for universities and employers to understand that exams this year were not a genuine reflection of students’ potential. There will be no one size fits all response to this across institutions, but some options could include longer interview shortlists for companies or increased emphasis on writing samples and admissions tests for graduate admissions offices.

“Above all, Oxford needs to acknowledge that it has failed the class of 2021 and fundamentally reassess its priorities if it wants bright students from across the world to continue to put their trust in the system to give them a fair shot.”

A 4th year biologist who submitted a mitigating circumstances notice following the bereavement of an immediate family member, described the application as “impersonal and detached”: “The whole process has this stigma and atmosphere that you are trying to prove you are not lying or making it up.”

She said her tutors and department have been “fantastic and supportive” but thinks there are core issues with the policy at University level, including how opaque the system is, how distressing it is to write and the lack of support given to students. She added that the system is not built for mental health issues and there are a confusing range of outcomes to the application. 

Debora Krut, a second year Spanish student, described completing the application form as a “painful experience”: “I had to describe my mental state after brain tumour treatment. So it stung when I was told in two blunt sentences that nothing had come from my form.”

She said the University needs to make clear how the process works: “There needs to be more transparency about just how much mitigating circumstances will cover, because this ambiguity really makes people lose faith in a system that is meant to support them.”

Safa Sadozai, Oxford SU Vice President for Access and Academic Affairs, told Cherwell: “Many students are disappointed with the lack of adjustment made to their classifications this year, despite assurances that college approval and independent evidence would not be required for approval, as well as the insistence of departments and tutors that this year’s MCE policy would make up for the lack of a safety net, which numerous other universities and faculties across the country adopted.

“The [Sabbatical Officers] and I are working hard on fairer assessment standards this year and this issue will remain my priority. I have been working with the VP for Graduates (Devika) and the VP for Welfare and Equal Opportunities (Keisha Asare) to make sure we can come up with a policy that will be implemented at both undergrad and postgrad levels, as well as across the divisions. It is important to me that the grades students get in 2022 accurately reflect the challenges they’ve faced throughout the pandemic and how this has affected all of our learning and assessments.” 

Image Credit: Ham / CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons

North Oxford developers meet with St John’s MCR to discuss environmental standards

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Thomas White Oxford, the development company of St John’s College, is currently managing  a development project which will turn a college-owned meadow into a new office, laboratory, and residential space.

The ongoing project has attracted protest from the local and student community, with Wolvercote residents campaigning outside of St John’s College. Several key issues that have been raised include biodiversity, traffic and pollution, and affordability of homes.

St John’s MCR’s Environment and Ethics officers recently met with William Donger, director of Thomas White Oxford; Olivia Lane-Nott of Spacecraft Consulting, who is managing Oxford North’s community relations; Rob Linnell of Savillis, who was managing the planning applications; and Zoe Hancock, principal bursar of St. John’s, to enquire about these particular issues. Cherwell has seen an email to members of St John’s MCR.

In the email, the E&E reps highlighted that they asked how Oxford North intends to achieve the net 5% biodiversity gain as required by law for new developments. This question was asked in light of offsetting measures already planned at Cutteslowe park, yet these measures would only account for around half of the biodiversity loss caused by the development of Oxford North as assessed by an environmental consultancy. Donger assured that the legal target would be met through biodiversity gain within the main site as the project continues. 

The email went on to state that in regards to traffic and pollution, Linnell cited previous and planned improvements to the A34, A40, and A44 around the premises and Wolvercote roundabout as being able to mitigate any issues. The development is set to have private car parking at a lower level than is standard for such a business park, intended to reduce any traffic into the site. Linnell explained that modeling on the impact of deliveries and commuters coming in off the A40 had been done to a level satisfactory for planning and permission purposes. However, Linnell offered no exact figure for the expected change to traffic levels in the area. 

Regarding traffic and pollution during the construction phase, Lane-Nott cited the creation of a community liaison group available for nearby residents to report their issues and concerns. 

Another concern held by residents is the affordability of the new homes on the site.  The plan is for 480 homes to be built, with the 35% quota for affordable housing perhaps being increased to 50% subject to the financial viability of the site as is council requirement, explained Donger. Of the 35% of affordable housing, 80% will be available for rent with an income cap in place and 20% will be sold at affordable prices (80% of free market value). The remaining 65% of homes will enter the free market probably to be sold. Donger explained that the ideal outcome for the site will be a contained community, with workers living and working within Oxford North

Spacecraft Consulting say Oxford North’s Red Hall will provide an “innovation centre” for around 300 start-up companies. Image: Spacecraft Consulting

Spacecraft Consulting later told Cherwell that this “contained community” should look like a “24/7 vibrant and connected district for people to live, work, play, learn and visit and enjoy – a place that people want to visit with open spaces, three new parks, public art and culture and children’s play areas.

“We have a Section 106 agreement with Oxford City Council, and Oxfordshire County Council as highways authority. It means we are legally bound to deliver more than 40 commitments to which we have agreed so that Oxford North is a strong, vibrant and sustainable community.” 

Some of these commitments include “reducing car dominance,” “a commitment to use materials from within the local area to minimise travel distance,” “a Soil Re-source Plan to ensure minimal amounts of soil are taken off-site,” “outreach to local schools,” with “jobs being offered to local people,” “boost the economy of circa £150 million,” and “enable gross jobs circa 4,500.”

The E&E officers stated in their email that “clearly there are some open questions left after this meeting, many of which will only be answered as the project progresses. [Thomas White Oxford] was adamant to stress throughout our conversation that, at all stages of the project, all requirements towards the council were fulfilled. It will be important for the St John’s student community to keep an eye out for how these assurances are delivered on as the project progresses.”

In a later consultation between Cherwell and Oxford North’s community relations manager, it was clarified that the net 10% biodiversity gain will be reached through off-site meadows to improve Cutteslowe Park biodiversity and on site measures through significant tree and shrub planting with “circa 1,000 new trees to create a more diverse habitat across the site, pollinator-friendly plants to benefit insects and the whole food chain.” 

Featured Image: Spacecraft Consulting

Shortlisted names for University College kitten announced

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After over 200 names were submitted for the new kitten at University College, the College has narrowed the suggestions down to a shortlist of five.

The College has revealed that “Catty McCatface” was among the suggestions, a reference to the infamous “Boaty McBoatface”. The naming format became a meme after “Boaty McBoatface” became the most popular suggestion for the name of a $287 million research ship in 2016.

Other names the College received included “Logic Lion”, “The Witch-Queen of Agmar”, “Kitten Kong”, and “John Wick”.

However, only the five most popular suggestions could go through to a public vote. They are:

• Clawkins

• Lyra – a reference to the protagonist from Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials

• Martlet – a mythical footless bird in heraldry, several of which appear on University College’s crest

• Mary

• Shelley

People can vote for their favourite name on the College website. Voting will close at midnight on September 16th, and the final name will be announced on September 17th.

Image: The Library, University College Oxford

The Changing Face of Olympic Sport

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We all know the classic sports of the Olympics: athletics, swimming, gymnastics, amongst others. These are sports that we’ve seen on the TV every year. But the Olympics is constantly updating itself, and sports are vying for a chance to make their competitors Olympic athletes. Tokyo 2020 (+1) was the opportunity for five new sports: skateboarding, sport climbing, surfing, karate, and softball/baseball. In addition, more events were included, such as BMX freestyle, and mixed gender relays in swimming and triathlon. So how successful were these new events?

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) decides whether a sport can become part of the Games. Firstly, a sport must have an international federation. Information about gender equity, global participation, passion by fans (measured by TV audiences, social media and event attendance) and the cost of venues is then considered.

It was a big moment for the new sports to have the opportunity to be in the Tokyo Olympic Games, offering unprecedented global exposure. Shauna Coxsey, the only GB athlete to compete in the sport climbing event, recognised the significance of competing at the Olympics: “It’s a monumental time for our sport. It is going to be seen by so many more people. If someone sees climbing and goes and finds something that they absolutely love and have a passion for, that’s huge to that individual.” The Games can inspire people around the globe, and with climbing walls already in more than 140 countries and over 35 million climbers, the interest in the sport is rising. The Olympics can encourage many to start a new sport.

One of the IOC’s key motivations in introducing five new sports was a “focus on youth”, with a hope that sports like skateboarding and surfing would draw in a wider audience to the Olympics and demonstrate it was modernising with the times.

One of the IOC’s key motivations in introducing five new sports was a “focus on youth”, with a hope that sports like skateboarding and surfing would draw in a wider audience to the Olympics and demonstrate that it was modernising with the times. Skateboarding certainly captured the interest of the youth, for the competitors themselves were some of the youngest in the Games. Britain’s 13 year-old bronze medallist Sky Brown joined 19 year-old Sakura Yosozumi and 12 year-old Kokona Hiraki on the podium in the women’s park skateboarding. While its athletes were not quite so young, climbing had an average age of just 21, with 18 year-old Spaniard Alberto Gines Lopez winning men’s gold and twenty-two year-old Slovenian Janja Garnbret women’s gold. Both sports were certainly marketed towards a young generation of athletes.

But did they manage to attract viewers? Both sports proved to be a virtual spectacle for audiences. With spectators in the parks not allowed due to COVID, all had to be watched on TV. And skateboarding and climbing fared well with TV audiences around the world. During its opening day of competition, climbing was the top trending Olympic sport on Google Search. The demonstration of skill and the excitement of new sports attracted viewers to these events. They gave a modern outlook to the Olympics that reflects sports that are enjoyed throughout the world.

In contrast to some of the rivalries of more established Olympic sports, viewers also delighted in the camaraderie of the athletes in many of the new sports. Regardless of country affiliation, skateboarders were seen enjoying each other’s company and supporting one another. Similar scenes were seen in the climbing and BMX freestyle events, with competitors cheering each other on. The atmosphere created in these sports is something that can hopefully be replicated across the board. This presented a symbol of unity between athletes from different countries, which after a trying year globally, was a joy to see.

In many Olympic sports, but in particular skateboarding, BMXing, climbing and surfing, rather than enjoying a celebrity-like status, athletes are from a variety of different backgrounds. Seeing this representation in sport sends a positive message for the hopeful athletes of the future. In interviews, there are a variety of accents to be heard from all around the UK, from Scottish to northern to southern. Charlotte Worthington, who won gold in the BMX park freestyle, was a full time chef before deciding to focus on the Olympics. From working over 40 hours a week in the kitchen to earning an Olympic gold, Worthington demonstrated that with hard work and dedication, it is possible to take a passion and turn it into a world-class skill.

Most importantly, the new sports are some of the most accessible in the Olympics. BMX silver medallist Kye Whyte has become known as the “Prince of Peckham” and hopes that his sport can “help kids come off the streets and get into BMX, no matter where they’re from”. There are skate parks around the country, giving those the chance to get into sports that they had never imagined. Hanging out in the skate park from a young age could end up being a career in BMXing or skateboarding. The new sports at the Olympics can provide inspiration and open up opportunities in a way that other, more traditional sports have been unable to do.

32% of Britain’s medallists in Rio 2016 were privately educated, and 36% in London 2012. In rowing, half of the medal winners in Rio came from fee-paying schools. It is unsurprising that this is the case, as well-funded private schools are able to have top-quality sports facilities with qualified coaches. Millfield is a co-educational independent school, and has an Olympic-sized swimming pool and an equestrian centre. At the Rio Games, 8 former pupils took part in the Olympics, bringing home 4 medals. With only 7% of the country being privately educated, these statistics are wildly out of proportion and highlight the elitism that is still prevalent in Team GB. This is why the introduction of new sports, which give an opportunity to more people from state school backgrounds who did not have access to such high-level facilities, is so important. Sport should be something for everyone, no matter whether they pay for school or not.

Crucial to success at the Olympics and supporting a career in sport is funding. UK Sport is responsible for deciding which sports receive funding and how much. It funds the best performing sports to try to guarantee more medals, and thus a sport will lose its funding if they do not feel it has medal potential. After UK Sport announced they would only support male BMX racers in Tokyo after no British women qualified for Rio 2016, Beth Shriever created her own programme and crowdfunded £50,000 in order to reach her Olympic goal. To enable athletes from different backgrounds to view the Olympics as a viable dream, funding is necessary, or they will need to work or go into debt to compete.

The future looks hopeful for the funding of these new and accessible sports. The success of the sports this year in terms of audience enjoyment will mean that they are able to retain their place in the Olympics. And the achievements of the GB teams, with a skateboarding bronze, BMX freestyle park gold and bronze and BMX race gold and silver, will undoubtedly mean that they will receive more funding.

Now is the time for more people, no matter their background, to be able to get involved in elite sport.

Image credit: pxhere.com (CC0).

Blood money: A cry against London’s ‘festival of violence’

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CW: Violence

You’d be forgiven for thinking that it was an after-work social event for overzealous, middle-aged wellbeing enthusiasts. An event that promises to ‘power progress’ while providing ‘valuable opportunities for networking’, live-action demonstrations, and the opportunity to explore ‘innovative solutions’, ‘reinforce existing relationships’ and engage with ‘relevant, timely and productive’ topics.

Not so, I’m afraid; if you were looking for avocado superfood smoothies and fitness mums exploring their auras, you’d be very disappointed. Instead, from 14th-17th September, the London Docklands will be transformed into one of the most deadly places in the world, a ‘festival of violence’ as Caroline Lucas put it. Mutating into an exhibition of lethal weaponry and torture devices, the fair will provide a social hub for both perversely proud designers and hungry human rights abusers eager to buy their wares.

The Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) Arms Fair is one of the world’s largest arms fairs, taking place at the London ExCeL Centre every two years. The event, supported by the UK Ministry of Defence and the Department for International Trade, sees the bringing together of 1,600 exhibitors and 30,000 attendees active in the arms industry, including many attending from countries known for their human rights abuses such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Thailand.

As one of the industries that thrives the most on death, destruction and suffering, the arms industry is the most obnoxious and reprehensible manifestation of capitalism and cold human cruelty. The more bullets that are fired and the more wars that continue, the more the industry gains. The more armed drones that fly and haunt the skies, the more the bonuses of its nefarious CEOs grow. As the population in Yemen is starved and bombed and children in Gaza die, the blood money of arms companies and their shareholders is raked in to the tune of billions, with the largest 25 arms companies selling $361 billion worth of arms and services in 2019 alone.

We are far from strangers to the images of pain and despair recorded by photojournalists in the wake of war: snapshots of grisly mutilated bodies, little children washed up on beaches, and blood-stained surfaces that appear occasionally in our newspapers and on our TVs when showing them takes the media’s fancy. These realities are of course hidden by DSEI, who present a highly refined image of respectability – showing off and promoting their killing machines in pretty packages with their exhibitors clothed in Savile Row suits and loathsome smiles. This is taken to extremes in the form of the 2019 DSEI highlights video which rolls slickly on like some sick, grotesque Hollywood movie or video game trailer, eroticising and glorifying the violent implements of war and torture, and entirely camouflaging their lethal reality.

ExCel London is 100% committed to tackling the challenges of sustainable development and operating as a responsible corporate entity’, agreeing that ‘businesses have a responsibility to respect human rights and act in accordance with internationally applicable standards, such as the UN Declaration of Human Rights.’ It would be laughable if it wasn’t so sickening.

Just a few months ago the ExCeL Centre was still being used (albeit incredibly unsuccessfully) as an NHS hospital site, intended to save lives (and to boost the power and profits of the private sector). How things have changed. It seems that we are yet again inexcusably plagued by our perpetual blindness, displaying our limitless tendency to care only for those who are in physical proximity to us or directly involved in our lives as we continually ignore the suffering that we are not only complicit in but actively help to cause. How can it be that we allow this arms fair to happen? How can it be that we permit the precursor to the destruction of families, lives and livelihoods to happen in our capital city?  

The support of DSEI by the government alludes to the wider problem of the UK’s sustained support of the arms industry, with the UK being the second biggest arms exporter in the world. The problem is set to get even worse. This year the DSEI organisers have shamelessly urged exhibitors to attend the event so that they can take advantage of increased opportunities to sell as a result of the UK government’s commitment to increase its defence budget by £16.5 billion, the largest increase in 30 years. The increase, introduced by the Conservatives and backed by the Labour Party, wrecked and spineless under its current leadership, demonstrates the two-faced nature of the UK: although the government may talk of compassion and a concern for human rights and dignity, again and again they make apparent how hollow this rhetoric is through their support for and upholding of one of the most despicable industries in the world.

All over the globe, people are being forced to flee and suffer as a result of the actions of the arms industry – the willing lackey of destruction. In many cases, the suffering starts in London as bonds are forged and contracts signed between Janus-faced governments and businesspeople. Instead of continuing and expanding our commitment to arms, the UK should use the little international influence that it has to take a stand against this repugnant industry and in solidarity with all those who are victims of war, torture, and violence worldwide. No more can we allow there to be profit in death, no more can we welcome the brutal cronies of the arms industry with open arms, and no more can we allow the power to kill to serve as a currency that can be traded for political gravity and wealth across the world.

Stop the Arms Fair is protesting against DSEI outside the ExCeL Centre between Monday 6th and Friday 17th September 2021 ‘with talks, music, art, workshops, actions and more’ taking place. For more information see their website and Facebook event.

Image Credit: David Mirzoeff/Global Justice Now / CC BY-NC 2.0 via flickr

Christ Church threatened with regulatory action by Charity Commission

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CW: Sexual Assault

As reported in The Times, the charities regulator has sent emails to Christ Church stating that they are “concerned” by “the very protracted and public dispute” between Very Rev Martyn Percy and the college. As Christ Church is a registered charity, the Charity Commission has the power to take regulatory actions against the college. 

Helen Earner, the Charity Commission’s director of regulatory services, warned the College that it may use its “regulatory powers” if trustees do not respond by September 30th. The Charity Commission could replace some of the College’s charity trustees responsible for the management of the college. 

Very Rev Martyn Percy, who was the Dean at Christ Church but is now suspended on full pay, has been involved in various disputes with the college for over 3 years. The disputes started in 2018, when Dr Percy questioned the College’s pay structure, and requested an increase in his salary after realising he earned less than other College heads.

In November 2018, Dr Percy was cleared of 27 charges of improper conduct by a High Court Judge in an internal tribunal. Percy is currently taking action against the college in an ongoing Employment Tribunal. He hopes to recover the expenses paid on legal action.

One article on the The Financial Times calls Christ Church to be “virtually ungovernable” in late 2019, while Jonathan Aitken, who was a former government minister, criticised the college’s “wrongful charitable governance” in 2019.

The Very Rev Martyn Percy was also accused of sexually assaulting a woman by stroking her hair while alone in the college cathedral’s sacristy at the end of last year. After Thames Valley police did not press charges against Percy, the College appointed a former police officer to investigate the incident. Kate Wood, the former police officer who led the internal investigations into the sexual assault case, found the complainant to be “credible”. 

An investigation by The Church of England stated that it would be “entirely disproportionate” for the case to move to a church tribunal. 

Supporters of Dr Percy have claimed he was the victim of a “black ops” campaign, who was being penalised for attempts to reform the College’s pay structure and admissions.

Attempts were made for mediation, but talks broke down this summer. In her email to the members of the college’s governing body, Helen Earner stated: As mediation between the two parties was halted, we continue to see the dispute as damaging to the reputation of the charity [Christ Church] and affecting its ability to govern itself. We continue to be concerned of [sic] the toll that the dispute is placing on all involved and are now considering whether it is appropriate to use our regulatory powers.” 

Christ Church told Cherwell they were “unable to comment on ongoing conversations between Christ Church and the regulator”.

The Very Reverend Martyn Percy has been approached for comment.

Image: Dylan Moore/CC BY-SA 2.0 via geograph.co.uk

Covid-19 and populism: The death or renewal?

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Populism, the charismatic spectre haunting the Western world, was forced into the shadows at the outset of the pandemic. In the face of an entirely unfamiliar crisis, citizens turned to the stability of traditional politics, producing a ‘rally-round-the-flag’ effect and leaving populists in opposition with little dissatisfaction to exploit. Undermining support and exposing the inadequacy of short-term, popularity-seeking populist policies, the pandemic dealt a severe blow to populists. 2020 saw Trump, a figurehead of the latest ideological wave, voted out of office, while the populist Brazilian president Bolsonaro’s standing in the polls dropped below 30%, the lowest level since he came to power. In India, Prime Minister Modi, another populist leader, is experiencing his lowest polling support in two years. The waning of an ideology that posed such a threat to mainstream politics in 2016 causes us to wonder: is this the death of populism or will it resurge with even greater force?

An ideology that thrives on dissatisfaction and a prevailing sense of government negligence, populism builds a rhetoric of conflict between the infallible and homogenous ‘people’ and some ‘others’: elites or outsiders who seek to exploit and capitalise on the people’s misfortunes. Framing themselves as the sole saviours of the people, populists propagate this crisis narrative in order to gain support and challenge traditional democracy. 

Given its tendency to benefit from a climate of crisis, the pandemic initially appears the ideal catalyst for a populist wave. In its early stages, however, such support for populist politics was glaringly absent. The pandemic lacked the crucial ingredient for populist exploitation: dissatisfaction with the government. Support for leaders across the world soared, as the ‘rally-round-the-flag’ effect was fueled by high levels of insecurity, a rise in patriotism, and the pushing aside of partisan divisions. With health concerns eclipsing all else in the public discourse, traditional cultural, socio-economic, and antiestablishmentarian resentments, traditionally capitalised on by populists, this ideology was forced out of the limelight. Populists had little to exploit. With the people placing trust in their governments rather than the more radical views proposed by populists and adopting a united front to face a common enemy, the ‘people’ against  ‘others’ conflict narrative lost most of its potency, resulting in a decline of support for populists.

When this initial unification had begun to deteriorate and the pandemic became increasingly politicised, government criticism returned to the detriment of populists in power. The top five countries by mortality rate, the US, Brazil, Mexico, India and Britain, all have leaders with populist tendencies and all came under attack for their inadequate handling of the pandemic. 

In the face of such a crisis, requiring a coordinated technocratic response, populists across the globe reverted to their characteristically oversimplified and inadequate solutions. Ignoring and undermining expert advice, Trump suggested using strong light and injecting disinfectants to combat Covid, while Bolsonaro advocated various antibiotics and vitamins as ‘miracle cures’ and Modi proposed yoga as an effective treatment. Not only entirely ineffective, these ‘solutions’ caused many to underestimate the severity of the crisis and disregard scientific advice, exposing the dangers of misleading populist guidance.

Rather than addressing the severity of the situation, populist leaders have tried to create the illusion that it is contained and under control. A large part of the populist appeal relies on their claimed unique ability to handle crises competently and so, when this is not the case, populists turn instead to optimism and exaggeration to obscure the extent of the peril. Accordingly, Trump, Erdogan, Johnson, Modi and Bolsonaro have all downplayed the crisis while boasting about their successes. Bolsonaro called Covid a ‘little flu’ and claimed that Brazilians were immune. Trump insisted that the virus was less deadly than the seasonal flu and even overtly lied, claiming ‘We (the US) now have the lowest Fatality Rate in the World’. Meanwhile, in India, Modi declared India free of Covid by early 2021; claims all rapidly belied by record death tolls. In their desire to perpetuate the illusion of strength, populist leaders’ refusal to admit their mistakes, boundless self-assurance, and seemingly unwarranted confidence in their ability to solve even the most intractable problems obscured the reality of the situation and obstructed progress in combating the spread of the virus. This hubristic downplaying of the severity of the crisis bred complacency, even a feeling of invincibility, among the people, encouraging them to embrace conspiracy theories and disregard policies when they were eventually put in place. 

Slower to respond to Covid than their non-populist counterparts, populists’ reluctance to impose unpopular policies which might damage their public image resulted in delays in imposing lockdowns, acquiring PPE, and developing testing services and vaccines. A striking example was India where, despite being one of the largest exporters of vaccines, by May 2021 only 1.9% of the population was vaccinated. Once Covid regulations were eventually put in place, populist leaders flaunted them by holding mass political rallies, blatantly refusing to wear a mask and encouraging anti-lockdown protests. Many populists leaders including Trump, Lukashenko and Bolsonaro all held unmasked political rallies, while Modi actively encouraged citizens to attend the Kumbh Mela festival celebrations despite a daily rise in Covid cases of 300 000 and overflowing hospitals. Trump and Bolsonaro went as far as encouraging and, in Bolsonaro’s case, even attending anti-lockdown rallies, capitalising on the unpopularity of restrictions at the expense of hundreds of thousands of lives. According to a model by the University of Colombia, if Trump had imposed social distancing even one week earlier, 36,000 lives would have been saved. Such mishandling of the pandemic and the catastrophic loss of lives that has resulted has left the people with chronic mistrust and resentment which will not be easily overcome.

The pandemic has exposed the inadequacy of these populists’ ability to handle a crisis. Their shortsighted, self-interested politics has cost lives, something the people will not easily forget. The ideology which has run rampant through Europe for the last decade is, however, far from quelled. As the tide of Covid recedes, the political landscape is littered with debris: debt-filled economies, nationalism and the return of strong anti-government sentiments – the ideal atmosphere of crisis for populists to feed on. While those in power have been suffering from criticism, those in opposition are now eager to accentuate the political aspects of the crisis and draw the discourse back to their traditional strongholds. 

This rise of anti-government sentiments has been embraced by populists in opposition, who adopt a rhetoric of crisis in blaming government incompetence for the high death rates and calling for the dismissal of those allegedly responsible as a result. Posed as the sole solution to the problem and the only ones who understand and act on the people’s will, populists stand as the radical alternative. Criticising those in power for doing either too much or too little to combat the crisis, populists in opposition capture support across the spectrum. Le Pen has epitomised this paradoxical form of criticism, drawing on her traditional xenophobic and anti-globalisation narrative to call for tougher Covid measures and the closure of borders, while criticising the elites for the globalisation and immigration which have supposedly made France vulnerable to the virus. Simultaneously, she has accused the government of taking overly invasive measures, such as health passes which she calls a ‘backwards step for personal freedoms’. Such patterns of criticism are shared by populists in opposition around the world. In Spain, Abascal attributed the high death toll to ‘sectarianism and criminal negligence by this Government’ while accusing the government of restricting personal freedoms, calling lockdowns ‘mass house arrest’. Undermining the government and highlighting their inability to handle the crisis, populists exacerbate the perception of governmental negligence and propose themselves as the only solution, playing on the crisis to capture the support of the resentful people. 

Economic destabilisation leads to support for unconventional politicians, with the people turning to more radical solutions when the government appears to fail. The 2008 financial crash fueled the wave of populist in the early 2010s. The post-Covid economic downturn is projected to be even worse. Favouring unsustainable economic policies such as a combination of flat tax rates and tax cuts with increased spending on public services and benefits, populists make unachievable promises which are highly appealing in times of economic crisis. Pressure to stabilise the economy may lead governments to relax their financial support and impose austerity measures, leaving people vulnerable and providing fertile ground for populists to exploit. 

While in many countries government care packages have alleviated some of the economic impact of the pandemic, it is projected that global unemployment will have increased by 20 million by 2022, with an additional 108 million workers falling into ‘extreme poverty’ from pre-pandemic levels. The scale of the downturn and extent of government debt mean that immediate measures like care packages are temporary and limited. The mitigating policies do not combat the drop in social status associated with unemployment. This breeds resentment against the meritocratic tone of traditional politics, which often makes people from lower socioeconomic brackets feel humiliated and detached, and therefore increases support for the populist championing of the sovereignty of the people. Impacting primarily those working for a lower wage, such as small business owners, manual production workers and service sector workers, the pandemic has had a devastating impact on people already disproportionately dispensed to support populists. 

More indirectly, the Covid pandemic has heightened geopolitical friction, providing renewed ammunition for populists to attack their greatest bete noire: globalisation. Since travel aids the spread of the virus, populists claim that globalisation is responsible for the rapid proliferation of Covid cases and leaves their countries vulnerable to future pandemics. Salvini called for harsher border controls and accused immigrant ships from Africa of bringing Covid to Italy. Opposition leaders Salvini, Le Pen, and Abascal have all condemned technocrats and champions of globalisation, attempting to delegitimise the government and blaming them for subordinating the needs of the people to those of ‘outsiders’ or the economy.  Furthermore, in Europe, the dramatic failure to coordinate an international response to the pandemic, and even the introduction of restraints that slowed down countries’ responses, has fueled Eurosceptic attitudes. The European Commission faced severe backlash over its slowness in approving and acquiring vaccines, leading to delay in vaccine rollouts because of bureaucratic red tape. Meanwhile, the WHO has been condemned for deferring the declaration of the pandemic as an international emergency and its slow imposition of travel restrictions caused by convoluted regulations. Validating the long-running populist vilification of supra-national organisations, these inefficiencies and failures of existing structures have increased scepticism and the desire for independence, intensifying the populist appeal.

The nationalistic elements of the pandemic have renewed such anti-globalisation resentments. Anti-China sentiments especially have allowed populists to villainise globalists for creating the economic structure which turned China into a superpower. Salvini made claims that the outbreak began due to experiments with coronaviruses taking place in Chinese labs. Abascal went as far as claiming the Chinese had created the virus and were using it to establish a globalist tyranny in Europe. Other populist parties including the French Rassemblement National, Swedish Democrats and Alternative für Deutschland called for an international investigation into the Chinese government’s handling of the outbreak. By condoning and intensifying conspiracy theories about the threat from China, populists are perpetuating a crisis narrative that will outlast the pandemic, creating a long-term source of populist support and allowing them to draw xenophobia firmly back into the public discourse and reignite anger over globalisation.

The dire mismanagement of the crisis by populist-led governments has temporarily exposed the delusion of the populist promise, driving the people towards more conventional politics. However, populists in opposition are and can expect to continue seeing a surge of support, with the pandemic providing the ideal environment for them to exploit. Long after the pandemic is over, populists will continue to propagate a sense of crisis, creating a ‘permanent crisis cycle’ which will allow them to capitalise on the aftermath of the pandemic for years to come. The ideology of populism is far from dead and will continue to haunt the globe, ready to rear its head for many crises to come.

What the pandemic has taught me: Nursing during Covid-19

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The past year-and-a-half has been incredibly difficult for all of us. Amongst the many difficulties brought about by the pandemic, our relationships with our home, our work, and the people we love have been tested and forcibly reshaped. This is perhaps, most true for our healthcare professionals who were never afforded the option of working from home and have often had to put their own health at risk in protecting their patients. In turn, they have had to carry the weight of the previous shift home with them each day, fearful of imposing this burden onto both the physical and psychological wellbeing of the people they love. 

In this series of articles, we will be asking a range of healthcare professionals about their experiences of the pandemic, and what the past eighteen months has taught them. In doing so, we hope to provide a space for these individuals to articulate both the highs and lows of their work and, if at all, how this period of intense change has altered their views on their career.

Today, we’re listening to nurses. 

Across a series of interviews with members of the nursing profession (many of whom had come out of retirement in order to support overstretched local health services throughout the pandemic), perspectives on the last eighteen months varied significantly. When asked whether the pandemic had changed their perspective on their work, focus shifted between the practicalities of the nursing profession and onto the broader issue of the (mal)treatment of nurses working within our healthcare services. 

While some noted how COVID-induced changes to nursing practices meant that they now missed “speaking to people, and being given the privilege of supporting individuals within their own homes”, others had learnt “how much, as nurses, we put ourselves at risk”, and also, “how fragile life really is”. Responses also detailed how the pandemic had made working life more difficult, referencing how the enforced changes to nursing practices had made nursing “less patient centred” and had “taken focus off a lot of essential care needs”, with one respondent describing how the pandemic had “highlighted the desperate need for safe staffing levels in the NHS”, and how current staffing shortages were exacerbating difficulties and shortcomings in addressing these essential care needs.

On this note of how the pandemic has altered the nurse-patient dynamic, we were also keen to ask these individuals how they felt the pandemic may have changed the public’s perspective on their work. It was striking how responses to this question frequently centred around the ‘Clap For Our Carers’. Individuals described how the first night of this scheme (designed to showcase the public’s appreciation for healthcare professionals) was “spine chilling”, and was “appreciated” by nursing staff. However, the sentiment of many was that this act encapsulated a wider issue in the experiences of nursing professionals: a respondent noted how they were aware that this appreciation “would not last”. At times, this same split-feeling also existed in discussing public perspectives in the broader context of the pandemic as a whole. To illustrate, many nurses expressed how the pandemic had led the public to “value the NHS as a whole, now more than ever”, to “understand the difficulties faced in the NHS” and to have a “new awareness and appreciation” for the nursing profession. 

Simultaneously, other individuals described how “people will soon forget about nurses and carers, as they struggle to ensure their own survival in a post pandemic recession”, how nurses had, on occasion, been used as “scapegoats”. Others spoke of how the growing public perception that “healthcare workers are angels” may not be helpful in ensuring that people fully grasp the human, emotional realities of the nursing profession and how nurses cannot possibly have remained untouched and unaffected by all that this last eighteen months has enforced upon us. It was also hugely poignant and informative to hear how the infallibility and resolve of the nurses we spoke to had been tested beyond professional boundaries. When discussing the hardest moments of the pandemic, many individuals spoke of the pain of loss: of patients, of colleagues and of old work friends. 

In spite of the many difficulties faced across the pandemic, when asked what advice they would offer to a young person that currently plans and aspires to pursue a career in nursing, responses were resoundingly consistent. They expressed that although it can be tough, it’s an incredible and important career: “Embrace it – but it’s difficult”, said one individual. Respondents also wanted to highlight the importance of interdependence and helping one another; answers conveyed how it’s integral that you “don’t be afraid to stand up for yourself and colleagues” and that “mental health is priceless and should come first”.

If the pandemic has taught us anything, it’s demonstrated who we instinctively turn to for support through our darkest moments. Across this hugely challenging and sad time, we’ve relied on nurses to keep us, and our loved ones, safe. We can only hope that in reflecting on these insights, we may respond to future difficulties that the profession will face (unjustly low pay, staff shortages and incidences of patient abuse to name a few) with empathy and support, and therein help to improve the day-to-day experiences of these individuals, for the benefit of us all. 

Thank you to all the nurses that have worked so hard throughout the COVID-19 pandemic to protect our health and wellbeing.

Image Credit: Alberto Giuliani / CC BY-SA 4.0

Oxford City Council announces measures for return of students

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The City Council has announced its plans to welcome back university students after restrictions on student returns this past year have left the city “strangely empty.”

Councillor Susan Brown, leader of Oxford City Council, said: “Oxford is looking forward to having students back and feeling that life is returning to normal. I want to thank both our universities for the huge contribution that they made as institutions and as individuals (staff and students) to our ability to tackle the pandemic on a local, national and international level.”

While acknowledging that the risks presented by covid are lowered by the increased vaccination rates of both the student and local populations, the Council says both universities will continue to take steps to reduce the risks associated with COVID-19. 

The City Council has listed six main measures to be taken. One measure will be encouraging students to take up their vaccine appointments as soon as possible, ideally before returning to university. Additionally, pop-up vaccination centers will be provided at both universities for students still in need of their vaccine. 

Students will also be encouraged to get tested before arriving at university and to continue to test twice a week throughout the term. Symptomatic PCR tests will be available on site at both universities. Health guidance such as the use of face coverings, testing, and self isolation where necessary will continue to be issued to staff and students. 

The Council is also announcing that many larger lectures will continue to take place online, while smaller teach sessions can go ahead in person providing appropriate safety measures are observed. 

Local businesses in particular are posed to enthusiastically welcome back the student population, as the city saw a drop in tourism over this past summer. Councillor Susan Brown explained: “for local residents, it will take us a little time to adjust to the city filling up again, as it did when we started to emerge from lockdown. But in a city built around university education, the return of student life is an essential step towards normality –and very important for our local economy.”

The City Council also hopes that students will volunteer within the community, particularly aiding with food charities. Students will hopefully reengage with local arts and culture projects as well as sports and physical activities. 

Specific advice issued for international students is to continue to follow the same quarantine rules as any other overseas arrivals, with those coming from red list countries to formally quarantine in hotel accommodation before returning to university. However, universities will be posed to offer these students more specific support. Both universities are set to provide extra welfare support to help students. 

The City Council believes that the community has made progress managing covid, with more than 85% of adults over 50 in Oxford having received both vaccines. Case rates in Oxford are reportedly “around the national average.”

Ansaf Azar, Oxfordshire Director of Public Health, has said: “cases in Oxfordshire are on the increase in line with the picture we are seeing across the rest of the country, and we expect numbers to increase further with the return of schools and universities.”

One notable change this term is that there are no legal restrictions on indoor socializing, group sizes, or outdoor gatherings. Any “anti-social” behavior will be dealt with “in the normal way,” in accordance with standard university policies. 

Councillor Susan Brown said “The pandemic is not over but we are in a better place. We will continue to work with both universities to make sure we are ready to respond as needed if circumstances change. We now have good systems in place if we need to adapt.” Both universities have commented on the Council announcement.

Gillian Aitken, Registrar of the University of Oxford, said: “we are looking forward to the next academic year with most of our students back in Oxford. While the pandemic is not yet over, we are hopeful that this year will be less disrupted for everyone than the previous 18 months. Our new health campaign sets out the behaviors we expect of our students and staff; helping to reduce the risks of COVID-19 to the community as we look forward to studying and working on site.” 

Professor Anne-Marie Kilday, Pro Vice-Chancellor student and Staff Experience at Oxford Brookes University, said: “We have been planning in detail for the return of students to Oxford in September, and are confident that we will continue to protect the health and safety of the local community, our staff and students. Even though life is opening up, we remain vigilant, continuing with some safety measures such as face coverings, and online teaching for larger groups.

“We also have high expectations of our students in terms of their behaviour, and will be writing to all residents in areas largely populated with Oxford Brookes students, reminding them of our procedures.”  

Councillor Susan Brown said: “to new and returning students – welcome back to our city. I hope you will enjoy your time here, grow to love our beautiful city and get the most out of the fantastic educational opportunities that are open to you. Please do keep safe and respect other people.”

Image: Nils Lindner via unsplash.com