Friday 6th June 2025
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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

Row, Row, Row Your Boat Gently… Across the Atlantic Ocean.

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Most of us here in Oxford will be talked into giving rowing a try at some point, be that dabbling in the odd college rowing session or signing your life away by committing to the University level rowing regime. However, it’s safe to say that there are few people brave enough, and perhaps crazy enough, to literally eat, sleep and breathe rowing for 40 days straight to race across the Atlantic Ocean in the Talisker Whiskey Challenge. 

A pair of twin Oxford students, alongside their two older twin brothers Jack and Hamish, are taking on this challenge in a bid to become the first four brothers to row an ocean, alongside raising a massive £150,000 for charity. Euan Friend, a University College alumnus and incoming St Cross College post-graduate, and his twin Arthur Friend, an incoming St Anne’s post-graduate, will split their year in Oxford between the classroom and the gym. Both of them will undertake PGCEs in Maths and Physics and an intensive rowing training programme in the build-up to the Talisker Whiskey Challenge next year.

This Saturday, the Friend brothers got their campaign off to a flying start at the Exeter Quayside. This officially launched their Atlantic campaign, which is named The Friendship. They rowed up the Exeter Ship Canal to a cheering crowd of friends, family, bystanders and the sound of the Pirates of the Caribbean theme tune; a fitting tune in reference to the oldest twin, Jack, who has taken on the role of team captain. 

After mooring up alongside the Piazza Terracina, people could take a closer look at the 28-foot boat that will carry them, unassisted, for 3,000 nautical miles across the Atlantic Ocean. They will start in the Canary Islands and finish up in Antigua. However, while the boys and the boat were impressive aspects of the day, the real star of the show was the Friend brothers’ grandmother, Elspeth, in whose honour the boat was lovingly named. Elspeth spoke beautifully of her pride in her courageous grandsons, revealing that while initially she “couldn’t believe it when they told [her] what they were going to do” she was “so proud of them.” After her speech, Elspeth carried out the ceremonial renaming of their boat, smashing a biodegradable bottle of champagne over the bow and officially christening it “Eppy”.

While the actual race may be over a year away, between now and then the brothers face an ocean of hard work to get them to the start line. They’ll be training in preparation for the physical and mental challenges that lie ahead, aided by their coaches Duncan Roy, a triple Guinness world record holder, and Gus Barton, who has trained 23 teams who have successfully completed ocean crossings. While Arthur admitted that he has “never been a massive fan of the water”, they’re fully committed now and regularly take Eppy out for rowing weekends in Exmouth.

Aside from the gruelling training regime, the behind-the-scenes work required to secure the sponsorship funding to actually get the boat to the Canary Islands is monumental. On top of that the boys have set the ambitious target of raising £150,000 for three fantastic charities. These include CHAT, a vital service for those struggling with housing issues in Mid-Devon; Drive Forward Foundation, a UK registered charity that helps children and young people that have been through the foster/residential care system to achieve their full potential; and Friends of Kiwoko Hospital, a charity supporting the work of a Ugandan hospital. The administrative preparation is certainly no small feat.

As their campaign gathers speed, this impressive band of brothers will certainly be one to watch. With a Friendship Ball planned for December and an appearance at Henley booked for next July, it seems like we will be seeing plenty more of these brothers and their Atlantic campaign.

If you’d like to follow them on their journey you can get involved at:

Website: https://www.thefriendshipatlantic.com

Instagram: @thefriendshipatlantic

Facebook: The FriendShip Atlantic

Image credit: Sam Edwards.

The four brothers pose for a photo. From right to left: Euan, Jack, Hamish and Arthur.

Magdalen President received at least £134,000 for role in anti-gay marriage case

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An investigation by the Oxford University LGBTQ+ Society has found that Dinah Rose, QC, President of Magdalen College, received at least £134,000 for advocating against same-sex marriage on behalf of the government of the Cayman Islands.

The case was brought to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Counsel in February 2021 by Chantelle Day and Vicky Bush, a lesbian couple who wished to marry in the Cayman Islands. The couple had previously been granted the right to marriage by a Court in the Cayman Islands, but this decision was overturned by the Caymanian Government in the Court of Appeal, with Ms Rose acting on behalf of the government.

A Freedom of Information request filed in July by Colours Cayman and the OULGBTQ+ Society revealed that Ms Rose was paid CI$152,197.28 (£134,340.73) to represent the Caymanian government. Jeffrey Jowell QC and Tim Parker, who also acted on behalf of the government in these cases, received a further £322,000. OULGBTQ+ described these payments as “extortionate”, contrasting them with the £2000 that Day and Bush had to fight their case.

Ms Rose told Cherwell the OULGBTQ+ Society’s presentation of the fee she received was “inaccurate and misleading”, since the fee relates to “the entirety of [her] work on the case over a two year period, including all the proceedings in the Court of Appeal”. She added that the “substantial majority” of the fee was paid before she was appointed President of Magdalen College.

Ms Rose was criticised by students and societies at Oxford for representing the Caymanian government in their attempt to oppose the legalisation of same-sex marriage. Much of the criticism centred around a perceived conflict of interest between her role as President of a College which includes LGBTQ+ students, and her professional obligations as a barrister.

In response to criticism and pressure to drop the case, Ms Rose said: “As a barrister, I am subject to professional obligations enforced by the Bar Standards Board. These include a duty to accept briefs without regard to the acceptability of the views or positions of my clients, and to represent clients without regard to external pressure. I also have a duty not to withdraw from cases that I have already accepted, and always to put the best interests of my clients first.”

Following the controversy surrounding Ms Rose’s involvement in the case, Magdalen’s JCR passed a vote affirming it’s support for her as College President. However, an anonymous LGBTQ+ student at Magdalen claimed that “the motion… was largely directed by straight white men” and described the experience as “dehumanising”.

Cherwell’s initial reporting on the controversy can be found here

In response to these events, OULGBTQ+ Society compiled a report examining the policies colleges have in place to prevent a College Head’s work outside the College conflicting with their pastoral responsibilities to students.

OULGBTQ+ Society contacted the Heads of the 44 other Oxford colleges and PPHs and received 23 replies. The report notes that “all College Heads who responded disclosed that they require permission from the Governing Body prior to accepting external work to ensure there is no incompatibility between positions.” However, most colleges did not take student welfare into account in their definition of ‘incompatibility’. According to the report, the Society received  “only one response that outlines sufficient due diligence in the appointment and tenure of a College Head” with regard to student welfare.

The report concludes that “existing policies do not go far enough to protect members of the student body, especially those most vulnerable.” Only one college, suggests the report, provided an exemplary response that demonstrated “best practice”. While OULGBTQ+ Society notes that it is unreasonable to expect Heads to give up their professional lives, it recommends the adoption of formal measures at all colleges to ensure that student welfare is considered during the application process.

OULGBTQ+ Society’s report recommends that both existing and new professional obligations for College Heads are examined with regard to their impact on student welfare, particularly with regard to minority student groups. The report argues that the Conference of Colleges should implement this appropriately, and that college Conflict of Interest policies should be freely available to the public for the sake of transparency.

In a statement, the OULGBTQ+ Society said: “[They are] shocked and disappointed to discover the significant amount that the President of Magdalen received to represent a foreign government furthering a homophobic cause. Ms. Rose is already receiving a substantial salary for her primary role as President and so we implore her to donate her fee to LGBTQ+ advocacy organisations and charities in the Cayman Islands who are working tirelessly to support vulnerable LGBTQ+ people in the area.

The Society finds Magdalen College’s aim of eliminating discrimination to be incompatible with prosecuting a case on behalf of a foreign government that is denying the equal right to marriage on the basis of sexual orientation. Our concern does not stem from Ms. Rose’s duties or professional entitlements as a barrister, but instead from the conflict these duties created with her primary and overriding responsibility to protect the LGBTQ+ members of Magdalen. It is inconceivable, to us, that as an acting College Head with pastoral duties, Ms. Rose may simultaneously fulfil an external role actively harming the same community she has a duty to protect.”

Speaking to Cherwell, Dinah Rose QC said: “As you know, I have already commented in detail on this case. All I would add is that the argument that there is a conflict of interest between my discharge of my professional obligations as a barrister and my role as President is wrong. It can only be founded on the assumption that a barrister may be taken to share the views of their client. I have explained before why this assumption is false, and dangerous to the fair and effective administration of justice. In any event, the issue in this case is not whether same sex marriage should be available in the Cayman Islands, but whether that is a matter which should properly be decided by the courts or by the Cayman Parliament. Arguing this question of constitutional interpretation and democratic accountability does not amount to “furthering a homophobic cause”. 

“I remain fully committed to safeguarding the welfare of all members of the Magdalen community, including our LGBTQ+ community, and fully committed to supporting LGBTQ+ rights, including the right to equal marriage.  

“My availability to deal with queries over the next week is very limited, because I am currently preparing to argue an appeal commencing on Monday before the Hong Kong Court of Appeal in which I represent appellants who have been refused permission to change their birth-assigned gender on their identity cards. For the avoidance of doubt, my fees in that case will be covered by Legal Aid. It is a matter of great sadness to me that the OULGBTQ+ Society is seeking to renew a public attack on me, with all the stress that this entails, at a time when I am seeking to focus my professional attention on the advancement of LGBTQ+ rights.”

Oxford University has been approached for comment.

This article was updated at 11:24 on September 9th to include a comment from Dinah Rose QC.

Image: Ed Webster/CC BY 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons

University College seeks name for new kitten

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While waiting to welcome students back through their heavy front doors, University College has welcomed their “smallest fresher” – a little white kitten with a pink nose, pink toe-beans, and tabby splotches. But there’s a problem: she doesn’t have a name!

The kitten exploring one of University College’s quadrangles. Image: University College

The kitten vaguely resembles Clement Cattlee, University College’s previous cat, who was adopted by the College in December 2020 after he made his home in the Lodge. Unfortunately, Clement passed away a couple of weeks later.

The kitten provided a statement, which was translated by Domestic Bursar Angela Unsworth, which has been published on the College’s website. The statement shows the kitten seems a little unsure of her new surroundings, but is settling in well: “She [Angela Unsworth] did say it was beautiful here, and She was right about that. She said the people in the Lodge were really lovely and I would have a lovely bed of my own and nice food and toys and someone to talk to whenever I wanted to talk, and she was right about that too. She also said though, that there would be a welcoming committee; so where is it? Where is the adoring public I was promised?”

The kitten continued: “I do understand though that I am a very lucky kitten indeed to be coming to such a place and I undertake to be the best College cat that I can be and grow up in the best Univ traditions.”

Simpkin IV of Hertford College, Walter of Exeter College, and Admiral Flapjack and Professor Biscuit of St Hugh’s College have been approached for comment.

The kitten shows-off her pink toe-beans while rolling on the floor of the lodge. Image: University College

The kitten has also made clear that it will not cause any trouble in the College, and will be available to provide company to students. She said: “So, if anything gets broken, I will not have been there at the time, if there is sick in the quad it will not be mine and I will have been curled up in my bed all night (well, unless there’s grass in it and then I suppose I am caught red handed), but if anyone is sad or upset and in need of the very best feline company I will be there whenever I am needed. I’m already grateful to our lovely old members who have set me up with enough kitten food to get me by for a considerable period without even knowing me, She says I can count myself very fortunate to be the Univ cat; I’m sure she knows what she’s talking about on this. I look forward to reading all about me on the various social media Univ Cat adoration pages which are now certain to pop up all over!”

Students and University College staff are invited to help choose a name on the College website. Suggestions can be made until Monday September 13th. The College will then compile a shortlist of names, which will be put to a vote.

Kitten-fanciers are advised to keep an eye on the College website and social media to stay updated.

Image: University College

Review: ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’: The Good, The Bad And The Amateur

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Content Warnings: mentions of rape, sexual assault, and violence.

Quentin Tarantino’s novelization of Once Upon A Time In Hollywood is pretty good. It’s also pretty bad. But above all, it is, for want of a better word, supremely Tarantino-y.

Just as his films reflect his fascination with both high and low cinema, the novel’s narration veers off constantly to comment on cinema and culture. A brief scene of one character asking another on a date melds into a lengthy exegesis on post-war international cinema and the political themes of Vilgot Sjöman’s erotic drama film I Am Curious (Yellow). Equally, the judgments that Tarantino makes in these exegeses are often startling. His narration declares that Francois Truffaut’s acclaimed movie The 400 Blows is thematically unsuccessful, and that the equally acclaimed director Michelangelo Antonioni was “a fraud”. You might not agree with all of these opinions but these offbeat critiques, infused with Tarantino’s profane, provocative enthusiasm, enliven the history of cinema in a way that a serious scholarly analysis never could.

The novel also indulges in other, less pleasant, eccentricities. Much ink has been spilled over the accuracy of Tarantino’s portrayal of Bruce Lee, which Lee’s daughter has criticized as insulting and reductive. The novel also includes two passages describing a fifteen-year-old girl in an unsettlingly sexualized manner, with the narration commenting on her nude body and sexual history. While these scenes do serve to depict how the girl was abused by Charles Manson and his cult, they also read as being exploitative and disturbing in their own right. The novel thus lurches between observing the flaws and immorality of 60’s Hollywood, and indulging in similarly unpleasant and exploitative rhetoric.

A less disturbing but similarly noteworthy element of the novel is Tarantino’s writing style. In place of “saying” dialogues, his characters “exclaim”, “interject”, “blaspheme” and (in a memorably awkward turn of phrase that kills the mood of an otherwise tense scene) “animatedly [express]”. While replacing “he said, she said” with these more colourful descriptors is not necessarily a poor decision, they are often distracting, or a means for an inexperienced author to add emotion to a dull conversation. However, given how compelling Tarantino’s dialogue is, these markers appear to be an unnecessary and almost amateurish addition by a writer more accustomed to writing screenplays.

In fact, the entire novel feels like an experiment, or an unfinished train of thought, showcasing scenes that almost made it into the movie, not all of which are quite polished. In the movie, the question as to whether one of the protagonists, Cliff Booth, killed his wife intentionally or accidentally is left unanswered. The brief flashback depicting the murder leaves it ambiguous, but the novel shows that Cliff in fact did murder her. However, instead of a cold-blooded killing, Tarantino gives us a glimpse of how he immediately regretted the act, and how the two shared a tender moment before her death. It’s an intriguing and unusually heartfelt scene, which makes it a pity that it’s two pages long. By contrast, a scene of Cliff considering being a pimp and killing two gangsters takes up a full, very boring chapter.

Some of the novel’s scenes are fascinating — I would even argue that the novel’s concluding scene is better than the film’s actual ending — while I can see why others didn’t make the cut for the film, such as the aforementioned gangster-killing scene. The unedited, occasionally messy nature of the story certainly makes it drag at points, but while a more adroitly edited novel would be tidier and more coherent, the novel’s rough edges are what make it compelling.

In Ian McEwan’s novel Atonement, a young and inexperienced writer is described as writing stories which are “inept, but hauntingly so”. Far be it from me to call Tarantino “inept”, but the disjointed style of the novel is certainly haunting and fascinating. It’s a rough draft, a miscellany of film trivia, an experiment in novel-writing by a man more familiar with screenplay. Tarantino shows off his knowledge (often to the detriment of things like pacing and narrative coherence), testing out new material and seeing what works. Perhaps Tarantino will become a better novelist as time goes on, but there’s a charm to how this book is a behind-the-scenes look at a story still in construction, full of blind alleys and experiments.

It’s weird, self-indulgent, sometimes problematic, occasionally brilliant, often messy. But I can’t help but love how it’s so idiosyncratic and untidy — in a word, how Tarantino-y it is.

Image credit: Wang Sum Luk

Summer Heat on the Tip of the Tongue

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Readers, your quest towards Hot Girl Summer is incomplete without capsaicin.

Run-of-the-mill summer recipes are heavy on sugar, acid, and ice, dominated by freezer-ready desserts, light salads, and a shocking amount of mayonnaise. Certainly the choice is instinctive, but all that cream and raw leaves surely gets sickening.

Enter the chilli pepper: an appetite-inducing, nerve-buzzing, aromatic, bond-forming, and chemically addictive accomplice to your culinary escapades.

Contrary to popular belief, eating spicy food in a heatwave won’t make you melt from the inside out. In fact, this kind of literal fight-fire-with-fire combat in the digestive tract cools the body. From a Chinese medicine perspective, different foods have warming or cooling properties affecting bodily ‘heat’ (irrespective of the temperatures they’re served at) and though excessive consumption of ‘warming’ foods like chillies is discouraged in the summer, a healthy amount of spice is thought to drive sluggish dampness out of the body. Capsaicin, a phytochemical compound found in chilli peppers, stimulates the same skin receptors that respond to heat, causing sweating and the loss of body heat through evaporation. For example, hotpot enthusiasts in the humid valley city of Chongqing enjoy fresh meats, vegetables, and noodles in rolling boils filled with broth and dried red chillies every summer, braving 40℃ outdoor evenings and slightly scandalising a New York Times journalist back in 1997. The most memorable spicy summer meals aren’t half-hungry expensive-restaurant affairs, but rather involve copious volumes of sweat and cries of pain, best indulged in the company of close friends and loved ones.

Nature herself leaves subtle clues, encouraging you to tingle your tastebuds during the scorching season: the hotter the summer, the higher seasonal chillies climb up the Scoville scale. These colourful jewels of heat effectively kill microbes when used as food preservatives, which partly explains their popularity in warm climates like the Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia. However, science and tradition aren’t the be-all-and-end-all of spice consumption. While tropical cuisines are known to delight in flaming flavours, there is insufficient data to show that this cultural preference is purely due to climate adaptation. These places and cuisines are simply too vast to have one motivation for liberal capsaicin usage. Instead, we must consider pleasure and agricultural patterns. From southern Italy to Ethiopia and from Sichuan to the Mexican coast, peppers come into season in July and bear fruit all the way into the fall, giving us ample time to put away those sad cayenne shakers and embrace their juicy-fresh, rainbow-coloured cousins. Summer is the perfect time to enjoy peppers in their height of glory: they’re at their boldest when raw, but they soak up other flavours beautifully in grills, pans, soup pots, and anywhere else.

Barring inoffensive bell peppers, the jalapeño is likely the most popular pepper in the West, but the world of sweet, fresh summer heat is incredibly wide. A family favourite is the Chinese screw pepper, a brightly green variety whose tender skin and mouth-watering heat make it a perfect vegetable for stir-frying. These are harder to access without nearby Asian markets, but in their absence any soft-skinned pepper can be eye-popping when splashed with sizzling hot oil and soy sauce. Alternatively, mince a few birds-eye chillies into your salad dressing for a thrilling kick to the throat, or top your pizza with some beautiful habaneros. Pickling your local chilli variety brings on a whole new dimension and lets you chomp into briny, juicy heat any time of the year, while packaged kimchi, Calabrian chilis, and Lao Gan Ma serve up convenient, concentrated flavours to pair with your main dishes.

Or simply embrace chaos and drizzle chilli oil over your sundae. Any path you choose, a delectable summer awaits.

Vice-Chancellor “embarrassed” Michael Gove studied at Oxford

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Professor Louise Richardson, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, has said she is “embarrassed” that Michael Gove studied at the University. She made the remarks during a panel of university Vice-Chancellors from across the world, held at the Times Higher Education World Summit.

Mr Gove studied English at Lady Margaret Hall, graduating in 1988. He was President of the Oxford Union during the Hilary Term of 1988. He is currently Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Minister for the Cabinet Office.

Her comments were a criticism of Mr Gove’s infamous remark that “people in this country have had enough of experts” after the journalist Faisel Islam told him that the Bank of England, IMF, and the Chief Executive of the NHS, among others, were opposed to Britain leaving the European Union. The remark was made three weeks before the public voted in the referendum.

Professor Richardson juxtaposed his comment with the public reception of scientists during the pandemic, saying: “Michael Gove, the British cabinet minister who I am embarrassed to confess we educated, famously said after it was pointed out to him by a journalist that all the experts opposed Brexit, he said: ‘Oh we’ve had enough of experts.’

“With the vaccine, it seems like the public can’t get enough of experts. Many of our scientists have become household names. “We have demonstrated through the vaccine work and the development of therapeutics and so on just how much universities can contribute and that’s enormously helpful to our cause.”

Mr Gove later claimed that his comment was taken out of context, saying he said: “people have had enough of experts from organisations with acronyms that have got things so wrong in the past”.

Professor Richardson’s remark has been seized upon by The Express as risking “opening up the University of Oxford to criticism for supporting the EU”, adding, “supporters of Brexit have consistently accused the UK’s top universities of being too closely linked to Brussels.”

An analysis by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism found that The Express was the newspaper which published the second highest number of pro-Brexit articles during the first two months of the referendum campaign. The Daily Mail published the highest number.

During the panel, Professor Richardson also addressed the threat the so-called “war on wokeness” posed to institutions. She warned that a perception that universities were “bastions of snowflakes” were “deliberately being fanned” by sections of the media, populists, and some politicians.

She also argued that in order to earn more support from the public, universities would need to host more “ideological diversity” and debates on controversial subjects.

Professor Richardson said:”Increasingly people are seeing that they haven’t gone to university and yet their taxes are paying for these utterly over privileged students who want all kinds of protections that they never had and I think we have to take this seriously.

“I think we need more ideological diversity. We need to foster more open debate of controversial subjects. We need to teach our students how to engage civilly in reasoned debate with people with whom you disagree because, unless we do that, we are going to lose the public argument.”

The University of Oxford has been approached for comment.

Image: Richard Townshend/CC BY 3.0 via Wikimedia Commons