Sunday 12th October 2025
Blog Page 960

Students fight legal action to remove squatters from Wadham building

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Iffley Open House has been served with an eviction order by the current leaseholders of the ground floor of a building that they are using as a temporary homeless shelter.

The Midcounties Co-operative Investment are taking legal action to imminently secure possession of the property, which is also owned by Wadham College. A court hearing is scheduled to take place tomorrow.

However, the appeal by the group of squatters to continue using a building on Iffley road owned by Wadham being backed by Wadham JCR and OUSU’s ‘On your Doorstep’ homelessness campaign.

Kevin Brown from Midcounties Co-operative Investment said: “We’re very sympathetic to the plight of the homeless, particularly at this time of year and are in dialogue with a number of parties to review all of our options for this site.”

Meanwhile Wadham college has stated that it would “prefer to resolve the situation amicably”.

However, the college has warned of safety concerns with the building, which they say contains large amounts of asbestos and has an unsafe roof.

The building, purchased by Wadham in 2015, is scheduled for demolition from the end of February so that it can then be turned it into student accommodation.

It has been occupied since New Year’s Eve by a group calling itself Iffley Open House. Around 36 people are believed to currently be sleeping in the space.

The group started a petition requesting the college’s permission to use the former VW garage as a temporary shelter until the end of winter.

The group said they want to “provide secure shelter and basic amenities for people sleeping rough on Oxford’s streets.”

A student campaign, started by a group of Wadham students, held a meeting this week, in attempts to push the college to allow the shelter to move upstairs in the building.

Chair of OUSU’s ‘On your Doorstep’ campaign, Jeevan Ravindran, told Cherwell the group would “do everything it can” to keep the shelter open.

He said: “Keeping Iffley Open House accessible for the winter months could save lives, and would be a chance for the university to show that they are willing to help. In the face of the loss of 145 beds for the homeless and shelter closures as temperatures plummet…it’s a disgrace to allow people to die on our streets.”

Speaking to Cherwell, Wadham SU President Lucas Bertholdi-Saad acknowledged that “the student body does have a material interest in ensuring the site is developed on schedule” but showed support for the temporary occupation.

He said: “Until and beyond the time at which Wadham will require access to the site, however, I believe that a state exists that minimises the risk of harm to the people staying at the Iffley site, whose current alternative is sleeping rough in freezing temperatures, and I know that Wadham students will be fighting for that end.”

On Friday morning students plan to stand outside Oxford crown court with banners during the court hearing.

At the time of going to print, 89 people had attended the event ‘Support Us at Court- Resist the Iffley Open House Eviction

In a statement on Thursday, Wadham said that while it was “profoundly sympathetic to the plight of homeless people in and around Oxford” that the college is “ obliged to ensure that the College’s assets can be used to their fullest extent and, in relation to the Iffley Road property, to construct new student accommodation, which will be particularly important for students of more modest means.”

“We are seeking to establish a constructive dialogue with all of the interested parties. We have met with representatives of the Iffley Open House and are working to reach a consensus on how best to resolve this matter.”

In a letter to Iffley Open House, seen by Cherwell, Wadham specifically warned of “serious safety issues for anyone visiting or remaining within this old and dilapidated building which is not considered safe for residential use.”

Oxford finalists join rebellion against National Student Survey

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This week, Oxford students have taken part in a nationwide boycott of the National Student Survey (NSS) in an effort to undermine the government’s controversial new Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF).

The boycott is being coordinated by the National Union of Students (NUS), with the support of the Oxford University Students’ Union and numerous college JCRs.

OUSU’s recommendation to boycott the survey has been circulated via email to finalists in a number of colleges including Wadham, Pembroke, and St. Catherine’s.

Those organising and supporting the boycott hope a lack of responses will undermine the NSS, and in turn the TEF.

The scores generated by the NSS have long been used to rank universities.

However, Universities minister Jo Johnson now wishes to use them as a key component of the TEF, which assesses the standard of university teaching based on graduate destinations, drop-our rates, and NSS scores.

The TEF will award universities one of three medals: Gold, Silver, or Bronze. The NUS believes these medals will be used to “create a false market” and allow more highly ranked universities to charge increased tuition fees.

Many Oxford finalists are declining Pro Vice-Chancellor Sarah Whatmore’s invitation to complete the NSS, with some colleges already voting in favour of the NUS/OUSU boycott.

OUSU Vice President for Academic Affairs and Access Eden Bailey told Cherwell: “if a 50 per cent participation rate is not reached, the data cannot be used as a metric in the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF)… Not only do these metrics fail to measure ‘teaching excellence’, and the University’s own Education Committee have said as much, but we are strongly opposed to the TEF as it is primarily a mechanism for increasing and diff erentiating fees.

“The system of differentiated tuition fees TEF is designed to introduce not only entrenches the principle that only the wealthiest should have access to high quality education, but in practice would make Oxford even more inaccessible for the least socioeconomically privileged. Debt aversion already disproportionately deters groups who are underrepresented at Oxford, including working class and BME prospective students, from coming to university. If Oxford were to charge even higher fees than other universities, this would undoubtedly exacerbate the existing inequality.”

President of Hertford College JCR Ava Scott told Cherwell: “As a college with a history of progressive access policies, we voted to boycott the NSS. We believe its use to calculate the TEF is regressive and detrimental to our access policy. By boycotting, we hope to reduce its legitimacy as a metric for increasing fees.”

The Wadham College Student Union will be holding a vote on the boycott this Sunday. Last term, the college voted to condemn the entire Teaching Excellence Framework, so a pro-boycott result is expected.

Prominent members of the SU committee have expressed support for the boycott in a personal capacity.

Last year, over 400,000 students nationwide were invited to complete the NSS with an 80 per cent response rate. It is unclear what affect the boycott will have.

In response to the boycott, a spokesperson for the University told Cherwell: “In common with other UK universities, we write to our students every year to make them aware of the National Student Survey (NSS). We have been working with colleagues from across the collegiate University, and with OUSU, to secure a strong response to the NSS, as we genuinely value the feedback we receive from students. This exercise is entirely unrelated to the Teaching Excellence Framework.

“The NSS allows students to tell us what they liked and didn’t like about their time at Oxford, giving us valuable feedback as we seek to improve the student experience. Additionally, if more than 50 per cent of our students respond, the results are published on the Unistats website, which is linked to the UCAS website and allows students thinking of applying to Oxford to see what previous students thought of their time here.”

Students across the country have been encouraged to complete the National Student Survey, because a degree from a higher scoring university may potentially increase job prospects.

As in previous years, more material incentives have also been offered by the Oxford.

Exeter College third year Will Jarrett said: “It is insulting that the organisers are attempting to bribe our cooperation with the offer of ‘Oxford University branded hooded sweatshirts’ for twenty five respondents. It is outrageous that they believe the future of UK education could be sold so cheaply.”

OUSU has made clear that they are not opposed to measuring student satisfaction in principle, but that they believe NSS is a flawed system.

Oxford offers alternative measurements of satisfaction such as the Student Barometer, which are not linked to the government’s Teaching Excellence Framework.

Sandy Downs, OUSU’s VP for Welfare and Equal Opportunities, told Cherwell: “As we were mandated in OUSU Council last year, we’ll be campaigning for students to avoid the NSS, and focusing on other ways of collecting student feedback.”

Vice-Chancellor Professor Louise Richardson and Pro Vice-Chancellor for education Professor Sarah Whatmore have been contacted for comment.

NUS Vice-President filmed plotting to oust Malia Bouattia

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National Union of Students (NUS) Vice-President Richard Brooks has reportedly been exposed plotting against NUS President Malia Bouattia in secret footage taken by an undercover Al-Jazeera reporter.

According to a report by Middle East Eye (MEE), the footage further reveals collusion with Israeli Embassy officials and prominent figures in the Jewish and Labour student movements in order to oust a President routinely accused of anti-semitism.

The undercover Al-Jazeera reporter—known only as Robin—was apparently introduced to Richard Brooks by Shai Mascot, an Israeli diplomat who in hidden camera footage released earlier in the week boasted of having set up pro-Israel pressure groups in the UK.

Mascot spoke of his desire to “take down” MPs hostile to Israeli interests.

Brooks, believing the undercover journalist to be the Chairman of Young Labour Friends of Israel, is reported to have admitted to organising the anti-Malia faction and to have told Robin “drop me a line whenever you want to have a conversation” when asked how to get in touch with figures supporting her removal.

He is also said to have made reference to a network of NUS figures actively supporting Malia’s removal: “[If] you want to speak with someone in a certain geographical area, I’ll point you at the right people.”

The report further claims that Brooks admits to taking a trip to Israel funded by the Union of Jewish Students (UJS) along with Rob Young, another NUS Vice President.

Neither declared the trip to the NUS national executive council, which most likely would have violated the body’s 2014 vote to affiliate with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign.

The hidden camera footage reportedly also features Michael Rubin, the Parliamentary Officer for Labour Friends of Israel and a former chair of Labour Students, who ran Megan Dunn’s unsuccessful campaign against Bouattia for NUS President.

In scenes filmed outside a London pub Rubin allegedly boasts that he and Mascot “work really closely together… but a lot of it is behind the scenes”.

MEE claim that Rubin and Russell Langer, campaigns director for the UJS and a recipient of Israeli funding, met secretly with Brooks during the run up to the 2016 NUS Presidential elections.

NUS Women’s Officer Hareem Ghani commented on Twitter: “I’ve never been so disappointed work for this organisation… [Malia Bouattia] has been hospitalised over 5 times this year. She has had to deal with endless amounts of racism, xenophobia and sexism… And to top it all off, we have NUS officers colluding with foreign governments to bring her down. This is unreal.”

Noorulann Shahid, NUS LGBT Officer, wrote: “And now we have concrete evidence that the campaign to oust Malia Bouattia was orchestrated by 2 of her vice presidents and the Israeli govt… Sadly, I am neither shocked nor surprised by the news but I am disgusted… Since I’ve been involved in NUS, and especially in 2015, I’ve seen how violently people retaliate to students of colour being successful.”

After her election as NUS President in 2016 Malia Bouattia was criticised as anti-semitic and labelled an “outright racist” by the Home Affairs Select Committee.

This in part was thanks to her characterisation of an NUS motion opposing ISIS as ‘islamophobic’, her description of Birmingham University as a “Zionist outpost in higher education” and repeated references to “mainstream Zionist-led media outlets”.

This prompted a mass disaffiliation campaign, as a result of which Newcastle, Lincoln and Hull voted to leave the NUS.

After a closely fought campaign Oxford chose to remain as a member, with a total of 57 per cent of the 6,000 students who voted opposing disaffiliation.

The NUS, UJS, Richard Brooks and Malia Bouattia have all been contacted for comment.

Wadham “making every effort” after squatters appeal for use of temporary homeless shelter

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Wadham College has responded to demands from homelessness activists currently occupying its building on Iffley Road, saying the college is “making every effort” to “investigate the ramifications” of allowing the group to use the site as a temporary shelter.

It comes after a group, calling themselves ‘Iffley Open House’, started a petition asking the College to allow them to use the former VW garage, which is owned by Wadham, as a temporary shelter for rough sleepers.

They want to “provide secure shelter and basic amenities for people sleeping rough on Oxford’s streets”.

Around 36 people are believed to have been sleeping in the space, which includes a kitchen and showering facility, since New Year’s Eve.

As well as students, there are several local residents and housing activists, including some Green Party members, one ex-Green Party councillor and former Lord Mayor, Elise Benjamin, involved in the initiative.

The building has been empty since it was purchased by Wadham in 2015, and building work is due to start on the site in March this year, to develop it into student accommodation.

An online petition started by the group had reached over 1,200 signatures at the time of going to press. The group had also written an open letter the College, asking for their permission to continue using the site until the end of winter.

The letter states: “The situation for rough sleepers and homeless people in Oxford is now at a critical point.

“Oxford University and colleges like Wadham own dozens of buildings across the city which lie empty, some of which have been empty for almost a decade, that could be repurposed as shelters, social housing and social spaces.”

A member of ‘Iffley Open House’, Sandra Phillips, said in a statement to Cherwell: This building lies empty whilst hundreds are without a home or even a roof over their head. We all have an obligation to do what we can to help this situation, everyone is affected by the housing crisis in some way.

A spokeswoman for Wadham told Cherwell that the college was considering allowing the group to stay in the building, but raised concerns over safety of those staying there.

She said: “Wadham is investigating the ramifications of this move, with particular concern for the safety of those who are sleeping rough in an old and dilapidated building, including in areas that are not designed for residential use. The College will be making every effort to speak to representatives of this homeless group as well as local residents, safety experts and the site developers.

“Wadham is currently awaiting planning permission for redevelopment of the site as student accommodation, significantly relieving pressure on local housing stock. As part of this project, Wadham College has undertaken to contribute more than £900,000 towards social housing provision in Oxford.

“Wadham College is particularly concerned about the problems of homelessness in Oxfordshire and to this end has a longstanding relationship with the Gatehouse homeless project. The College regularly fundraises for homeless organisations and donated much of the furniture from the Iffley Road site to a homeless charity.”

The activists say that homelessness in Oxford has trebled in the last five years and that the situation for rough sleepers has worsened after government cuts have forced closures of night shelters in the city.

In November, local authorities announced the closure of Simon House and Julian Housing, which is expected to cause the loss of around 202 beds over the next twelve months.

Ruthi Brandt, a Green Party Councillor on Oxford City Council, who has been helping at the shelter told Cherwell: ” I think this is an excellent initiative and I fully support it (as do the rest of the Green Councillors, both on the City and the County councils). We are in a real crisis at the moment – there are more and more people sleeping rough in Oxford (as is apparent to anyone walking in the city centre or along Cowley Road – the situation is heartbreaking), and with winter temperatures settling in, sleeping outside is even more dangerous than usual.

“Services have been cut to the bare bones and the Labour city council has so far refused to dip into the emergency homelessness funds to deal with this emergency. So I applaud the people who have taken this step to help those of us who now need help, and I am hopeful that Wadham College will come through as a good and conscientious neighbour and allow the people to stay there in warmth and safety over the coming winter months. I am told that neighbours [near to the garage] have been very supportive, and some even donated items such as blankets.”

A group of Wadham students will be meeting to support the petition later this week, and a motion in support of the move is expected at this Sunday’s SU meeting.

Rowan Davis, a fourth year biology student, said on the petition: “As a Wadham student I am immensely privileged to receive subsidised accommodation in the centre of the city. In the middle of this freezing winter it is immoral to allow our community to suffer around us.”

Math rock for everyone

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What’s in a name? Matt Sweeney of Chavez once claimed the term “math rock” was coined by a friend as a derogatory summary of one of Sweeney’s past projects, Wilder. After listening stony-faced to a Wilder track, Sweeney’s friend would punch numbers into a calculator to try to figure out how good the song was. This bizarre quip can be explained by one of math rock’s characteristic features: a dizzying number of irregular time signatures employed in a single track, with seven, eleven, and 13-beat metres slotted in for single bars or longer sections.

Interestingly, the arithmetic challenge that math rock presents (and that sparked its name) seems to be just one aspect common to bands under the genre’s umbrella. Math rock arose from the post-hardcore scene, and so the crazy rhythms of math rock drummers are frequently host to dissonant, abrasive instrumentation and harsh production. Slint’s 1991 album Spiderland is a good example: a terrific record and a pillar of the math rock genre, but at best uncomfortable in its discordance and at worst near-unlistenably alienating in its isolating lyrics and extreme dynamics.

However, one band from Oxford has throughout a decade-long career successfully annulled math rock’s marriage to stridency. TTNG—who officially adopted the acronym of former moniker This Town Needs Guns after concerns that the previously “ironic statement” was no longer appropriate once they set foot on the global stage—pioneer a decidedly melodic math rock sound. Guitar virtuoso Tim Collis pairs rich instrumentation with the impossible metric of brother Chris Collis’ impressive drumming, and singer Henry Tremain’s honeyed voice conjures lyrics somewhat more relatable than those of Spiderland.

It’s a bright sound, and full for just three musicians; no part of the kit goes un-drummed, down to the rims of the toms, and the guitar parts are complex sonic whirls. In contrast, the vocals are simple and untampered, and are a necessary platform that grounds and guides the listener in the delightful madness of TTNG’s tracks.

TTNG’s discography begins with 2008’s Animals (literally a collection of animals—‘Chinchilla’ through ‘Zebra’). This auditory zoo’s finest specimens include ‘Baboon’, in which an absurdly rapid stream of notes gushes from Tim Collis’ guitar, and ‘Panda’, where all the delicate rhythms collapse into a three-beat metre injected with one-two stabs of seventh- and ninth-laced chords.

Meanwhile, the explosive opener for 2013’s 13.0.0.0.0,Cat Fantastic’, sees Tremain musing over material indulgence (“You’ll be happy when you’re willing to share”) and the mood shifts in the wonderfully-named ‘Nice Riff, Clichard’, where Chris Collis programmes an Ochre-esque, aquatic IDM beat to accompany a melancholy guitar loop.

The band released Disappointment Island in July 2016. Opener ‘Coconut Crab’ buzzes with excitement: the drums mostly steer clear of cymbals and rhythm is found with accented snares and toms, while guitar tracks coalesce into exotic chords. ‘Consoling Ghosts’ finds a moment for subdued, nostalgic swells amongst the speeding grooves, while ‘Whatever, Whenever’ opens with a deceptively simple, straight beat that quickly expands into a mass of hi-hat finesse and whooping guitars.

Though TTNG’s sound has undergone minimal evolution since their debut, they’ve carved for themselves a niche so small and refreshing that for them to simply fill the melodic math rock musical vacuum with three albums of their unique style is actually very welcome. For a group of musicians to keep to quite so many time signatures is formidable; for the music they create to actually be a great listen is an accomplishment. In this sense, TTNG have made math rock accessible to the masses. Additionally, as an Oxford-based group, they’ve been known to grace the hallowed halls and sticky walls of Cellar as recently as 2013, so keep your eyes (and ears) peeled.

Not Wong: A case for genuine equality

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Both of your neighbours’ houses are on fire. Neither of them is at home. The neighbour’s house to your left contains far more combustible furniture, and is thus more likely to burn to ground both more quickly than the neighbour to your right. Seven fire hoses are required to douse the flammable house, whilst only three are needed to put out the fire in the less flammable house.

The fire sergeant arrives, and allocates five hoses to each house. You pull them to a side and whisper, “Hold on—this house only needs seven hoses; the other needs three!” The fire sergeant blankly stares at you and says, “Yes, but these two houses are equal, so we ought to treat them equally. To favour either of the house would be unfair towards the other house.Two hours later, the less flammable house survives, but the flammable one collapses amidst flames.

The fundamental misconception behind the sergeant’s words—and, more generally, certain literal egalitarians—is the view that equal treatment satisfies the normative objective of equality. It is worth noting that genuine equality—i.e. a long-run, comprehensive doctrine of equality that accounts for pluralistic aspects of individuals’ wellbeing—calls for more than mere equality in treatment, but a form of equality that provides individuals with equal access to advantage unless the inequalities are morally justifiable (cf. Cohen). Cutting the jargon short—basically: within an ideal moral world, people should be equally able to hold advantage over each other unless they have been implicated in processes (e.g. committing a crime, foregoing an opportunity) that render it justifiable to strip them of their advantage. This account mandates that the fire sergeant allocates seven hoses to the flammable house, and only three to the non-flammable house. In this way, both houses are saved. Genuine Equality refers to equality in this sense, whilst Flat Equality refers to the Sergeant’s conception.

The primary reason why Genuine Equality should be favoured over Flat Equality has to do with its ability to capture the fact that fundamental, long-run equality may necessitate superficially unequal treatment in the short run. Firstly, an unequal distribution of resources means that equal addition in resources does not rectify inequality. Giving 100 pounds to respectively a white, middle-class man and a white, working-class man may be a form of equal treatment, but does not create Genuine Equality, on the basis that the working-class man lacks far more resources in the Status Quo than the middle-class man anyhow.

Now consider the second claim. A typical critique of Black Lives Matter is that it allegedly neglects that “all lives matter”. This sentence makes as much sense as the fire sergeant telling you that they ought to allocate five hoses to both houses because “all houses matter”. Note that inequality in the Status Quo can persist on a second order—in terms of issue salience and our willingness to care. Black Lives Matter exists in response to the fact that the media have systemically erased or framed away the gravity of police brutality in America; that whitewashed newspapers and programmes have often framed black victims as faulty criminals or—at best—‘unfortunate incidents’—who largely deserved their fates.

The structured means through which these media present incidents of abuse are denied, trivialised, or dismissed as ‘single incidents’ or ‘overblown sensationalisations’ stand in stark contrast against more general outpouring over cases of violence against those who are not persons of colour. Noting this inequality does not entail that one attacks or aggresses upon people who partake in this process of erasure: it merely means that we ought to compensate the existent differential by allocating more resources to the particular cause of ensuring that the deaths of African-Americans are granted equal airtime as the deaths of non-persons of colour. Branding an African-American death at the hands of the police force as “just another civilian death” (i.e. “equalising” our treatment of their deaths) does nothing to improve public recognition and acknowledgment of the active suffering.

Thirdly, treatments may also be unequal in response to different degrees of suffering. A disabled child being verbally abused for their disabilities should be treated as comparatively worse (NB: treatment does not equate actuality: I am definitely not saying that the former is qualitatively worse than the latter) than an abled child being verbally abused, because the added dimension of exclusion on the basis of disability maps onto structured forms of exclusions that disabled people face in their daily lives—from hiring, to employment, to the ability to civically engage, to relationships, and beyond. Different extents of harms and disadvantages in the Status Quo require different levels of responses—whilst the treatments may be Flat Unequal, they culminate at Genuine Equality (cf. I.M. Young, and S. Okin).

 A secondary reason—and one that is often glossed over—is the fact that we may sometimes have to treat people differently on the basis of our different degrees of reciprocal obligations (cf. Nozick’s principle of rectification) towards them. Suppose a thief steals 500 quid from you. Upon their arrest, they offer to give you 100 quid back, and the other 400 quid to four individuals (each person gets 100 each). Their justification is: you are no more entitled than the other four to the wealth acquired by them, because the fact of the matter is that the past should have no moral implications for the present.

This argument may sound absurd —but it applies to a familiar argument against the obligation of paying reparations to citizens in former colonial states (NB: I believe that reparations in practice are an awful idea and lead to poor consequences—e.g. abuse by despots, nationalistic rhetoric being used to co-opt opposition and slaughter minorities etc.—but these harms have nothing to do with whether the obligation exists prima facie). Former colonial states have often benefited actively (and to this very date, still do) from the wrongful exploitation of their colonies through processes of exploitative trade, violent resource acquisition, slavery, wealth-inducing warfare, genocides, and more.  Having the capacity to call out and walk away from benefiting from the remnants of colonialism—and yet actively choosing to not do so—constitutes a prima facie harm. The principle of Flat Equality may posit that countries must treat each other as equal, and that no obligations to pay reparations hence exist. Yet this principle neglects the historical patterns that define our current property claims (cf. Nozick, Cohen, and van Parijs), and should therefore be rejected in favour of Genuine Equality, which accounts for historical grievances as debts to be settled and redressed.

The first objection may be this: large-scale redistributive programmes—e.g. taxation, welfare payments, Affirmative Action etc.—often harm the minorities rather than benefit them. Firstly, it is worth noting that empirical results are often mixed and cannot be homogenised. Secondly, that these programmes may not work out in reality does not imply that the principle that motivates and underpins it cannot stand. Note further, thirdly, that accepting a prima facie duty to achieve Genuine Equality does not mean abandoning all other relevant prima facie principles—e.g. social stability, respect for property rights etc.

The second objection is that this view seems to reduce individuals into an ‘Oppression Bingo’ game that essentialises their identities. Firstly, it’s worth pointing out that the essentialisation of individuals already exists independently of movements that push forward Genuine Equality—cf. racists, sexists, homophobes who define their victims of discrimination by the nature of their identities. Therefore, prioritising Genuine Equality does not further essentialise anyone—because they already are essentialised. Secondly, essentialisation is not a conclusive harm—its harmfulness depends upon its consequences; to the extent that essentialisation aids us in pinpointing moral imperatives and areas for compensation, it is very well justified. Thirdly, deconstructing oppression is a complex and multi-faceted process. An individual may be oppressed on one dimension and an oppressor on another—yet this absolves them neither of their claim to justice on one, nor of their obligation to compensate on another.

Finally, the most potent objection, perhaps—and the primary motivation for this piece—is that modern egalitarians appear to be “reluctant” to speak out against abuses that do not conform to their “egalitarian sphere”. The recent spark involves four black teenagers beating up a white, disabled individual and posting a video of their hate crimes on social media.

Let’s be very clear here. To posit that egalitarians would comfortably accept and dismiss such a hate crime is a bizarre conjecture. For any egalitarian to brush aside this form of ableist assault and abuse would be for them to reveal the fact that they are none but the antithesis to egalitarianism: partial and bigoted. Yet the more bizarre claim, perhaps, is that an egalitarian paradigm cannot reconcile with condemning ableist abuse directed towards a disabled individual—this is apparently false.

Genuine Equality requires an understanding of equality throughout time, with references to the past, understanding of present moral claims and inequalities, and a positive outlook for the future. To insist that equality means treating people equally is no less absurd than abandoning the flammable house to crumbling into the flames of cynicism and idiocy.

‘Keep the Damned Women Out’ – CherwellTV & Nancy Malkiel

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Cherwell Broadcasting speak to Nancy Malkiel, discussing her book Keep the Damned Women Out—discussing the history of women’s education in Ivy League and Oxbridge universities and how they were ‘welcomed’ (or not) by male students and faculty. Reasons for co-education are not what you might have imagined—less feminism, more feminine attraction.

It’s available on Amazon now—do check it out. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Keep-Damned-…

The Oxford interview: a helper’s view

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The Oxford interview. It’s an inevitable part of the admissions process, but one that supposedly strikes fear into the heart of applicants and is not always fondly remembered by current students.

Having only just made it through my first Michaelmas term, the thought of being an interview helper this year led to legitimate anxieties about getting candidates lost. I consequently went on a lightning-quick tour around other colleges to give the applicants the illusion that, after two months, I knew Oxford like the back of my hand (on which directions were regularly scribbled when taking them to interviews).

Everyone has their own interview anecdote and mine involves a chair held together with a ridiculously large elastic band outside the interview room which promptly collapsed when I sat on it. At the time, I was convinced that the ability to sit on the chair without making it fall down was a part of the admissions process and that I had already failed at the first hurdle.

Too preoccupied by the chair incident, I didn’t consider how the interview process, which has all the makings of a logistical nightmare, manages to run smoothly. This year, I’ve discovered the answer lies in a remarkably efficient system of spreadsheets, phone calls, and post-it notes between colleges and faculties. Yet under this calm surface, the applicants do not see the legs of the interview coordinators, most often current students, frantically paddling (usually metaphorically, sometimes literally) like the proverbial swan.

The start of interviews was marked by the strange absence of the term-time buzz, which left college eerily quiet, except for the excited and nervous chatter of applicants bonding over Monopoly Deal. Nevertheless, the evening activities of films and quizzes, along with the friendliness of helpers, coordinators and, staff, gave the interviewees a feel for college life.

Sometimes, being an interview helper, dare I say it, did not feel like work at all. Getting to know both my college peers and the candidates provided many memorable moments: the Name Game caused such confusion that I somehow mistook Rudolph for Donald Trump and the decision to sing ‘Happy Birthday’ to an interviewee in hall awkwardly backfiring as we found out, mid-song, that it was another applicant’s birthday too.

On a personal level, the high hopes I had for the work I could do between shifts turned out to be just that: high hopes. Attempting to revise for collections and packing the miscellaneous junk that I had accumulated over the term proved a challenge to my self-motivation skills after an exhausting eight weeks. Napping certainly figured more than any of my intended activities, but at least I had the posts on the Student Problems page to comfort me.

Overall, it was a pleasure to welcome students from Hertfordshire to Hong Kong into Oxford and, as cheesy as it sounds, wearing my interview helper t-shirt gave me a sense of belonging to the college community and pride in representing the university.  Despite the ever-increasing home-sickness, it was incredibly rewarding as a fresher to contribute to the process that I came through not so long ago. Just a reminder to interviewees: always check your chair before you sit down.

Cherwell TV: Recruitment HT17

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We’re looking for budding presenters, editors and camera operators for an exciting new Hilary term with Cherwell Broadcasting—do drop us a message on Facebook to find out more or to get involved, or email [email protected]. There is always scope to try out anything you like and we strongly encourage new ideas!

Santa Fun Run 2016

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On 11 December, hundreds of jolly Santas took part in a fun run around Oxford for Helen & Douglas House. Replete with mince pies and Christmas songs, it was a great way to raise money and welcome in the festive period.

For more information about Helen & Douglas House, do go to their website: http://www.helenanddouglas.org.uk/