Saturday 14th June 2025
Blog Page 989

Profile: Amara Konneh

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Fortune has not always worked in Mr Konneh’s favour. Born on a mud floor in the twilight years of a peaceful Liberia, his family struggled to send him to school. He helped his father dig for diamonds in their village each morning to keep finances afloat. When Konneh was 18 Liberia was plunged into civil war, which lasted over a decade. He lost his father and three siblings to the fighting before finding sanctuary across the mountains in a Guinean refugee camp.

What is fortunate, however, is that he has never left his success to odds. He set up schools for refugee children, which brought him to the attention of the International Rescue Committee, who helped him go to study on a scholarship in America. When war ended in 2003, he returned from the US to his country to manage its economic rejuvenation, as Minister of Finance. In Liberian public service for ten years, he dealt with the Ebola crisis, a crash in global commodity prices and an attempt by the Liberian legislature to imprison him.

His previous experience hence makes his new job managing the World Bank’s Fragility, Conflict and Violence (FCV) Hub in Nairobi seem like a walk in the park. I spoke to Konneh just after he finished a conference in the Blavatnik School of Government, on global fragility. It featured experts from all over the world, discussing problems faced by states recovering from conflict, and how to stop them relapsing.

Konneh sees his work in Nairobi very much as part of an international political picture, “today we have more countries on the fragility list than there were in 2006, you have more refugees now than there were in 2000; we need to ask what is going on.”

His leadership has a clear goal; to bring the World Bank back to grassroots level, to the people it serves. “My vision for the hub is to bring the World Bank closer to the clients, to reduce the time from initial commitment in the boardroom in Washington to results on the ground. We will have to engage, we will have to be there with our colleagues who are managing the country.”

Fragile states is Konneh’s new currency, and he works as much as a political strategist as an economist: “when a country is classified as fragile it speaks to the inability of the government to deliver basic services to the people, to provide fair and adequate security, to provide the space for equitable justice and rule of law.”

A textbook case of fragile statehood, then, was the Liberia he returned to after 14 years of bloody civil war. The control exerted by central government was flimsy. The GDP had dropped by 90%, electricity and running water were non existent. Mr Konneh had his work cut out.

His logical, pragmatic approach to reconstructing Liberia mirrors his undergraduate background in computer science, “think of post-conflict state building as a computer. You have the hardware which is the computer itself, and then the software, the programmes that make the computer work.”

“In most post-conflict countries, infrastructure is missing. You need infrastructure to get the economy going, to create the jobs to attract the private sector. So roads, energy, airports, seaports; you have to rebuild everything to rehabilitate, that’s the hard part.”

“But, you also have to address the “soft” issues around human conflict. Issues of governance, for example. You have to create a civil service for the public when most civil servants will have been fighters in the war. You need the correct form of human capital for the hardware to work.”

“The other software component is extending government to the interior of the country; people after war will still feel the exclusion from the government that made them participate in the conflict in the first place.”

After ten years of peace and recovery, West African states were knocked double by the Ebola crisis and a dramatic fall in global commodity prices. Konneh campaigned to have the economic effects of Ebola recognised, setting up the Ebola Trust Fund. The Liberian economy is only just getting back on its feet. What can developing economies learn from this?

“Diversify, diversify, and diversify”, Konneh’s voice echoes across the spacious fifth floor of the elegant new Blavatnik building. “This is the first lesson. And this requires a lot of tough decision making to decide which sectors you want to grow. In the case of Liberia, the economy is run mainly by extracting raw materials, rubber and iron ore, and any exogenous track leaves your economy very insecure to crises like Ebola. So you need to diversity using sectors like agriculture to withstand an external shock, as we saw in Côte d’Ivoire.”

But Konneh’s optimism and clear-cut, neatly packaged economic solutions hide the fact his journey as a Minister in the Liberian government has not always been smooth. In February the Liberian senate attempted to jail him for proposing a $1.2 million budget cut, clamping down on politicians salaries. His imprisonment was blocked by the Supreme Court, but Konneh left government soon afterwards.

He chuckled when I brought up the event, politely refusing to comment on the current political situation in Liberia. He did, however, point to a wider problem in the refusal of politicians to accept expenses cuts.

“What is absent [in politicians] in most post-conflict countries is that sense of commitment to the people, commitment to deliver. They do not recognise that you can’t receive a large salary with all the perks when the roads are bad, when the garbage cannot be collected, when the schools are failing.”

As we spoke, Theresa May was attending the UN summit for Refugees and Migrants, where she argued the refugee crisis must be tackled at its “root”; the unstable war-torn countries that Konneh deals with, rather than by taking more refugees. Mr Konneh was inclined to agree. “We need to invest in the prevention…increasing investment in fragile states but targeting the investment so that the benefits reach the people.”

One of the most challenging parts of being a refugee, he argued, is maintaining their dignity. “You want to make sure that they are productive contributors to the economies of the countries that welcome them.” He cited his own experience as a refugee, including the killing of his family “[it] shaped me into who I am as a professional and also as a human being”.

“The parcel of land that was given to me by a chief in Guinea changed my life, so if we’re putting money into activities like those, so refugees don’t feel that they are dependent on hand-outs but can become productive citizens, it will change their very composition.”

 We ended the interview setting out his ‘vision for Africa’ in his new book, Amara Konneh: An African Journey. He laughed, “I don’t want to sound philosophical, Africa is a big continent.”

“That said, I really believe Africa is going to be where the action will be in the 21st century. There is a lot of potential; a lot of smart, young Africans are returning to Africa.”

He paused. “There are so many aspects that we don’t see on television. So the vision I have for Africa is an ability to harness that massive capacity rather than watching people drown in the Mediterranean trying to get to Europe for opportunities instead.”

Hours after we parted a boat carrying over 500 migrants from African states capsized in Egyptian waters, killing 162. Wars in Sudan, Somalia and Libya rage on. Africa remains the poorest continent in the world, and Konneh’s vision, at the moment, appears unlikely. But he has a habit of defying odds.

Fiction: “You don’t seem to know anything”

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Good morning! Is it? I don’t see why not. Well, you said that yesterday and we all know how that went don’t we? Yes, but – But? Today is a new- A new beginning? Yes, today is a new beginning. And why shouldn’t it be? Well, let me see… I shouldn’t have asked. How did yesterday actually go? Can you even remember? Cast your mind back. Did you leave the house when you planned? No, but that- No ‘buts’! You failed. You set yourself a target and you failed. So what happened then? You have to run to the station and you get all hot and bothered. Actually, let me revise that: you looked bloody awful. Anyway you finally make it into work – God knows how – and lo and behold! A truly, stupendously, cataclysmically awful day.

Do you fancy Danny? Yes. Is he single? Yes. Has Charlotte told you that you should talk to him or – God forbid – ask him out? Yes. Do you think you should? Yes. Did you avoid him all day at all costs, reversing rapidly into the stationery cupboard when he walked past with his friends? Yes. You are an embarrassment. I know. And while we’re on the topic, let’s talk about those friends of his. What about them? They are better than you. Take Lucy as an example. She started working with you what… six months ago? Yes? She started a good year and a half after you and yet she’s already been promoted to team leader! Why haven’t you done anything like that? Well she had all that experience at her old job. And so did you when you joined. I know. And what did you do about it? Nothing. Why didn’t your experience get you promoted to team leader after six months? I don’t know.

That’s half the problem! You don’t seem to know anything. You’re just pathetic. Please don’t bully me. Who’s bullying you? I’m just trying to help. Like now, for instance, you’ve only got ten minutes before you have to get that train and you haven’t even finished getting dressed! Well that’s because I’ve been sitting here listening to you. Today was meant to be a new beginning. I was going to get things done today. I’ve got aims. I’ve got objectives. I can be a better person. I’ve got my appraisal with Nick today and I‘m going to speak to him about possibly getting some more responsibilities, helping Lucy out a bit so I could potentially cover for her when she goes on holiday next week. Also, I know that Danny has to come over to our side this afternoon to discuss the new project and I’ll chat to him then, just casual stuff. Charlotte tells me he quite likes the theatre and I used to do a bit of am dram back in the day.

I have to believe in myself. If I keep letting myself listen to all your negativity and self-loathing I’ll just end up letting life pass me by and I can’t let that happen. Don’t. What? You were going to say something. Was I? Yes. You were going to say that I’ve already let life pass me by. Like you say, I’ve been there for ages compared to Lucy and still I’m in the same position and she’s team leader. Likewise, I’ve been basically in love with Danny for months – I can’t stop thinking about him and my heart almost stops when he walks by – and I haven’t said anything. I hide in stationery cupboards! I’m a grown man and I’m pathetic. And I know all of this. I can see it plainly before my eyes and yet nothing ever happens.

Why can I never change? Maybe this is just it. Maybe this is what life is. But it can’t be! How could human civilisation carry on if everyone felt like this? Lucy doesn’t feel like this. Danny doesn’t feel like this. They have fantastic lives. Lucy has just got married, they have a lovely house, an amazing car, she’s just been promoted and I know Nick thinks she’s great so she’ll probably be moving into the goldfish-bowl before Christmas! How does she manage everything so brilliantly? And as for Danny – he’s funny, he’s intelligent, he’s kind, and he’s utterly gorgeous. How could he ever possibly fancy me? Actually, Charlotte said he might.

And what would Charlotte know? She’s not exactly what one could call an expert in the field of love is she? And anyway she was probably just flattering you so you’d stop going on about it. No, you’re probably right. I’m hopeless, absolutely hopeless. I should just be happy with what I’ve got. But I’m not happy. Other people seem to do so well. Why shouldn’t I? I’m just as deserving as them. I am going to do well. I have decided. I’m going to go into that appraisal, dazzle Nick and get a promotion. And then I’m just going to go for it and ask Danny out on a date. I may as well. I haven’t got anything to lose. All he can say is no. Here we go – my new beginning! Have you seen the time? You’re going to miss that train. Don’t bother running, you’ll never make it. Just call Nick again. How do you think that’ll go down in the appraisal? So much for a new beginning. There’s always tomorrow.

Willie Healey: star in the making

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A true Oxford homeboy, most of Willie J Healey’s music videos comprise, as someone at Zappi’s once told me, of him “pissing around on the Cowley Road with his mates”.

Willie describes his music as “rock n stroll” and has been compared to the likes of Kurt Vile and Mac Demarco for his lo-fi rock and home studio sound. Having landed up on National Anthem/ Columbia records, Willie J Healey is certainly one to watch, having progressed quickly from one eighteen-year-old dude recording for fun in his garage.

This summer I headed down to see him gig in his hometown. And what better venue for a bit of sweat ‘n’ roll than the Cellar. Before the show his frizzy ginger lid identified him to me, as he lingered by the purple turtle, greeting friends and fans. The gig on the whole was very low-key, with a gaggle of dedicated fans singing along at the front. At one point someone from the crowd passed Willie a San Pellegrino in special reference to his well-known proclivity for the beverage. The venue was pretty much full (not so impressive considering this is the Cellar we’re talking about).

Willie certainly had presence on the stage, one’s eye naturally drawn to him (and to his attractive second guitarist to the left). There is an identifiable uniqueness to his music – it’s not a slacker-rock, Mac Demarco rip-off. He employs less jangle, more classic rock. Musically, I hear Bowie and Bryan Ferry, especially in Healey’s punchy vocal style. Lyrically Willie’s songs are light-hearted but fun – memorable without being overwrought.

Although Healey had it within his ability to play all of the instruments on stage, his band did a great job of backing him up. Healey certainly had chemistry with his band, but this could’ve been stronger. There was little to no chat between songs, perhaps a conscious decision, perhaps nerves.

Standout songs were definitely ‘Pipedreams’ and ‘Subterranean’ – the latter was especially great live – the tempo of the song building and building from a lulling unaccompanied slide guitar to an energised quick-tempo full wall of sound. Real jump-along stuff with Healey’s unique bass vocals punching themselves over the rhythm.

Healey took the opportunity to play some new material that also clearly had potential. The biggest drawback with the gig was its length. It was disappointingly short. This is due mainly to the amount of songs that Healey has written, which is understandably short given his age. One gets the impression that this guy, given another year or two of serious music making, will be really really good. For now though I can honestly say my ears were left wanting more.

An open letter to Phoebe Aldridge

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Dear Phoebe,
I’m sure that after a summer of indecision, you’re happy (or at least settled) with your decision to join Oxford. So, welcome to the university! Making a decision to leave Ambridge’s close farming community is a brave thing to do. While some of your peers are eschewing academics for a direct entry into the workplace, you’ve joined one of the oldest educational institutions in the world. It must seem like a far cry from collecting eggs on Willow Farm. Be prepared for godforsaken hours one will end up awake, living in a building so old that central heating is but a dream, an ‘everyone-knows-everyone’ community and an abundance of tweed. Perhaps it isn’t that different to Ambridge after all?
If Oxford is to teach you anything, it is to postpone entry into the real world for as long as possible. Perhaps you’ll never leave – this degree could be the beginning of your very own spinoff into academic life. From one student to another, my advice is not to be intimidated by reputation and intensity of the university; you’ll soon plough your own furrow in the Oxford community. Don’t let the likes of Josh and your mother convince you that other routes will be just as successful. Work hard, and you’ll reap what you sow. As a fellow PPE student, you’ll be joining the ranks of nearly every important leader our country has ever seen, and quite frankly, who wouldn’t want that?
So, be glad to be saying goodbye to Ambridge for the next 8 weeks. It is unlikely that many of your new fresher friends will be in the know of about your small farming community, but you’ll now be able to join in the student tradition of yore of moaning about your own embarrassing hometown. If you do start to miss home, perhaps a visit to the cows of Christchurch meadow, or failing that sink a few pints at the Lamb and Flag will bring the sights, sounds and smells of village life back to you.
Regards,
Cat Bean, PPE 2nd year at Oxford

A world in one sentence

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“Mr and Mrs Dursley, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud to say they were perfectly normal, thank you very much.” The first line of the book that-shall-not-be named contains so much more than a cursory introduction to character and setting. Uptight suburbia, twitching curtains, skeletons inside perfectly charming, rose-painted closets: all conjured in the defensive “thank you very much”, as Rowling greets her readers with a knowing wink and an irresistible invitation to find out why the Dursleys were wrong. In only twenty-one words, she creates a wry voice, a relatable universe, and one of the most globally recognisable opening lines in fiction — it’s from Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, for those of you that live under a joyless rock.

The opening sentence of a piece of adult fiction is subject to many competing agendas: establishing genre, catering to the narrative arc and circumnavigating the fine line between an intriguing beginning and a shameless, cheap hook. Whilst this all may be present under the surface in children’s fiction, it is ultimately subordinate to the main goal: to create an escape. Parents are shouting, people are crying, things are happening you do not understand, and you are denied the adult escape routes of calling a friend, storming out of the house or pouring yourself a large alcoholic beverage. You need a book you can open and instantly be transported elsewhere. Hence, the opening lines of good children’s books are some of the purest and most masterful lessons in escapism that can be found.

If JK Rowling is the queen of this art, then Eva Ibbotson is its high priestess. She produced stellar specimens such as “Ellie had gone into the church because of her feet” (The Star of Kazan) or “There are children whose best friends have two legs, and there are children whose best friends have four— or a thousand, or none at all” (The Beasts of Clawstone Castle). Her gift for the pitch-perfect literary welcome mat in no way diminished toward the end of her career. Her final novel, The Abominables, was posthumously published from a typescript found among her papers and opens with “about a hundred years ago something dreadful happened in the mountains near Tibet”. Even now, reading this line creates a pleasing buzz of anticipation and excitement. The key is how the promise of faraway lands is combined with the nebulous threat of “something dreadful”. The Abominables is about climate change and animal cruelty. As with all the best children’s fiction, the surface whimsy is rooted in reality. The perfect first line, then, strives for the optimum blend of magic and mystery, which transports the reader but does not shy away from darkness. It is important for the otherness to be palpable, yet not in any way sugar-coated.

Elizabeth Goudge achieves this delicate alchemy in The Little White Horse, where we meet Maria Merryweather, Miss Heliotrope and Wiggins, riding in a rickety carriage through the dark night. Goudge describes how “the carriage gave another lurch” and the characters console themselves with “those objects which were for each of them at this trying moment the source of courage and strength”. This first line captures the Gothic allure of a horse-driven vehicle barrelling through a mysterious landscape, whilst at the same time confronting how this would really feel, evoking the very real sensation of emotionally anchoring yourself on an object as the world around you seems out of your control. For Goudge, this coping strategy is not unique to humans — Wiggins the spaniel keeps himself sane by focusing on the remains of his last meal, preserved in his whiskers. Thus childlike open-mindedness is combined with real emotion, pulling the reader into an immersive story world without talking down to them.

Goudge’s realistic exploration of character interiority does not detract from the fact she is creating a universe in which her readers can forget their troubles and lose themselves. The joy of first lines is that they open up a more exciting world. This is true of Chris Riddell’s Ottoline and the Yellow Cat; as soon as we learn that “Ottoline lived on the twenty-fourth floor of the Pepperpot Building”, our eyes are opened to an entire city of chimerical architecture and girls with fairy-tale names. Mary Hoffman’s underrated Stravaganza series begins in a room overlooking a canal, where “a man sat dealing cards out on to a desk covered in black silk”, proving that the first line of a children’s book doesn’t have to be overtly fantastical to create that essential sense of difference. Like the slicing of Will’s subtle knife in the His Dark Materials trilogy, the sentence that opens a children’s novel is the rip in your current reality, through which a fully-formed new world is ready for you to step into.

Poets and adult writers could learn a great deal about concision, world-building, humour and subtlety from the few choice words that open our favourite stories. They exemplify a skill that often goes unacknowledged: the ability to see, or rather to create, a “world in a grain of sand”. Whole universes can lie in the sentence that opens a children’s novel, and it is comforting to know they will always be there, waiting, for when everything gets just a little bit too grown-up.

Rewind: The English Bible

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Bizarre as it may seem to today’s modern and increasingly secular population, translation of the Bible into English has historically been a highly controversial endeavour. A Bible accessible to the masses, rather than just educated clergymen well-versed in Latin was once considered to be a dangerously radical idea with the power to topple the authority of the Catholic Church. The eventual publication of such a tome in 1535 marked a huge leap in the people’s ability to think and speak freely about religion. Gone were the days when the only possible interpretation of scripture was whatever your local priest droned through on a Sunday morning.

Work on an English translation began as early as the 14th century, when Oxford scholar and religious dissident John Wycliffe sought to bring the word of God directly to the people without the Church as a middle man. The translation proved popular and, in a shocking turn of events, he and his followers were labelled as heretical by Church authorities and many copies of their work were collected up and burnt.

It was not until the early 16th century that a full Bible in English could finally be compiled and published. This was the work of Wycliffe supporter William Tyndale, who, like his successor before him and Richard Dawkins some time later, incurred the wrath of the Catholic Church. Tyndale fled to mainland Europe to continue his work, and as new portions were completed, they were smuggled onto English shores in covert operations. In a situation uncannily familiar to us today, on the orders of Henry VIII and the Church England’s borders were patrolled by ships and officers tasked with searching incoming vessels from Europe for what was seen as dangerous contraband threatening the English way of life. However, in an act of most admirable spite, following Henry’s noted squabble with the Catholic Church, the newly formed Church of England promoted direct access to the Bible for all Christians and Tyndale’s Bible was circulated with the full support of the king. In fact, by 1539, the royally authorised Great Bible even depicted Henry on its title page!

Once works as important as the Bible could lawfully be produced in English, the prestige of the language was increased massively. English now commanded power and respect, planting the seed of its later status as the global lingua franca we know today. Who knew the Bible could be so influential?

Oxford grant funding falls more than a third

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Oxford was awarded more than £90,682,000 in grant income in the 2015-2016 academic year, Times Higher Education reported earlier this afternoon. This marks the second year in a row that Oxford received the most money in grants of any British university, despite a drop from an income of £138,548,682 in 2014-2015.

Oxford received roughly eight per cent of total funding awarded to UK universities in 2015-2016, a sum which amounted to £1.1 billion. This was £200 million less than was awarded in 2014-2015. Part of the reason the University received less funding was due to an unusually large grant of £38 million for research into quantum technologies awarded in 2014-2015.

Ian Walmsley, Oxford’s pro vice-chancellor for research and innovation told Times Higher Education, “We were exceptionally fortunate in winning several large grants in 2014-15. Our underlying trend of growth in research funding across all funders continues, and we are working hard to maintain that position.”

Most other universities also reported a drop in income as well, with Cambridge and the University of Manchester experiencing similarly precipitous declines of 29 per cent and 41 per cent respectively.

University College London, who were awarded £85,792,320 in income for 2015-2016 and which only saw a decrease of four per cent from the previous year, was the university that received the second most in funding for 2015-2016. Imperial College London, Cambridge, and the University of Edinburgh rounded out the top five.

Tories to slash student visas

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In at the Conservative Party Conference, Home Secretary Amber Rudd announced a framework for new restrictions on entry for overseas students, including ‘two-tier visa rules’, a move that has been greeted with concern by the Oxford University Students’ Union.

Rudd also launched a process to consult experts in businesses and universities on the new plans, which has since been welcomed by the Russell Group. Students on visas from outside Europe currently account for 167,000 of the 600,000 new migrants each year.

Addressing the conference on Tuesday Rudd emphasised, “The current system allows all students, irrespective of their talents and the university’s quality, favourable employment prospects when they stop studying. While an international student is studying here, their family members can do any form of work.

“Foreign students, even those studying English Language degrees, don’t even have to be proficient in speaking English. We need to look at whether this one size fits all approach really is right for the hundreds of different universities, providing thousands of different courses across the country. And we need to look at whether this generous offer for all universities is really adding value to our economy.”

Rudd also criticised British businesses for hiring foreign workers to do “jobs that British people should do”. The Government’s consultation paper will also include an option to require companies to publish the proportion of international staff they employ.

OUSU have expressed concern at Rudd’s new policies. Eden Bailey, Access and Academic Affairs Representative on the OUSU Sabbatical Team told Cherwell, “We are very concerned by these proposals. Many international students already have an exceptionally difficult time studying in the UK, and just last year we saw Theresa May attempt to wrongly deport 48,000 students before the end of their course.

“OUSU has and will be opposed to restricting visas for international students, who we believe are an intrinsically valuable part of our university. “It is vital that universities are communities not just of interested, enthusiastic students and academics, but that these bodies of people are diverse – a major part of coming to university is to learn from each other. At this time it is also important to note that we remain committed to tackling racism in all its forms. “As always, at OUSU we will be keeping up to date with all policy matters, both within the university and on a national level, to ensure changes affecting our students are properly communicated. Additionally, we will be doing all we can to provide the support that students need. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you are worried or have any concerns.”

Responding to the statement, the University of Oxford have promised to try to maintain a meritocratic visa regime. A University spokesperson told Cherwell, “The University is continuing to make the case for a visa regime which maintains Oxford’s access to the best and brightest staff and students from around the world. We are making representations on this through the Russell Group and other Higher Education bodies.”

However, the Chancellor of Birmingham University, Lord Karan Bilimoria, was a more vocal critic about the Home Secretary’s plans. He claimed that international students bring £14 billion to the UK economy and create over 130,000 jobs.

Bilimoria told the Radio 4 Today Programme on Wednesday, “the government is completely out of tune with the public. The public don’t feel that international students are immigrants. The public actually don’t mind international students staying on and working after they graduate.”

Mostafa Rajaai, the international students’ officer for the National Union of Students voiced concerns about discrimination, telling the Huffington Post UK, “The government’s hostile attitude towards international students has already caused irreversible damage to the reputation of the UK higher and further education sectors overseas. The new proposals assume the vast majority of international students studying across the country are immigration threats and will lead to further discrimination.”

Think tank Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) issued a report in September deeming a government response to EU migration concerns by targeting international students as a “costly mistake”. Marley Morris, IPPR Research Fellow in Migration, said that responding to pressure to cut immigration through toughening student visa rules would “harm our economy, fail to meet public concerns, and, based on our new analysis, rely on a dubious interpretation of the official statistics.”

Shadow Home Secretary Andy Burham said, “The tone of the Conservative conference has become increasingly xenophobic. Theresa May has presided over the return of the Nasty Party. Whether it’s doctors, migrants or Europe, the Tories are blaming anyone but themselves for their failure.”

The Liberal Democrat spokeswoman for universities Lorely Burt said, “Cutting down on international student numbers would rob our economy of millions of pounds and do untold damage to Britain’s world-leading Universities.”

Analysis – Colin Donnelly

As a “New York Republican” in both the literal and metaphorical senses, I find myself increasingly estranged from the right-wing parties with which I normally align. Amber Rudd’s coming crackdown on student visas, and immigration generally, exemplifies the recent movement away from core conservative principles. Rudd made her case in terms that exalted the state above private enterprise, and communal benefit over individual rights and achievement – precisely the reverse of what the Conservative party ought to stand for. She argued for tightening the test British businesses must pass to hire foreign workers by saying that the current system is, “not fair on companies doing the right thing.” Presumably, “the right thing” is supposed to mean hiring British workers over foreigners. Perhaps the Home Secretary needs a refresher course on capitalism – companies are not meant to benefit society, and certainly not one nationality over another. They have an obligation to benefit shareholders. They exist for the sole and exclusive purpose of making a profit, which is why they have been such incredibly effective engines of economic growth and prosperity the world over. Criticizing a corporation for not hiring British workers is like criticizing a football club for neglecting to build houses. Would building houses be a good thing? Sure, but that’s not what football clubs are for. Rudd’s suggestion that the Home Office should start penalizing companies for not being sufficiently concerned about the public good smacks of the kind of anti-growth, regressive socialism the Conservative Party claims to hate. Moreover, Rudd plainly suggested in setting up this contrast that British workers couldn’t compete on an even playing field with foreigners – that they needed special government measures to protect them. Since when does the Conservative Party believe in government intervention to protect people from healthy competition?
When it came time to specify what foreign workers in particular are pernicious, Rudd bizarrely singled out foreign students who come to Britain, with the ultimate aim of -shock!- working after graduation! Even Donald Trump has yet to reach the height of absurdity that is criticizing immigrants for wanting to work. Not long ago Conservatives were complaining about immigrants coming to the country and not working. The tremendous benefit of having extraordinary universities, is that students come from all around the world to attend these universities, subsidize the cost of higher education for Brits by paying fees which are more than twice as high, and then stay and contribute to the economy. Just last year, the Treasury estimated that increasing numbers of foreign students coming into the U.K. would add a billion pounds to the economy. Foreign students are, by definition, university educated, English speaking, and willing to take risks, work hard, and cross continents to achieve their goals. Are these not precisely the sort of immigrants Britain wants? I supported Brexit, in part, because I thought it would allow the U.K. to adopt a more fair policy towards immigration, evaluating immigrants on their merits rather than blindly giving preference to those from Europe. Instead it seems that the new government is determined to indiscriminately restrict immigration and tear up the tapestry of national diversity which makes Britain such a dynamic and interesting place. In so doing, they abandon the Conservative principles of freedom, fairness, and competition on which their party claims to stand.

Exeter students moved into hotel rooms

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Exeter students are spending the first month of Michaelmas in a four-star hotel in Wolvercote as planned accommodation in Cohen Quad remains incomplete.

86 students have moved into Jury’s Inn Hotel on the roundabout at the top of Woodstock Road, past Summertown until a provisional date of October 31. Cohen Quad was planned to be completed on August 11, however that date was later changed to October 6 and college was informed at the beginning of September that this would also not be possible.

Exeter College is covering all accommodation costs until students take up occupancy at Cohen Quad and students have received free breakfasts, as well as bus passes to travel into central Oxford.

The hotel has 168 “stylish” rooms, equipped with free Wi-Fi, en-suite bathrooms, fl at screen TVs with Freeview and trouser presses, according to its website. It also has a fully-equipped gym, squash courts, steam room, indoor splash-pools and beauty rooms.

A spokesperson from Exeter College told Cherwell, “There is no single reason as to why the building is delayed: the site and building are complex and it has taken longer to complete than anticipated. We are concerned that all of our students, particularly our Finalists, have not been moved into Cohen Quad and are doing everything we can to mitigate the impact that this change in accommodation has on their studies and College experience.

“We booked the hotel the day after we received notice from the contractors that they would not achieve the 6th October occupation date. We were careful in our choice of hotel to ensure that all of our students were housed together in suitable accommodation. Although it is further out from the City centre than we would have liked, keeping them together, as a cohort, was felt to be vitally important for social, emotional, and security issues.

“The whole College community remains excited and enthusiastic about what Cohen Quad will achieve for this and future generations of Exeter students. Cohen Quad will not only provide fantastic facilities (including a café, learning commons, study spaces, common room, auditorium – and of course student study bedrooms) but is in the heart of Oxford and the city, just a few minutes’ walk from our historic site. We’re proud of what we’re building but deeply frustrated by the delay and the impact that this will have on our students. To that end, we’re working closely with them to help mitigate the impact of this unexpected change in accommodation and put in place measures that will ensure their safety and preserve the Exeter collegiate community, albeit in north Oxford.”

JCR President Harry Williams, who is personally aff ected by the issues regarding accommodation, commented, “Of course I was disappointed to hear that the development would not be completed on time, but I am pleased with the way the college have handled the situation so far.”

Scaffolding was removed from the front façade of the Cohen Quad on Wednesday, “revealing the stunning new roof and beautifully cleaned stonework”, however the accommodation is still not ready.

Exeter College purchased Ruskin College’s campus on Walton Street in 2010 in order to create a “third quad” in the heart of Oxford. The new site, designed by Alison Brooks Architects, will off er teaching and study space, a lecture theatre, a café, 90 student bedrooms, sets for Fellows and archive space for the College’s special collections. Exeter third year Flora Hudson, who is supposed to be living in Cohen Quad, commented, “I think college have done the best they could with a bad situation—everyone seems pretty happy with the arrangement.”

A common room has been created at the hotel, and college staff will have an office on site seven days a week. The hotel also has a fully-equipped gym, squash courts, steam room, indoor splash-pool and beauty rooms. The Jury’s Inn Hotel have been contacted for comment.

Profile: Randall Kennedy

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Randall Kennedy Was born in South Carolina in 1954. He attended Princeton for his bachelor’s degree, Balliol College on a Rhodes scholarship, and Yale Law School, before doing two judicial clerkships, the second for US Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. In 1984, he accepted a teaching post at Harvard Law School, where he has stayed ever since, penning magazine articles and books on race and the law. In other words, Kennedy is an academic – and a very good one. But he is also an advocate and an intellectual: He is not only engaged in the pursuit of truth (‘Veritas’ reads Harvard’s motto), but a fighter in the world of ideas, whose scholarship is intended to be part of, and shape, the public discourse.

Kennedy is also black, and his work grapples with issues of race. He is working on two projects currently, he tells me, in his spacious office at Harvard Law School: a book of essays and a book on the consequences of the Civil Rights Movement. The projects complement each other. The first is a history of Kennedy’s work: he is revisiting, revising, and expanding upon old essays and books, addressing new developments and realisations. The second is, indirectly, a history of his life – his own and all the other lives of African-Americans born since 1954.

“There are a couple essays,” Kennedy says, that will form the core of his first book. One of them is called ‘Where is the Promised Land?’, in reference to a speech Martin Luther King Jr. gave the night before his assassination. That night, Kennedy explains, “King said to his audience ‘I might not get there with you but I’ve seen the Promised Land, and we as a people will get to the Promised Land.’ My question is, what is the racial Promised Land? What does it look like? What are its borders? What is its topography? What is it?”

“I don’t care who you are, everybody says they’re for racial justice, for racial equality. Everybody!” Kennedy continues. But what we mean by racial justice is deeply ambiguous – we have declared ourselves for racial equality and against racism, without focussing on what we mean by those terms. For example, Kennedy asks, “if you say you want a race blind society, ok, does that mean that you want the abolition of all associations that are designated by race? Does that mean that you want an end to, let’s say, the Congressional Black Caucus? Does that mean you want an end to any private association that has race in a title? Is it a bad thing for a black person to walk down the street and to interact in a special way with other black people?”

Kennedy himself admits to being unsure of the answers to these questions. One of his essays in the Atlantic speaks to racial solidarity and kinship – its thesis that politically and intellectually, the practices are indefensible. The essay stuck with me: it had taken a hard line about what I felt was a much less clear-cut issue. I ask him about it and he tells me he’s been considering “publishing that essay as is, and then responding to it.” He says something else that is remarkable as well: that he was undecided about racial solidarity even at the time he wrote the piece. “I wanted to try on that view,” he says. “Let me try this on, let me really argue for it strenuously. How will I feel about it? So I did.” But his ambivalence did not go away.

A third essay being featured in the book is on one of the long-running themes in Kennedy’s work – that in the history of American racial thought, there have been two camps: optimistic and pessimistic. The pessimists – whose ranks include Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, Malcom X, and Kennedy’s own father – say “we shall not overcome. Let’s just get that straight: America was born in racism, will remain a racist nation-state, and that should be understood.” The optimists – Frederick Douglas, Martin Luther King Jr., Barack Obama, Kennedy – disagree: we will reach that promised land.

“Now,” Kennedy says, “I’m going to revise [that essay], because, frankly, we are in the middle of a presidential election, and what has already happened is very alarming and very disturbing. And I need to talk about that. Frankly, if Donald Trump was to win the presidency – I don’t think he will –  but if he was, I would really have to rethink what I wrote.” A related revision will be to his 2012 book The Persistence of the Color Line. “Did I think when I wrote that book that the backlash, that the racial backlash would be as vivid, would be as sharp, would be as deep, would be as just open and unvarnishedvocal, visceral, as it has been? Nah! I have been taken a bit by surprise.”

But the book Kennedy says he needs to revise the most is his first, Race, Crime, and the Law. Kennedy’s thesis at the time was that African-Americans have been under-protected against criminality – a conclusion drawn in 1997, before discussion of mass incarceration and the hyperpunitiveness of the American criminal justice system entered the mainstream. “I don’t talk enough about that,” Kennedy insists. “And I am going to talk about that. I made it seem as though somebody goes to prison, it is all about them. I did not talk about the way in which everybody is part of a web. If some person goes to prison, it’s not just about them. What about their kids? What about their parents? What about their cousins? What about their neighbours?”

Another Of The compendium’s essays will be about Derrick Bell, briefly a colleague of Kennedy’s at Harvard and an “ideological adversary” for a long time afterwards (Bell died in 2011). Following the publication of Race, Crime, and the Law, Bell wrote an essay in New Politics declaring Kennedy “the impartial, black intellectual, commenting on our still benighted condition and as ready to criticize as commend.” His criticism amounts to this: Kennedy, for reasons of naivety or personal indulgence, has betrayed the civil rights movement; his positions only harm the cause, providing “a comfort to conservatives and advocates of the status quo.”

Consider the severity of this attack. Kennedy is enormously thoughtful; he is highly animated and cares tremendously about his work; and he considers himself a fervent supporter of American liberalism. Bell’s article, then, goes after the core of Kennedy’s intellectual identity – and Kennedy was harsh about Bell as well. But nevertheless, Kennedy says, “I am writing about him because I don’t think he’s ever gotten his due. I don’t think I gave him his due when he was alive. And I think he was an important person, who warrants a good, careful, rigorous examination. Any intellectual, that’s what they want.”

One of the subjects over which Kennedy and Bell disagreed most was the responsibility of the black intellectual. “I do various things,” Kennedy says. “There have been times when I have been a polemicist, really pushed hard.” He cites his work concerning interracial adoption. “I was involved in litigation about it. I was involved in lobbying. I lobbied Congress to pass a law, and was very successful in doing so. In those years, I was very much the polemicist: here is the subject, here is the way you should think about it. I was take no prisoners, very single-minded. I portrayed the other side, but I did not give much scope to it. I portrayed the other side in order to knock it down. But that is unusual for me. That has not been my typical way of being. My typical way of being is to be a little bit more cool, more distant, more appreciative of the other side, more interested in just setting forth for the reader the ironies, the paradoxes, the complications of things, and not being as much of an advocate for a particular view.”

Kennedy points out that Bell has not been the only one to take him to task for this approach. “I’ve had students who have gotten really impatient with me, who say, we are engaged in a struggle, and you act as if you’re just an aesthete. You’re talking about this as if we were talking about a poem.” On one level, he argues that this line of criticism is misguided: that the more effective strategy of persuasion is to be able to convince “a reader that if they read something by me, they are actually going to get a very rounded view of the subject.” He claims that his most recent book, For Discrimination: Race, Affirmative Action, and the Law, was able to bring people around in support of affirmative action by not pulling any punches – just proving that its arguments were stronger.

More fundamentally, however – and I think, more compellingly – Kennedy questions the logic of implying that the critic’s contributions are not worthwhile. His work can be meaningful, he suggests, regardless of whether it is successful advocacy. “If I am writing about a phenomenon like the 1964 Civil Rights Act, I think if I allow somebody to really learn about this phenomenon, I think I’ve contributed to the world. The more detailed, the more subtle, the more I allow people to understand why there were people who were against the 1964 Civil Rights Act, I think that is a contribution in and of itself, and I feel completely comfortable with that. Intellectual life is broad. It calls for different performances at different times.”

Another fundamental point of tension between Kennedy and Bell was over the optimism that pervades Kennedy’s work and thought. We will overcome. A compelling argument will succeed in changing hearts and minds. The same spirit of optimism also motivates his book exploring the impacts of the civil rights movement. The same year Kennedy was born, 1954, the Supreme Court also ruled school segregation unconstitutional in Brown v. Board of Education. “Now, has that been evaded?” Kennedy asks. “Are there public officials that engage in invidious racial discrimination through subterfuge? Yeah, sure, absolutely. But it is unlawful. They are not doing that legitimately. That was changed – and that is very important. It’s very important. So nowadays, since 1954, public officials – do they do that sort of thing? Yeah, they do that sort of thing. But they have got to lie about it!

“I feel absolutely inspired writing this book,” Kennedy adds. “In a way it’s the story of my life. Did the Civil Rights Movement change my life? Absolutely! Are you nuts? Yes! Where are you talking with me? Harvard Law School for God’s sakes. When you come to Harvard Law School in the entering class, in 1954 there might have been, maybe there was one black student, maybe. Maybe there were two. Not more! Entering class at Harvard Law School now, you got to make sure that you have got a class that can contain the African American contingent of students.”

The book is also an ode to American racial liberalism, to the thinking “that repudiates the idea that white people should be on top, that white people have a right to run things, that white people should, of course, have first dibs on the best of American life.” Kennedy reiterates that there is still far to go (“the United States is still a pigmentocracy, even with Barack Obama in the White House”), but he lauds the achievements of the Second Reconstruction – the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the 1965 Voting Rights Act, Brown v. Board of Education – as “the great landmarks of liberalism” and progressivism. “I’m no Pollyanna,” he says, but “people of my political ilk should be proud of that.”

In November Of last year, portraits of Harvard Law School’s African-American professors were defaced with black tape. The student body was outraged and upset: this was, many believed, an unequivocal case of racism – and emblematic of a deeper, systemic racism with the institution. “As a black student, it was extremely offensive,” the president of the student body told the New York Times. “And I know the investigation’s ongoing; we’ll see what happened, but to me it seemed like a pretty clear act of intolerance, racism.”

To Kennedy, it wasn’t so clear. In a Times op-ed published a week later he urged reflection and suggested other plausible explanations for the incident besides racism. Even “assuming that it was a racist gesture,” he wrote, “there is a need to calibrate carefully its significance. On a campus containing thousands of students, faculty members and staff, one should not be surprised or unglued by an instance or even a number of instances of racism.” He warns as well against a “tendency to indulge in self-diminishment by displaying an excessive vulnerability to perceived and actual slights and insults.”

New York Times commentators were appreciative; many students were not. On December 5, Two activists respond to Kennedy’s op-ed in the Harvard Law Record. For paragraph after paragraph, they tell him he is missing the point, insensitive to the systemic racism at play, diminishing the student body. “He is redefining racism and trivializing the experience, insights, and courage of the students who perceive something that he doesn’t,” they write. “He may unwittingly be a source of [black students’] disempowerment.”

A steeliness in Kennedy’s voice emerges when I ask him about the incident. “I think there were some people who viewed me an ideological enemy of the antiracists within Harvard Law School,” he says. “And it seems to me that they were profoundly mistaken.” The steeliness fades into frustration. “I talk with students about this all the time. I’ve said, first of all, since when is being a critic necessarily – you view me as being an enemy because I was being critical of you? Oftentimes, criticism is friendly. I was trying to be your friend.”

“You want people to save you from yourself,” Kennedy says. “Do I think that every time I write something, I’ve got it perfect? No! I don’t! I am all the time writing, sending out drafts to people, and either implicitly or explicitly, I am asking people, save me from myself. So, as far as I was concerned, I was an ally saying, hey listen, I think a lot of what you’re doing is good, but you’re strong. Glory in that. Why talk yourself into being weak? I think some of you guys are talking yourselves into being weak. ‘I’m so traumatized by this, I can’t study anymore.’ Nah, nah, nah, I see you guys, I talk with you, you’re in my classes. I’ve seen you. You’re strong.”

Kennedy does acknowledge a narrowness to his definition of racism. “I tend to be a little bit more demanding in evidence. So for instance, when this incident happened, I went around to people, and I said, Gosh, you are really so angry, you are really so alienated. I’m here, I’ve been a long time here, I must see things differently. Give me some examples of why you feel disrespected, so deeply alienated from Harvard Law School. Because I don’t understand. And then we would talk, and people would give me an example, and I would say, to tell you the truth, just given the example that you just gave, I don’t see it the way you see it. You see it as racism. I am not persuaded of that. There are a bunch of other alternative explanations. You just gave me an example – why do you think it is racism as opposed to somebody being a jackass? There are jackasses around. Maybe it is racism! I’m not saying it’s not. On the other hand, maybe it’s not.”

“Racism has a particular status in our society,” he adds. “If you are going to say that the institution is racist, yeah, well, people who are predisposed to go along with you might go along with you, just because you said it. But there are going to be a lot of people who, nah, they’re not going to go along with you just because you just said it. In fact, they may be very skeptical of you. How do you get through their skepticism, how do you draw them onto your side? I am training advocates for God’s sakes.

“And I should say one more thing: one thing that I think that came up after that piece, because there were some people here, some activists, who were very angry with me. One thing that I ultimately said to them is you need to be very careful in dealing with people, including me. Because you can make enemies out of people. I wrote the piece I think very much as a critical ally as yours. But some of you are acting in a way that if you are not careful, you are going to make an enemy out of me, and I would advise you not to do that, because frankly you’ve got enough enemies. Why make an enemy out of an ally? That doesn’t make any practical political sense. But you seem to be doing that from time to time. That, it seems to me, is something that you would want very much to avoid doing.”

Similar Struggles Over the boundaries of racism and discrimination have been playing out across higher education campuses. Protests have erupted over cultural appropriation, controversial speakers, ‘triggering’ content in course material, and – in the variation certainly most familiar to the Oxford student – institutional commemorations of bigoted historical figures. Does Oriel’s statue of Cecil Rhodes signal that Oxford is an exclusionary space? How about a residential college named after an unapologetic defender of slavery? Or a law school crest that pays homage to a slave-owning family?

These questions are the foundation of what Kennedy calls the “dememorialisation struggles”: on the one hand are student-led calls to eliminate symbols celebrating racists and bigots; on the other, there are cries to preserve history and the sanctity of free speech. We had Rhodes Must Fall here at Oxford; Princeton saw protests over the Woodrow Wilson School; Yale over Calhoun College; Harvard over the Royall Crest. There have been similar denunciations of vestiges of the Confederacy, like statues of Confederate soldiers and representations of the Confederate flag.

“For all of these,” Kennedy says, “my basic thing is, as a presumption, addition rather than subtraction. I don’t want people to lose sight, too much, of what’s in the past. Yeah, there was a guy named Robert E Lee, and Robert E Lee was a quite substantial person, admirable in certain respects, but this person who was admirable in certain respects fought for the Confederacy, which was willing to go to war to maintain a system that allowed for and that actually reinforced a regime of making people property. I want people to remember that boy, wasn’t that screwed up? And didn’t even people who were admirable in certain ways fall into that? That’s a hell of a cautionary tale. I want the cautionary tales to stick around.”

“Now, when somebody talks about Thomas Jefferson,” he continues. “I want the Jefferson story to be fully out there. Here’s this guy who wrote wonderful things about liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and all men are created equal, and he was a damned hypocrite. I want that out there too, I want the whole thing out there, but we are going to keep the Jefferson Memorial. Okay, I can live with that. And I would say the same thing, by the way, about Rhodes.”

At the beginning of my conversation with him, Kennedy told me the advice he always gives to American students heading to Oxford – a lesson based on the deep regret he says he feels about how he treated his time at Balliol. And maybe it applies here too, to those of us who risk letting Oxford’s flaws blind us to the privilege of being able to study within its walls. His suggestion was this: Be in awe. Be impressed. And take advantage of the opportunity for deep reading and study at this unique academic institution.