THE MACE AND ARMORIAL BEARINGS OF THE UNIVERSITY
The Mace was presented to the University in 1933 by University architect Emanuel Vincent Harris. It is approximately four feet long with a solid silver shaft and head. The finial at the top contains a representation in enamel of the University’s coat of arms. This symbolises the historical associations of the University with the locality. The triangular gold castle with three towers comes from Exeter’s coat of arms and is thought to represent the Rougemont Castle as alluded to by the red background. The 15 gold bezants around the edge of the shield are from Cornwall’s coat of arms, whilst the green cross on a white background is from Devon County Council’s coat of arms. The theme of learning is symbolised by the book with gold edges and a Latin inscription translating roughly as “We follow the light”.
YOUR CEREMONY
We hope you have a fantastic day and enjoy the ceremony. Just to let you know, we undertake filming and photography during the day which we may use for promotional purposes at a later date. We’ve done our best to ensure that the information presented in this brochure is correct at the time of going to print (June 2024).
History
The Congregation for the Conferment of Degrees is the occasion whereby a ‘graduand’ receives the degree of the University. The graduates are then known as alumni and are entitled to use post-nominal letters.
The ceremony has its origins in medieval times. This is reflected in the use of Latin phrases such as in absentia for graduands being awarded in their absence and honoris causa which is applied to honorary degrees.
Academic dress of gown, cap and hood worn by graduates, University officers and academic colleagues also originated in the medieval period. The varying colours of the gowns and hoods and the subtle variations in their style and cut indicate the degree obtained and the awarding university.
Music
The music for the ceremonies is performed by the Chapel Choir and Graduation Brass.
Processional music: Introit and Flourish was commissioned through the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra by the University to mark the Diamond Jubilee of the University in 2015. The music was composed by Stephen Montague.
Order of ceremony
• Processions enter
Please rise and remain standing until all the processions have taken their position and the Chancellor has invited you to be seated.
Processions enter in the following order after the Marshal’s address:
Academic, Senate, Council and Emeritus Professors’ procession;
Civic procession (if attending);
Chancellor’s procession including the Honorary Graduand and/or College of Benefactors inductee (if attending);
The Chancellor and the President and Vice-Chancellor are the last people to enter and are preceded by the University Mace Bearer.
• Welcoming address by Sir Michael Barber, Chancellor, University of Exeter (or his representative)
• Address by Professor Lisa Roberts, President and Vice-Chancellor, University of Exeter (or her representative)
• Conferment of the first cohort of graduands
• Public oration and award of Honorary Degree and/or College of Benefactors induction, or external speaker if applicable
• Conferment of additional cohorts of graduands
• Vote of thanks from the Students’ Guild/Falmouth & Exeter Students’ Union Sabbatical Officer, or nominated apprentice for Degree Apprenticeship ceremonies
• Closing address by Sir Michael Barber, Chancellor, University of Exeter (or his representative)
• Processions exit
Please stand while the processions leave in reverse order. The processions are then followed by the graduates as directed by the Marshals. Guests may then leave the ceremony venue to meet their graduates outside.
THE CHANCELLOR
Sir Michael Barber
The Chancellor’s Role
The post of Chancellor dates back to 1955, when the University of Exeter was created with the award of a Royal Charter from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Sir Michael Barber is the seventh Chancellor of the University of Exeter. The first Chancellor was Mary Dowager Duchess of Devonshire. She was followed by Lord Amory, a former Chancellor of the Exchequer; the scientist Sir Rex Richards; and the barrister Lord Alexander. In 2006, the actress and writer Baroness Floella Benjamin was installed as Chancellor, stepping down in 2016. Businessman and former government minister, The Lord Myners of Truro CBE, succeeded Baroness Benjamin in 2016, and was Chancellor until he stepped down at the end of 2021.
The Chancellor is the ceremonial head of the University and is a part-time, honorary appointment. The Chancellor’s most public role is to preside over degree ceremonies, and behind the scenes to act as an important adviser and advocate for the University.
Sir Michael Barber has been Chancellor of the University of Exeter since 1 January 2022. He is a world-leading authority on education and public service delivery and the Founder and Chairman of Delivery Associates, which works with government leaders across the world to enable them to deliver their domestic policy priorities. He is the author of ‘Accomplishment: How to Achieve Ambitious and Challenging Things’ (Penguin 2023).
Sir Michael was educated in York and studied history at the University of Oxford, where he was President of the Queen’s College Student Union. He was a teacher from 1979 to 1985 and subsequently a Professor of Education, first at the University of Keele and then at the Institute of Education, London.
In 1997, Sir Michael embarked on a highly successful career in central government, initially as the Chief Adviser on School Standards in the Department for Education. In 2001, he founded the Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit at No 10 Downing Street, which he ran until 2005.
From 2005 to 2011 he was a partner at McKinsey and Company and Head of its global education practice. From 2011 to 2017 he was Chief Education Advisor at Pearson, where he played a key role in Pearson’s strategy for education.
Most recently, Sir Michael was inaugural Chair of the higher education regulator, the Office for Students, a role from which he stepped down in March 2021. From January to July 2021 he assisted the Prime Minister and government in delivering their domestic policy priorities following the pandemic. In November 2022 it was announced that Sir Michael would lead a review of the government’s skills reform programme, and in June 2023, he took up the role of Chair of the South West Social Mobility Commission, which aims to drive forward transformational change in education and employment outcomes for disadvantaged young people in our region.
Sir Michael lives in North Devon with his family, and in 2022 took up the role of Chair of Somerset County Cricket Club. In 2009, the University of Exeter awarded Sir Michael an Honorary Doctorate of Laws in recognition of his many achievements. For several years Sir Michael was a distinguished visiting scholar at Harvard School of Public Health. In 2005, he was knighted for his services to improving government.
THE PRESIDENT AND VICE-CHANCELLOR
Professor Lisa Roberts
Professor Lisa Roberts became President and ViceChancellor of the University of Exeter on 1 September 2020. In her role, Professor Roberts is responsible for the leadership and management of the University, promoting and advocating for the University globally, nationally and locally, and ensuring the delivery of the University’s Strategy 2030, with its vision to use the power of our education and research to create a sustainable, healthy and socially just future.
Before joining Exeter, Lisa was Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Innovation at the University of Leeds, where she led on the development of the university research and innovation strategy. During this time she led a major step change in the quality and impact of the university research and in business collaborations, launching a new innovation hub and leading a city-wide team of senior city stakeholders through the MIT Regional Entrepreneurship Acceleration Programme (REAP). Before joining Leeds, Lisa was Executive Dean of the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at the University of Surrey, leading the Schools of Bioscience and Medicine, Psychology and Health Sciences, where she also developed and launched only the eighth School of Veterinary Medicine in the UK, and developed a successful One Health Strategy.
Professor Roberts is a Professor of Virology, having studied for her PhD at the BBSRC Institute for Animal Health (now the Pirbright Institute) and the University of Kent. Earlier in her career, she worked as a Product Development Manager for Procter and Gamble in the UK and Belgium. Lisa is a Board member of the Russell Group, a Board member of Jisc, and a Board member of Universities UK, where she was also recently elected as the Policy Lead for Student Experience, Education and Skills. Lisa also chairs the IDP Connect Strategic Advisory Board, and is an inaugural Commissioner for the South-West Social Mobility Commission. In 2023, she was awarded an honorary degree from the University of Surrey.
A Welcome from the President and Vice-Chancellor
A warm welcome to this wonderful graduation celebration. On behalf of everyone at the University, I would like to say what an honour it is for us to share this very special day with you. Graduation is a chance for all of us at the University to join you in celebrating your achievements, and give thanks to the friends and family who have supported you during your studies. I hope that this special day will be a memorable occasion, and that you enjoy your celebrations.
Graduation is also a time to reflect on your university journey, and on everything that you have achieved. A university education is about more than your degree – it is about growing and developing yourself, challenging your own assumptions and absorbing new perspectives, so that you are equipped for the global workplace. You graduate today having demonstrated the knowledge and skills you need to go out into the world and help forge a greener, healthier and fairer future, and I know that you will be successful in whatever you choose to do next.
As a graduate of the University of Exeter, you now join a vibrant alumni community which extends to more than 185,000 people across the world. These people carry Exeter with them in everything they do, and I encourage you to become an active participant of our alumni family.
Congratulations again on your fantastic achievements, you should be very proud of your success.
I hope you leave Exeter with fabulous memories that will last a lifetime, and that you continue to stay in touch in the years ahead.
THE PROVOST AND DEPUTY VICE-CHANCELLORS
Professor Dan Charman
Senior
Vice-President and Provost
Professor Dan Charman has held the role of Provost and Senior Vice-President at the University of Exeter since August 2023. He was previously the inaugural Pro-Vice-Chancellor for the new Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy and before that was the Dean, and then Pro-Vice-Chancellor, of the College of Life and Environmental Sciences. He undertook his undergraduate degree in Agricultural and Environmental Science at the University of Newcastle and completed his PhD in physical geography at the University of Southampton, subsequently working at the University of Waterloo, Canada, and the University of Plymouth before coming to Exeter in 2009. He is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and is an Earth system scientist researching long-term ecosystem and climate change, with a focus on peat-forming wetlands and the global carbon cycle.
As Provost, he is deputy to the President and Vice-Chancellor and represents the University externally through Universities UK, Russell Group and other networks. Dan leads the academic community, working with the Pro-Vice Chancellors of the University’s three faculties and the Deputy Vice-Chancellors across research and impact, education and student experience and business engagement and innovation. His primary responsibility is to lead the delivery of the University’s Strategy 2030, through the development and implementation of the major academic strategies, and the University academic planning, resourcing and budgeting process.
Professor Krasimira TsanevaAtanasova
Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Impact)
Professor Krasimira Tsaneva-Atanasova is Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Research and Impact and Professor of Mathematics for Healthcare.
Professor Tsaneva-Atanasova earned her undergraduate and MSc degrees in mathematics at the University of Plovdiv, Bulgaria and her PhD in applied mathematics at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Following postdoctoral fellow positions in the USA and France she spent five years at the University of Bristol. She joined the University of Exeter in 2013. She has previously held a number of leadership roles at Exeter including the Associate Dean for Global and the Associate Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Research and Impact in the Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy. Professor TsanevaAtanasova’s research addresses open questions in Health and Life Sciences by means of mathematical modelling and analysis including advanced data analytics.
As Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research and Impact), Professor Tsaneva-Atanasova oversees a total research portfolio of more than £500 million and leads the research and impact strategy for the University. Her overarching responsibilities include our preparation and submission for the Research Excellence Framework in 2029; interdisciplinary institutes, networks and centres; strategic leadership of our Doctoral College, the University Ethics Committee and the Research and Impact Executive Committee; and ensuring our research is utilised and impacts positively on the wider world. Professor Tsaneva-Atanasova represents the University externally via a number of research-related groups including GW4, our regional alliance of the Universities of Bristol, Bath, Cardiff and Exeter.
Professor Richard Follett
Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Global Engagement)
Professor Richard Follett leads the development and delivery of the University’s Global Strategy and has oversight of the University’s global activities, including student recruitment, global experiences for staff and students, establishing and leading the University’s relationships with key global partners, and engaging alumni around the world.
An elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, Richard is also Professor of American History and a specialist on the history of African American slavery. Richard joined Exeter in January 2023 from the University of Sussex where he worked for 23 years, latterly as Associate Vice-President (International). He is a graduate of the University of Wales, the University of London, and the University of Illinois. He obtained his doctorate from Louisiana State University where he was a Fulbright scholar.
Exeter’s Global Strategy lays out the University’s vision to be a truly global institution by extending our presence, reach and impact around the world. We aim to be an internationally recognised leader in human health and wellbeing, sustainability, and social justice; to grow our mutually beneficial partnerships; to diversify our international student community; and to provide an inclusive and world-class staff and student experience. In his role Richard works with Exeter’s leading international partners, including the University of Queensland, Duke University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi and Tsinghua University. This year, Exeter also joined the prestigious Worldwide Universities Network.
Richard has lived in Spain, Ireland and the US, and worked in more than 30 countries, including visiting appointments at the Universities of Lagos, Nanjing, Peking and Heidelberg, and the National Autonomous University of Mexico. He was Chair of Universities UK Africa and Middle East Network from 2020-2023.
Professor Tim Quine
Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Education and Student Experience)
Professor Tim Quine is the Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Education and Student Experience and Professor of Earth Surface Science. Tim is responsible for leading the delivery of the University’s Education Strategy, and the Education and Student Experience vision within our Strategy 2030.
Tim’s brief is captured in the Education Strategy commitments to Success for All our Students and Valuing Educators, and encompasses the undergraduate and taught postgraduate student journey from arrival, through excellent teaching, learning and assessment, to the next stages in graduate life. He maintains a close partnership with the Students’ Guild in Exeter and the Falmouth & Exeter Students’ Union in Cornwall to ensure that our students’ interests are central to our plans for continuous enhancement. He also works closely with the Education Leadership Team including the three Faculty Associate Pro-Vice-Chancellors (Education) to ensure that the University maintains its excellent academic standards and continues to innovate in teaching and learning for the benefit of all students, as was recently evidenced by the University’s Gold rating in the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) 2023.
He is a graduate of University College London where he obtained his Bachelors degree in Archaeology. Tim went on to complete his doctorate at the University of Strathclyde, and his research in earth surface science focuses on perturbation of the terrestrial carbon cycle and ecosystem services by soil erosion and sediment deposition. Tim’s research projects have seen him collaborate with researchers in universities and research institutes in China, India, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Bolivia, Saudi Arabia, Australia, New Zealand and many European countries. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and member of the Russell Group Education Network.
THE PROVOST AND DEPUTY VICE-CHANCELLORS
Stuart Brocklehurst Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Business Engagement and Innovation), Director, Green Futures Solutions
Stuart Brocklehurst is Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Business Engagement and Innovation, leading the University’s collaboration with business and our drive to deliver innovation through our research and education. In addition, as Director of Green Futures Solutions he heads up the University’s drive to translate our world leading work on climate change into practical impact.
Stuart started his career in banking, holding a number of roles with Barclays in the UK and Africa, then as Senior Vice President for Digital Commerce at Visa International CEMEA leading the adoption of new business models and technologies. Following a period as a Partner at consultancy Carbon, Stuart joined Amadeus in support of its initial public offering and served as Group Communications Director after the flotation. He went on to run his own business up to its sale to the Troy Group, where he remains a board advisor.
Stuart is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, a Fellow of the British Computer Society, a Companion of the Chartered Management Institute, a Chartered IT Professional, a Chartered Manager, a Freeman of the City of London, and holds a degree in theology from Oxford.
He has served on numerous company boards, on the synod and Bishop’s Council of the Diocese of Exeter, as a Governor of Petroc College in North Devon and as a Leadership Fellow of Exeter Business School. He chairs the Exeter Science Centre Advisory Board and serves on the boards of Great South West Pan Regional Partnership; SETsquared; GW4; the Centre for Resilience in the Environment, Water and Waste; the South West Investment Fund’s Strategic Advisory Board; and, the Liveable Exeter Place Board. Additionally, he is on the Executive Committee of parliament’s Rural Economy Research Group and the Selection Committee for the Zayed Sustainability Prize.
Professor Martin Siegert Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Cornwall)
Professor Martin Siegert is Vice-President and Deputy ViceChancellor for Cornwall and is responsible for the strategic development of the University of Exeter’s activities in Cornwall. Martin joined the University of Exeter in November 2022. Previously, he was Co-Director of the Grantham Institute for Climate Change at Imperial College London, and Head of the School of Geosciences and Assistant Principal for Climate Change and Energy at the University of Edinburgh.
Martin is a polar scientist who uses airborne and ground-based geophysics to explore the subglacial environment of Antarctica, and to understand how the ice sheet has changed in the past and how it may change in the future. He has undertaken three Antarctic expeditions and has been the UK lead on over a dozen international scientific exploration programmes across the continent. He has published over 250 papers, has written/ edited eight books and has convened four major international conferences concerning Antarctic exploration.
Using his knowledge of polar change, Martin has offered talks on the necessity of the net-zero transition to a variety of audiences, including major corporates (HSBC, Octopus, SAF), TV and radio (such as the Life Scientific and Inside Science), and to secondary schools (through the Speakers for Schools programme).
Professor Rajani Naidoo Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor (People and Culture)
Professor Rajani Naidoo was appointed Vice-President and Deputy Vice-Chancellor for People and Culture at the University in January 2024. She holds a UNESCO Chair in Higher Education Management; sits on the European Foundation for Management Development Research and Development Committee; and is a member of the British Council Education Advisory Group.
Rajani was featured in the Stanford/Elsevier top 2 per cent most highly cited scholars in her field and her research focusses on the transformation of contemporary universities and their contribution to the global good. She has been involved in global research projects on the changing academic profession, international higher education partnerships, and the contribution of higher education to social justice; and has presented numerous keynotes at major conferences in Europe, the US, Canada, Asia and Africa.
As the Deputy Vice-Chancellor for People and Culture, Rajani leads on the development and implementation of the ‘Our People’ theme of the University’s Strategy 2030 with overall responsibility for championing and driving a step change in Exeter’s people and culture priorities across the whole University community. She co-chairs the Wellbeing, Inclusivity and Culture Committee, providing senior leadership and ensuring the integrated delivery of our strategic vision for culture, inclusion and performance. She works closely with Faculty Deputy Vice-Chancellors, Divisional Directors and the Community and Inclusion team to co-create support, development and inclusive leadership strategies.
Rajani is a graduate of the University of Cambridge; University College London; and the University of KwaZulu-Natal with majors in Law, English, Psychology, Education and Management.
BEHIND THE SCENES OF YOUR GRADUATION
Mike Shore-Nye Senior Vice-President and Registrar & Secretary
My role is to lead the University’s Professional Services teams, ensuring the effective and efficient operations and governance of the University. These teams cover everything from accommodation to wellbeing services; libraries, IT and sports facilities to careers advice and guidance.
Professional Services play a pivotal and vital role in University life, no more so than for graduation. We take pride in supporting every aspect of the ceremonies each year, with over 2,000 team members involved in making it a very special day for our graduands, their friends and families. There is a huge amount of work behind the scenes during the 12 months prior to the ceremonies; many colleagues volunteer away from their day jobs to help the events run smoothly on the day.
I hope you have a wonderful day, enjoy every moment and I wish you all the best for whatever the future brings.
In Summer 2024 we are holding 25 graduation ceremonies:
In the average ceremony, each person claps approximately 7,000 TIMES
7,312 STUDENTS GRADUATE with 18,995 GUESTS in attendance
The Mace Bearer
The role of the Mace Bearer is a historic one dating back to the 12th century. The Mace Bearer’s role is to protect the dignitary who follows them: in our case, the Chancellor. Original maces were weapons which could be used if necessary to protect the King.
As time progressed, maces became increasingly decorative and the use of silver-covered maces in Exeter can be traced back to the late 14th century. You can read more about the University of Exeter’s mace on the inside front cover.
The Mace Bearer and Marshals, who lead the procession carrying the less ornate wooden ‘wand’, are selected from Professional Services to ensure both the academic and professional support functions are reflected in the ceremonies. The remainder of the procession and stage party comprises academic staff, and representatives from the University’s Council, University executive staff and the University’s Multifaith Chaplaincy.
During our typical winter and summer graduation ceremonies:
Over 6,000 HOURS WORKED by hospitality team members
26 GROUNDS TEAM MEMBERS prepare the grounds, set the stage and make the displays
More than 100 CLEANERS spend nearly 1,000 HOURS CLEANING
HONORARY GRADUATES AND GUEST SPEAKERS
Each year, we award Honorary degrees to a number of exceptional people who demonstrate outstanding merit in their field. Since 195556, over 600 people from all walks of life have been honoured in this way. The following abbreviations for Honorary degrees are used: LLD Doctor of Laws; DLitt Doctor of Letters; and DSc Doctor of Science.
A full list of Honorary degrees conferred by the University is available at: exeter.ac.uk/honorarygraduates
During the Summer and Winter 2023 ceremonies, we honoured:
Lord David Puttnam CBE (DLitt)
Amanda Pritchard (LLD)
Professor Sir Steve Smith (LLD)
Dame Melinda Simmons DCMG (LLD)
Leslie McLoughlin FRGS, FRHistS (DLitt)
Bernardine Evaristo OBE, FRSL, FRSA (DLitt)
Reverend Prebendary Professor Georgina Radford (DSc)
Melanie Eusebe MBE (LLD)
Dr Nicholas Tregenza (DSc)
In acknowledgment of the importance of philanthropy, the University of Exeter invites its most generous donors to become members of the prestigious College of Benefactors. Induction into the College is the highest honour that the University can bestow upon its donors. The following became members in 2023:
J P Moulton Charitable Foundation
Mr David and Mrs Kirsten Higgins
A MESSAGE FROM A RECENT HONORARY GRADUATE:
Kamila Shamsie FRSL (DLitt)
Kamila Shamsie is the author of eight novels which have been translated into over 30 languages. One of her award-winning novels, Home Fire, won the Women’s Prize for Fiction and the Hellenic Prize, was long listed for the Man Booker Prize, and shortlisted for eight other prizes. Vice-President and Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Manchester, she was one of Granta’s ‘Best of Young British Novelists’ in 2013.
When I graduated, I had no idea what was ahead of me. Believe me when I tell you that you are only at the very start of knowing what your time at Exeter will truly mean for your lives. So much is possible, so much is still ahead, but right now let me congratulate you on this present moment and the achievement of being here, graduates and graduands of this fine University into which I am so delighted to have been welcomed.
HONORARY GRADUATES
Damon Albarn OBE (DLitt)
Musical polymath Damon Albarn is one of the UK’s most prolific and influential artists. The creative force on over 40 albums: band projects, solo albums, collaborations, operas and film soundtracks. The singer and songwriter of blur, Gorillaz and more, he is the recipient of six BRIT Awards, two Ivor Novellos and two Grammy Awards.
blur’s debut Leisure in 1991 marked the start of an extensive and eclectic career. Iconic works for blur and later Gorillaz are interspersed with writing for film soundtracks including Ravenous (1999), 101 Reykjavík (2001) and Broken (2012).
An Oxfam commission gave rise to the transformative Mali Music (2002) made in Bamako with Afel Bocoum & Toumani Diabaté , and Kinshasa One Two (2011). Then, with Africa Express, came Maison De Jeunes (2013) and Egoli (2019), as well as the formation of The Orchestra of Syrian Musicians for an eponymous studio album and the opening slot at Glastonbury Festival in 2016.
Albarn’s first full opera Monkey: Journey To The West debuted at Manchester International Festival in 2007 and was followed by the operas and musicals Dr Dee (2011), Wonder.land (2015) and most recently, Le Vol du Boli (2021).
In addition to nine studio albums with blur and eight with Gorillaz, Albarn has also recorded two albums with The Good, The Bad & The Queen and two solo albums, the Mercury Prize-nominated Everyday Robots (2014) and The Nearer The Fountain, More Pure The Stream Flows (2021). He has also produced for multiple artists from Kano to Amadou & Mariam, and most proudly, wrote and produced Bobby Womack’s final album The Bravest Man In The Universe, released in 2012.
Stephen Catlin (LLD)
Stephen Catlin began his insurance career in 1973. He founded Catlin Underwriting Agencies Limited in 1984, which later became part of Catlin Group Limited.
Stephen served as Catlin Group’s Chief Executive throughout its history and also served as the active underwriter of Lloyd’s Syndicate 1003 and later Syndicate 2003 until May 2003. He assumed the position of Executive Deputy Chairman of XL Group Ltd from May 2015 (upon the completion of XL’s acquisition of Catlin Group Limited) to May 2017.
From May to December 2017, he acted as a special advisor to XL’s Chief Executive Officer, Mike McGavick. In April 2019, Stephen and Paul Brand founded international specialty insurer and reinsurer, Convex Group Limited. Stephen was CEO and Chairman until June 2022, when he became Executive Chairman.
Tom Chapman (LLD)
The multi award winning Tom Chapman is an author, barber, educator, ambassador, TEDx speaker, and founder of The Lions Barber Collective, an international network of barbers who have come together to help raise awareness for the prevention of suicide. He is an author four times over including a children’s book called The Mighty Lions and in 2022 published his life-saving lessons from BarberTalk training titled How to Listen so Men Will Talk.
After opening his own hair salon in 2011, Tom quickly realised that from inside the safe environment of his barbershop there was an opportunity to not only look after what’s on his customers heads but also what’s inside their heads. In 2015, he founded The Lions Barber Collective, with a vision of a world free from suicide, to educate and raise awareness about mental health and suicide prevention. Tom created a life-saving education programme, that trains hair and beauty professionals, and now anybody (in BarberTalk, Hair&BeautyTalk and HereToTalk training) giving participants the skills to recognise, ask, listen and help those around them with their mental health and suicide prevention.
Dr Alex George (DSc)
Dr Alex George is a presenter, best-selling author, and Youth Mental Health Ambassador to the government. He is also the co-founder of Mettle, the mental fitness app for men.
Alex has become a well-known and respected figure amongst healthcare professionals in the UK, from his years as an A&E doctor, bringing the nation accessible and reassuring advice directly from the frontline throughout the pandemic. He has published three Sunday Times Bestsellers, Live Well Every Day, The Mind Manual for adults, and A Better Day for children, which also won Book of the Year for Children’s Non-Fiction at The British Book Awards. Most recently Alex published his fourth book, A Better Day Journal: Fun and Calming Activities for Positive Mental Health in January 2024.
Alex is on a mission to improve mental health support for young people, and has become prolific throughout the UK for his campaigning for Early Support Hubs as well as his recent work alongside the Royal Foundation with the Prince and Princess of Wales. He also has a hugely successful podcast, Stompcast, which promotes the importance of walking in nature for mental and physical wellbeing.
Alex’s TV work includes presenting his documentary for BBC One and Children Need, Dr Alex: Our Young Mental Health Crisis as well as fronting Naked Education for Channel 4 and All4. Most recently, Alex released his first single with Decca Records at Universal Music, a spoken word track called The Dreaded Pill, in collaboration with pianist Luke Howard, with the ambition to break down stigma around mental health medication.
HONORARY GRADUATES
Cush Jumbo OBE (DLitt)
Cush Jumbo OBE, born in South London, graduated from the Central School of Speech and Drama in 2006 before embarking on an acting, writing and producing career. In 2013, Cush performed in her self-penned play Josephine and I, a one-woman play about jazz singer Josephine Baker, which premiered at the Bush Theatre, London and transferred to The Public Theater in New York. She won an Emerging Talent Award at the London Evening Standard Theatre Awards in November 2013 for this performance. She made her Broadway debut in the autumn of 2014 when she appeared in the transfer of the Royal Court Theatre production of The River by Jez Butterworth opposite Hugh Jackman.
Cush can currently be seen opposite Peter Capaldi in her Apple TV series Criminal Record in which she stars and Executive Produces. Cush has just played Lady Macbeth opposite David Tennant at the Donmar Warehouse. She is well known for starring in US series The Good Wife and The Good Fight, and can be seen as the lead in Britbox drama The Beast Must Die, and Netflix series Stay Close. Cush is three-time Olivier Nominated, most recently in 2022 for playing Hamlet at The Young Vic Theatre. Jumbo was appointed an OBE in the 2019 Birthday Honours for services to drama.
General Sir Patrick Sanders KCB CBE DSO ADC Gen (LLD)
Born in Tidworth Garrison military hospital and raised in Norway, Gibraltar and Iraq, General Sir Patrick Sanders was commissioned in 1986 and spent his early service as an Infantry Officer in The Royal Green Jackets in Germany, Norway and the UK. He has commanded on operations in Northern Ireland, Kosovo, Bosnia, Iraq and Afghanistan. His staff appointments have been in operational and strategic roles. He has been a member of the Directing Staff at the Joint Staff College, Pol/Mil adviser for the Commander of Coalition Forces in Iraq in 2003-4, Colonel Army Strategy, Chief of Defence Staff’s Liaison Officer to the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Assistant Chief of Defence Staff (Operations) in the MOD.
He has commanded 20 Armoured Brigade, the 3rd (UK) Division, and the Field Army. Promoted to General in May 2019, he commanded UK Strategic Command until May 2022 and became Chief of the General Staff in June 2022.
He is Colonel Commandant of The Honourable Artillery Company, Honorary Colonel of the Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment and President of the Armed Forces Winter Sports Association. He speaks French and Norwegian, colloquial Spanish and can tell when he is being insulted in Arabic, Pashtun, Dari, Albanian and Serbo-Croat. Married to Fiona Bullen, a successful author, they have made their home in a small Wiltshire village. General Sanders enjoys cycling, all forms of skiing, shooting and whisky. A season ticket holder with their son Kit, he is a dedicated Tottenham Hotspur FC fan.
Dougie Scarfe OBE DL (DLitt)
Having held senior roles as both administrator, educator and performer in a career spanning over three decades, Dougie is currently Chief Executive at Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra (BSO) where he has led transformational change since 2012. He was formerly Chorus & Orchestra Director and Concerts Director at Opera North, where he began his career as a professional horn player.
Dougie was recognised with an OBE for services to the Arts in His Majesty King Charles III’s inaugural Birthday Honours list.
A passionate advocate for culture, Dougie’s ongoing efforts to improve access and inclusion in classical music has been widely praised. His work in improving outcomes for disabled musicians — from the creation of the world’s first disabled-led ensemble at the core of a major symphony orchestra, BSO Resound, to the commissioning of new music for inclusive forces — has been regarded as a world-leading approach for the sector.
Dougie has remained dedicated to music education throughout his career, from conducting youth groups to teaching at a range of levels. Alongside his role in founding Yorkshire Young Musicians, a talent development organisation for exceptional young performers, his conducting commitments have included 18 years as Principal Conductor of the City of Leeds Youth Orchestra, through which he has inspired generations of young performers.
In 2019, he was awarded an Honorary Fellowship at Arts University Bournemouth (AUB), for Services to Music and in March 2023, won the Association of British Orchestras, Orchestra Manager of the Year award. In November 2023, Dougie was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant for Dorset.
Rachel Skinner CBE FREng FICE (DSc)
Rachel Skinner is an Executive Director at WSP, a global company that provides engineering, environmental and advisory services. Prior to this, she led WSP’s UK transport planning and advisory team.
From 2020-21, Rachel served as the youngest ever President of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE). Her theme of climate action explained the role of civil engineers in making faster, real-world change. She is a long-standing patron of Women in Transport (a not-for-profit that seeks to improve sector diversity). Rachel was awarded a CBE for services to infrastructure in 2022.
Rachel was invited to become a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2019, is a chartered engineer and a chartered transport planner. She was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Leeds in 2022 and is an honorary fellow of the Society for the Environment. She continues to work closely with the UK’s largest infrastructure clients as chair of the Carbon Task Group of the Infrastructure Client Group (ICG), also the ICE’s Decarbonisation Advisory Board and the UK Department for Transport’s employment and skills taskforce. She also served two years as an Infrastructure Commissioner for Scotland from late 2018.
In 2016, Rachel was listed as one of The Telegraph’s inaugural UK Top 50 Influential Women in Engineering; in 2017 she was named the Most Distinguished Winner and Best Woman Civil Engineer at the Women in Civil Engineering Awards, and in 2019 she was confirmed by the Financial Times as one of the UK’s Top 100 Women in Engineering.
HONORARY GRADUATES
Emeritus Professor Desmond Walling (DSc)
One of the world’s most eminent Geography scholars, Des Walling arrived in Exeter as a student in 1963 and was both an undergraduate and postgraduate (PhD) in the Geography Department. He became an Assistant Lecturer in 1968, retiring as a Professor in 2010.
His doctoral research focussed on hydrology, then a new area of Physical Geography, and compared the hydrological behaviour of five small instrumented catchments in southeast Devon. Most of his subsequent work has concentrated on suspended sediment in streams and rivers (muddy water) and associated catchment sediment budgets. Continuing to work in the UK, he also extended the global coverage of his research into contrasting environments, including China, southeast Asia, Africa, Chile and Greenland. In addition, he has investigated recent changes in the sediment loads of the world’s rivers in response to human impact and climate change. He has supervised more than 60 PhD students to successful completion and has published widely, credited with more than 54,000 citations by Google Scholar.
He has been heavily involved with international activity in his field and has served as President of the International Commission on Continental Erosion (1983-91), the International Association for Sediment Water Science (1993-96) and the World Association for Sedimentation and Erosion Research (2004-10). He has been awarded the Victoria Medal of the Royal Geographical Society, the Linton Award of the British Society for Geomorphology, the International Hydrology Prize of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences, UNESCO and WMO, and the AGU Hydrologic Sciences Award.
Sir Robert Tony Watson CMG FRS (DSc)
Sir Robert Tony Watson is one of the most influential environmental scientists worldwide, contributing to multiple assessments of sciences to inform international and national policies and actions. His research interests include biodiversity and ecosystem services, agriculture, climate change, and stratospheric ozone.
Among key positions held, Sir Robert was a former Scientific Advisor in the Office of Science and Technology Policy, White House; Chief Scientist at the World Bank; Chief Scientific Advisor in the UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs; Strategic Director for the Tyndall Center, University of East Anglia; and he is currently Professor Emeritus at the University of East Anglia.
He has chaired, co-chaired or directed several influential scientific assessments. Three of the assessments he has chaired have received prestigious awards - the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment won the 2006 Zayed Prize; the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize; and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, the 2022 Gulbenkian Prize for Humanity.
He is the recipient of numerous awards, fellowships, and honorary degrees which include a Knights Bachelor (2012), Companion of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George (2003); Fellow of the Royal Society (2011), member of the American Philosophical Society (2020), honorary member of the AMS (2021), UN Champion of the World for Science and Innovation (2014), the Asahi Glass Blue Planet Prize (2010), the Global Green Award for International Environmental Leadership (2003), and several Honorary Doctor of Sciences.
Josh Widdicombe (DLitt)
Josh Widdicombe is a highly popular comedian, presenter and actor, originally from Devon. He has starred in thirty series of the multi award-winning Channel 4 series The Last Leg, as team captain on Sky Max’s show Rob Beckett’s Smart TV and alongside Nish Kumar on Hold the Front Page. Josh has also had multiple appearances on shows such as Hypothetical, QI, Live at the Apollo, A League of Their Own, Have I Got News for You and Taskmaster, as well as performing onstage at the Royal Albert Hall for The Royal Variety Performance.
Josh co-hosts two popular podcasts, Parenting Hell with Rob Beckett and, Quickly Kevin will he score? The 90s Football Show. Both podcasts have been performed as multiple live shows. In addition, Josh has authored two Sunday Times Bestsellers – his first a childhood memoir about growing up watching too much TV in the 1990s, Watching Neighbours Twice a Day…How 90’s TV (Almost) Prepared Me For Life and the second based on his podcast, Parenting Hell – How to Cope (or Not) With Being a Parent.
His most recent stand-up tour Bit Much… culminated in a night at the iconic London Palladium and aired on Channel 4 in summer 2022.
This year, Josh will feature in Big Lizard, a new animated comedy adventure coming to CBeebies.
Will Young (DLitt)
Will Young, the singer, songwriter and actor studied politics at the University of Exeter prior to being voted the original Pop Idol winner in 2001 and the launch of his successful career. Will released his debut album in 2002 and in the two decades since has achieved six chart topping albums, two BRIT Awards, four UK number one singles and hits including Leave Right Now, Evergreen and Jealousy.
His acting career blossomed concurrently, with roles on stage and screen including the Judi Dench film Mrs Henderson Presents as well as numerous presenting gigs on TV and radio.
Will’s mental health
podcast The Wellbeing Lab has run for 2 seasons, and he has recently published two books focusing on mental health, To Be A Gay Man and Be Yourself And Happier. Will’s latest release, the single Falling Deep will be accompanied by an album due for release in August this year, followed by a tour in the autumn.
ALUMNI ANNIVERSARY SPEAKERS
Sarah Dusek
Sarah Dusek graduated from Exeter in 1995 with a Law degree. After an early career working for non-profit organisations in Africa and the Far East, Sarah became an entrepreneur and pioneered the glamping industry in the US by founding upscale outdoor hospitality brand Under Canvas, which she sold in 2018 for over $100 million. Today, Sarah is the Managing Partner and co-founder of Enygma Ventures, a venture capital investment fund investing in women-led businesses in Africa. Sarah is also the co-founder and CEO of an eco-travel company, Few & Far, which is heavily invested in conservation and carbon sequestration initiatives and protecting critical biodiversity. Her upcoming book, Thinking Bigger: A Pitch-Deck Formula for Women Who Want to Change the World is due to be released in September.
Sarah has been recognised as an Ernst & Young Entrepreneurial Winning Woman and regularly contributes to various publications such as Forbes, The Telegraph, TRT World and Inc. magazine, Fast Company and more. She sits on the board of 10 startups in Africa and divides her time between the US and South Africa with her husband and two children.
Frank Gardner OBE
Frank Gardner OBE graduated from the University in 1984 with a degree in Arabic and Islamic Studies. After an early career in investment banking in New York and Bahrain he switched to journalism and became the BBC’s Middle East Correspondent in Cairo.
Following the 9/11 attacks he became BBC Security Correspondent covering events in Ukraine, Afghanistan, Yemen, and across the Middle East. In 2004 he was shot six times by Al-Qaida terrorists while filming in Saudi Arabia, leaving him paralysed in the legs.
He was awarded an OBE by Queen Elizabeth in 2005 and received Honorary Doctorates from five universities including Exeter. He is the author of five bestselling books including Blood and Sand. His latest novel Invasion was published in May.
Paul Hammersley
Since studying Economic and Political Development at the University, Paul has spent his career in the advertising business. The first ten years of his working life were at Saatchi & Saatchi in London, from Graduate Trainee to Executive Board member. He then moved to New York to work for Lowe and Partners where he ran their Coca Cola account and oversaw the development of the Lowe network across South America. He later returned to London to run Lowe Howard-Spink and then Lowe Lintas. After the agency was made Campaign’s and AdAge’s Agency of the Year in 2000, Paul moved back to New York to be CEO of Lowe North America. He left Lowe in 2004 and returned to London to be Chairman and CEO of DDB London and then a founding partner of The Red Brick Road. Following a management buyout of the agency, Paul left to run the private equity-backed EDC group and in June 2017 he founded The Harbour Collective, a group of specialist marketing communications agencies, which he still runs. Outside of work Paul spends as much time as possible with his three, now grown-up, children and his wife Alex. Both Alex and their eldest daughter, Mia, are also Exeter Alumni. He is a keen runner, tennis player and golfer and a fanatical skier and watches as much rugby and cricket as he can get away with. He lives in Oxfordshire and London.
Oussama Kardi
Oussama Kardi studied Politics and International Studies, graduating in 2016, before undertaking an MSc in International Relations at the London School of Economics. After a brief stint in journalism, he joined the Civil Service’s Fast Stream programme in 2018. He has undertaken a number of Civil Service roles, mostly in crisis response and resilience, working in HM Revenue and Customs; the Cabinet Office; and the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. He has been deployed on diplomatic engagements abroad and currently leads a resilience team in the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs.
COLLEGE OF BENEFACTORS
Roger de Freitas (Politics, 1971)
We are delighted to welcome Roger de Freitas, a dedicated philanthropist and conservationist, to the University of Exeter College of Benefactors. Roger graduated in Politics in 1971 and has generously supported the University’s marine research community, amplifying the global reach and impact of our research, beginning with funding a Postdoctoral studentship in Ecology and Conservation in 2015.
Since then, Roger has supported PhD studentships looking at the ecological impact of marine pollution and microplastic debris in water systems worldwide, and further scholarships for Masters’ students within the European Centre for Environment and Human Health. Roger’s ongoing support and participation in the marine community continues to assist a growing Exeter student body to drive innovation, foster collaboration and deliver impact in some of the biggest global challenges we face.
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
This programme lists the names of those upon whom substantive degrees are to be conferred at this Congregation. The programme also lists those who elected to receive their award in absence earlier in the session. Graduands who have elected to receive their award in absence at this Congregation are indicated by an asterisk.
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
IN MEMORY
It is with great sadness that we inform you of the passing of the following student during his studies who would have participated in today’s graduation ceremony.
Jazib Ahmad was studying Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Science (BMBS)
Friday 19 July 09:00
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Emma Agnew
Thesis: Theroleoffungalmembrane organisationindirectionalgrowthand tissueinvasionbyCandidaalbicans
Shayma Abdulmuttaleb Kareem Alathari
Thesis: DevelopingField-basedMethods forReal-timeGenomicSurveillanceofViral OutbreaksinTilapia
Stephanie Helen Victoria Andrews
Thesis: InvestigatingtheOccurrenceof MicroplasticsintheNon-TidalRiverThames Ecosystem
Matthew Gaines
Thesis: ElectronCryo-microscopyof ArchaealSurfaceStructures
Remi Hatinguais
Thesis: CharacterisationofClec12bandits roleinimmunityandhomeostasis
Emer Hickey
Thesis: TheImpactofGut-relatedCarbon SourcesonCandidaalbicansVirulenceand Commensalism
Rechal Kumar
Thesis: Investigationoflipidtransportersat theperoxisome-ERinterface
James Matthew McMurtrie
Thesis: Dynamicinteractionsoffish skinmicrobiomeswiththeiraquatic environmentsandtheimpactsofantibiotic exposuresinaquaculture
Callum James Parkin
Thesis: Calciumfluxanddynamicsduring growthandstressresponsesinthehuman fungalpathogenCandidaalbicans
* Eliana Torres Bedoya
Thesis: PreparingforFusariumWiltof BananainColombia
Theresa Wacker
Thesis: Genomeanalysisandevolution ofthechytridfungusBatrachochytrium salamandrivorans
Jake Andrew Bowley
Thesis: Microplasticsasavectorofdisease intoimportantaquaculturespecies
Sam Edwards
Thesis: Evolutionaryecologyofobligate fungalandmicrosporidianinvertebrate pathogens
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (SWBIO)
Michael Lee Dawes
Thesis: Quantitativeinvivoanalysisof ligand-receptorinteractionsintheWnt signallingnetwork
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE BY RESEARCH
Katie Elizabeth Deakin
Thesis: InvestigatingPlasticContamination ofGalapagosMangroveSystems
Lisa Maria Ulvila
Thesis: Enhancinglacticacidbacteria resistancetoacidtoimprovetheir functionalityasnovelcatalystsfortheacidic productionlacticacid
Louisa Jasmine Williams
Thesis: ThePhysiologicalandBehavioural ResponseofMytilusMusselstoSalinityina ChangingOcean
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF RESEARCH
IN ADVANCED BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Ibrahim Chughtai
Jacob Murphy
IN ADVANCED BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE)
Jijy Rohini Padma Kumar
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER IN SCIENCE IN BIOCHEMISTRY
Alina Janani Creber
IN BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Ciara Elyse Watson
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Helisoa Derjean
Fotios Gkoutzourelas
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (ANIMAL BIOLOGY)
Frederick Brown
Holly Isabelle Brown
Katie Nash
Caitlin Polley
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE)
Rahul Anand
Kate Alice Bickerton
Isabel Dickie
Hayden James Edwards
Lucy Harper
Amaellia Rose Press
Harriet Lucy Reese
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY)
Joseph William Gerald Broughton
Amy Jones
Yana Skvortsova
Joshua David Witherspoon
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF ARTS
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND FRENCH WITH WORK AND STUDY ABROAD
Aarti Haresh Ramchand
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN BIOCHEMISTRY
Elizabeth Anne Allen
Sanjana Benakappa
Sophie Brown
Emilie Sakura Joyce Calloud
Lucy Carson
Samantha Cassidy-Campbell
Katie Clutterbuck
Mia Rose Crouch
Elisa Cureton
Christopher De La Haye
Remi Dewhirst
James Ellams
Christopher Elvin
*
Samuel Evans
James Farr
Reva Gulati
Jiaashree Hamal
Caitlin Heaton
Sebastian Duncan Hirst-Styles
Marnie Hollick
Isabella Jackson
Laura Khaukha
Summer Knight
Zachary Leishman
Yasmin Man Alexandrowicz
Henry McNaught
Maria Elisavet Mita
Jiun Mun
Anika Sarma Narayan
Tsz Yat Lumiere Ng
Joseph Parsons
Hannah Louise Rickard
Lucy Catherine Rook
Jessica Sim
Sasha Elizabeth Frost Slater
Zach Henry Reece Smith
Thomas Stratton
Aidan Stride
Rhiannon Taiwo
Alexandrina Turcan
Megan Hannah Mari Tyler
Laura Jayne Walkden
Oliver Wells
Rowan Michael John Wills
Soyoung Yoon
Pui Pui Yuen
IN BIOCHEMISTRY AND FRENCH WITH WORK ABROAD
Sophie Neale
IN BIOCHEMISTRY AND MANAGEMENT
Ellie Rose Chatwin
Tilly Dyer
IN BIOCHEMISTRY WITH INDUSTRIAL EXPERIENCE
Lucy Alice Barton
Oliver Peter David Cook
Hazel Anne Leaddley
Evie Sudbury
IN BIOCHEMISTRY WITH STUDY ABROAD
Lucy Barker
Olivia Louth
IN BIOLOGICAL (ANIMAL BIOLOGY)
Filippa Artikopoulou
IN BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Giulietta Grace Foot
Melissa Joy Harward
Taylor Keno
Evie Elizabeth Mackenzie
Kathryn Sweeney
Freddie Zachary Venturi
Tik Hei Edison Wan
IN BIOLOGICAL AND MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY WITH INDUSTRIAL EXPERIENCE
James Antony Kirk
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
James Allardice
Oliver Edward Aylwin-Archangeli
Matthew James Baker Mulhall
Elizabeth Benbow
Frederick Michael Richard Besly
Archie William Birdseye
Amber Rose Blackman
Alicia Kristina Blem-Filby
Frederick Bosch
Thomas Cadenhead
Lorenzo Cassani
Harriet Chadwick
Erica Morwenna Claire Chivers
Anouk Davies
Bronwyn Charlotte Davies
Ellen Elizabeth Dawson
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
Luke Dear
Grace Dixon
Ciara Donnellan
Ella Flanagan Jones
Joseph Andrew Gartell
Sabrina Emily Giampieri-Smith
Eliza Gilmour
Gabriella Gumuskaya
Gem Harvey
Milly Ellen Harvey
Imogen Ella Georgina Henderson
Elizabeth Hannah Hicks
* Callum Stuart Hill
Ben Harvey Hutchinson
Sayaka Imai
Hugo Jenkins
Chen Jun Khoo Ong
Lucy Caitlin King
Edward MacKinnon Lambert
Alice Katherine Maria Lloyd-Evans
Anna Leonora Mahoney
Benjamin James Jeremy Mather
Thomas Evan Middleton
Christos-Christoforos Mitsacopoulos
Jake Nicholds
Frederick George Nimmo
Harley Darroll John Norman
Kate Erin O’Doherty
Jessica Harriet Paterson
Isabella Pettitt
Jasper Joseph Pike
Grace Elizabeth Popplewell
Luke Potter
Nathaniel James Rotchford
Xavier Sidhartha Roulet
Serena Claire Sale
Leila Joanna Sampson
William Sedgwick
Sophia Shaikh
Marcia Jayne Shore
Emily Elizabeth Sims
Emily Jane Smale
Caitlin Sasha Smith
Asher Jude Stevens
Eliza Charlotte Stinton
Ellie Treharne
Richard Trumper-Kent
James Ernest Arthur Tuddenham
Imogen Webber
Charlotte Wong
William Philip Worthington
Muxi Xie
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (ANIMAL BIOLOGY)
Anna Cavalieri Canosa
Ngo Ching Chan
Martha Emily Clarke
Lucy Beth Cohen
Ethan Fitch
Poppy Eve James
Imogen Katie Legg
Cheuk Ying Lin
Elodie Rose May
Sophie Anne McCarthy
Olivia Preston
Anca-Ioana Pătru
Elliott Scrase
Amelie Rachel Shorrock
Bethany Jessie Hurley Turner
Wiehann Hendre Van Wyk
Hoi Ying Wong
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE)
Tsz Ka Choy
Lucie Cottam
Melannie Gamez
Francesca Giannachi-Kaye
Luca Hervada
Eleanor Holder
Matthew Hooper
Holly Catherine Hutt
Bella Louise Fox Jakob
Agnes Kee
Tsz Yin Leung
Alexandra Katherine Lloyd
Angus Armstrong Macfarlane
Laura Sophie Holm Nannini
Rhea Pascina Noronha
Katherine Raynor
Sarah Binte Shahrin
Ella Smith
Amy Kathleen Mottram Stowell
Alan Alexander Ianovich Taylor
Adam Jim Whiting
Taylor Wise
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES (MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY)
Abigail Georgina Curtis
Olivia Rebecca Dunn
Oliver Fellows
Mikaeel Hussain
Sophie Elizabeth Randell
Louis Schofield
Yan Tung Tse
Hou Man Yam
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH PHILOSOPHY
Emily Owen
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT
Margot Aubin
Olivia Tatiana Tame Crawford-Collins
Phoebe Rose Davies
Pierre Jack Watkins
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT (ANIMAL BIOLOGY)
Megan Leila Jones
Freya Payne
Anya Louise Callow Whittaker
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT (MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE)
Emily Charlotte Jones
Emily Jane Eva Sherrell
Poppy Jane Wagerfield
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT (MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY)
Chloe Anne Beney
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH STUDY ABROAD
Rachel Amber Booth
Amber Claire Fowler
Olivia Grace Mullan
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH STUDY ABROAD (ANIMAL BIOLOGY)
Jasmine Blythe
Annelise Jane Lemonius
Abbie Mills
Serena Mae Wild
IN BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES WITH STUDY ABROAD (MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE)
Kit William Felix Coleman
Phoebe Neville
Megan Hannah Samuels
Sophie Rebecca Summers
IN MATHEMATICS AND BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
* Eloise Rachel Shewring
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN SPORT AND EXERCISE MEDICAL SCIENCES
Wai Man Lee
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES
Khadija Ahmed
Shakeel Ahmed
Charlotte Toni Aldridge
Sophie Emma Allen
Abdullah Alnawfal
Angelica Amorim Almeida
Grace Olivia Andrews
Isa Asadi
Luke Balabanovic
Gitana Louise Blatter
Catherine Boyce
Emily Calvo-Hobbs
Alfred Rudy Lion Cane-McCree
Maximiliano Jack Caviedes Haig
Caitlin Chislett
Eva Crombie
Alessandro D’Orazio
Jessica Dardis
Natasha Leanne Dawson
Cara Dixon
Hannah Durber
George Nicholas James Edgar
Mia Edwards
Tal David Edwards
Hannah Kim Fairchild
Asia Fazion
Jack Fitzmaurice
Sophie Louise French
Tsz Ching Stephanie Fung
Jessica Gaffney
Juan Christian Jaime Gahol
Emma Jane Gasson
Claire Estelle Gort
Ayman Grebici
Joseph William James Gurr
Charles Harden
Ahmed Hasan
Maxwell Hayward
Lily Helling
Freya Lily Alice Higgins
Thomas Robert Higgins
Friday 19 July // 09:00
Alicia Romy Hill
Nathaniel George Hodgson
Zwe Htin Lin
Tia Christina Jacobs
Joshua Jones
Hiu Ching Lau
Scarlett Rose Elizabeth LaycockAldridge
Alice Elizabeth Aurora Leach
Katherine Rebecca Lee
George Oscar Sington Lock
Angus Loder
Lucas Marinheiro
Emily Martin
Kayleigh Mason
Rebecca Louise Webb Masters
Daniel May
Edward Gordon May
Luella Grace McCarthy
Hermione Mary McLeish
Jack Jeff Mitchell
Catherine Lee More
Joseph Robert Murray
Llion Rhodri Myers
Paige Kerryn O’Brien
Toryn O’Dwyer
Heather Scarlett Padley
Jodi Nicole Palmer
Harriet Jean Park
Charlotte Paterson
Casey Phillips
Alys Mae Rappel
Anya Frances Ridgers
Martha Grace Robbins
Veronika Maria Rojek
Fatma Salah
Faosat Oluwasayo Salako
Victoria Kay Standing
Mateusz Stefanow
Natsumi Suzuki
Daisy Tolley
Maya Scarlett Torkington
Alice Rose Watson
Rebecca Alice White
Olivia Catherine Williams
Nathaniel Woo
Harry Worrell
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES (HUMAN GENOMICS)
John George Holloway
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES (HUMAN GENOMICS) WITH PROFESSIONAL TRAINING YEAR
Nicole Lundrigan
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES (NEUROSCIENCE)
Isaac Gleave
Holly Webb
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES (PHARMACOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS)
Sasha Victoria Bassett
Jack Edwards
Eleanor Goldsmith
Askold Shestunov
Orla Rae Watson
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES AND FILM AND TELEVISION STUDIES
Rory Diez-Harrison
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES AND FRENCH WITH STUDY ABROAD
Raquel Alejandra Sklar
IN MEDICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL TRAINING YEAR
Natacha Sofia Andrade Trabulo
Kendra Simone Benney
Lily Brazier
Celie Broomfield
Kiera Llewelyn Burke
Natalie Claire Carpenter
Kirsty Cordwell
Benjamin Peter Craine
Helene Davis
Ethan De Villiers
Kyle Joshua Diddams
Ancuta Elena Dordea
Georgia Ellen Ek
Chiara Bernadette Guddemi
Kimberley Jane Hall
Bethan Louise Hawkins
Armin Jarchlo
Elizabeth Low
Sonja Kirstie McLeod Lowdon
Rohan May
Isabel Mae Valerie Metcalf
Isobel Chloe Peters
Joseph Jesse Ramage
Benjamin Smith
Hugo Toby Pardoe Swift
IN SPORT AND EXERCISE MEDICAL SCIENCES
Marguerite Rose Marie Laurence Besse
Freya Alexandra Bryant
Sarah Buckley
Miles Davidson Calvert
Esther Ruth Cole
Zara Emily Cook
Kerri Dorothy Doherty
Lauren Ewins
Joseph Michael Pemberton Glynne
Sophie Gorman
Evie Green
Tom McLeod Henderson
Charlotte Higham
Jiaqi Li
Jacob Peter Lund
Krish Manesh
Josie Pickering
Osian Rees
Katie Lana Tasker
Chloe Trowbridge
IN SPORT AND EXERCISE MEDICAL SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL TRAINING YEAR
Oliver Engela Ras
Eleanor Jane Gilkes
Cameron Jason Gillam
Ling Shun Lam
Adam Dewi Paris
Caitlyn Amy Sampson
Catherine Stidwill
Yuhan Zhang
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
Friday 19 July 11:45
IN
THE
FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN FOOD, NUTRITION AND HEALTH
Gráinne Whelehan
Thesis: MycoproteinandGlycaemicControl
IN SPORT AND HEALTH SCIENCES
Patrick Carden
Thesis: Exploringtheaetiologyof highburdenlowerlimbinjuriesinmale professionalrugbyunionplayers
Dan-Mihai Dorobantu
Thesis: Echocardiographicassessment ofacuteandchroniceffectsofexercise oncardiacfunction–fromphysiologyto clinicalpractice
Joanna Ellen L’Heureux
Thesis: Oralmicrobiomeasamodulator ofnitricoxidehomeostasisandindicesof cognitivehealth
Curtis Wadey
Thesis: CardiorespiratoryFitnessin PaediatricCongenitalHeartDisease
Kiera Wilkinson
Thesis: Theeffectofaplantbasedprotein sourceontheskeletalmusclemetabolicand functionalresponsetoeccentricexercise
Rebecca Lear
Thesis: AssociationsofPhysicalActivityand VascularHealth
Annie May Skinner
Thesis: Examiningthecross-sectional andlongitudinalassociationsoflifestyle factors,endocrinefactorsandbody compositionwithbonemassinchildhood andadolescence:ThePhysicalActivityand NutritioninChildren(PANIC)Study
IN SPORT AND HEALTH SCIENCES (QUEX)
Stefan Kadach
Thesis: InorganicNitrateMetabolism
WithintheHumanBody:DietaryNitrate SupplementationandFactorsInfluencing NOBioavailability
Max Edwin Weston
Thesis: Theeffectofageandexercise intensityonmiddlecerebralarteryblood velocityresponsestoexerciseinhealthy children,adolescentsandadults
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE BY RESEARCH
Emma Louise Edwards
Thesis: Stirred,notshaken.Astudyof headkinematicsandcognitivechangesin horseracing:Alongitudinalpilotstudy
Elsa Olivia Greed
Thesis: TheEffectofShatavari SupplementationonSkeletalMuscle StrengthandNeuromuscularFunctionin Post-MenopausalWomen.
Tyler Moore
Thesis: TheCircleSequencingTask(CST): Anovelapproachtoanalysingconcussion relatedcognitiveandmotorcontroldeficits
Elke Henderson Morgan
Thesis: Themediatingroleofbody compositionontherelationshipsof moderate-to-vigorousphysicalactivity, sedentarytime,andcardiorespiratory fitnesswithinsulinresistanceinchildren:the PANICstudy
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN PUBLIC HEALTH
Annabel Brookes
IN PUBLIC HEALTH (GLOBAL HEALTH)
Sakshi Pant
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN SPORT AND EXERCISE MEDICINE
Nishchitha Mohan
Niveditha Yadav Prakash
Preethi Tallam Adsah Vinodh
IN SPORT AND HEALTH SCIENCES
Akshay Krishna Bharadwaj
* Tang Sui
FOR THE DEGREE OF POSTGRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN SPORT AND EXERCISE MEDICINE
Afsana Zoha
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE
IN BIOSCIENCES
* Joshua Wong
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES
Maximilian Christoph Ackermann
William James Adams
Morgan Allan
Maisy Allen
Amelia Mary Anema
Elijah James Ashmore
Niall Baines
Ellis Joseph John Baldry
Jake Ball
Archie Barker
Jack Raymond Barnes
Molly Barnett
Kieran Thomas Barnicoat
Jack John Barry
Samuel Beaghan
Harvey Beckerleg
Freya Bellamy
Arthur Benson
Angel Bevan
Ellie Bishop
Charlie Blades
Benjamin Bond
Harriette Bond
Luke Booth
Jack Bosworth
Jack Branson
Alastair Stuart Brown
Isaac Brown
Katie Jeanette Buchanan
* Kasparas Buivydas
Olivia Cahill Coombes
* Tommy Callaghan
Marcus Caplan
Jack Chapple
* Soyeong Choi
Anais Cleaver
Alexander Cone
Aaliyah Cope
Maysah April Craig
Charlie Cribb
James Alan Cutler
Harvey James Cutmore
Olivia Dale
Reuben Davey
Charles Davies
Louis Joseph Davies
Hadrien Clement De Petrini
Harrison Geoffrey Dibble
Millie Marie Drake
Rebecca Dugmore
Chloe Yasmin Eames
Jermaine Ellis
Abigail Evans
Iestyn Luke Evans
Ella Evernden
* Jolyon Fitter
Flora Kate Fletcher
Kaylin Fourie
Joseph Freeman
Jasmine Frances Frost
Edward Michael Gardner
James Garvey
Benjamin Gorman
Piers Richard Gough
Milo Hallam
Alana Hamilton Tombs
Ben Hammersley
Luke Hams
Alice Jeanette Hardy
Victoria Elizabeth Harper
Joshua James Harwood
Cara Heath
Jemima Lily Helm
Rowan Henn
Amaya Herold
Oliver Hillyer
Jack Hingley
Isabel Grace Hobday
Thomas Holmes Moore
Lily Mae Horner
Thomas Hutchinson
Bethan Huxley
Rory Hyatt
Taylor Ingham-Hill
Heon Jin
Joseph Morgan Jones
Olivia Kate Jones
Eleanor Joyce
Natthanon Kansri
Ronan David Kelly
Danyel Kiani
Jack Largent
Hannah Lawrence
Sebastian Joseph Lawson
Charlie Lewis
Feifan Li
Kai Linkin
Annabel Little
Joshua Evan Loder
Adam Joseph Lowenthal
Daniel Loyal
William Lucas
* Joseph Mallett
Emily Jane Martin
Christopher James McCarthy
Nancy McGillivray
Daniel McGreevy
Elizabeth McNamara
Matthew Morgan
Alice Mundy
Fraser Murray
Jake Murray
Thomas Edward Mustoe
Boniface Nehatta
Joshua Thomas Nield
Nicholas Colin Samuel Nurse
Benjamin Yuttakai O’Neill
Niamh Orchard
Joshua Parr
Dan Pearce
Matthew James Pennington
Jacob William Perkins
Poppy Perry
Bethany Plummer
Mia Pollington
Jade Pope
Francesca Powell
Hollie Lauren Prodger
Samrith Purja
Anthony Puscuta Arenas
Georgina Ralston
Tyron Real
Jessica Rees
Francesca Charlotte Maria
Astrid Rhodes
Amy Ringshaw
Cellan Robinson
Imogen Honey Rodger
Alex Rowe
Priya Rebekah Shah
* Emily Christina Simon
Oliver Skirrow
Evelyn Slattery
Imogen Leah Spackman
Georgia Speck
Hardy Speck
Esme Spencer
Luke Steer
Connor James Stephanos
Harvey Stiles
Tristan Still
Ayush Thapa
Alfie Thatcher
George Thaw
Mollie Thomas
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
* Owen George Thomas
Nicholas Tolliday
Mae Truman-Davies
Emily Jayne Vaile
Samuel Walker
Yunchao Wang
William James Bromley Way
Benjamin Wells
Hannah Louise West
Matthew Williams
Eloise Winsor
Emmanuel Charles Winstone
Toby Winterbottom
Morgan Michael Withers
Kalum Withey
Bluebelle Wood
Austin James Woods
Billy John Wootten
Domenico Peter Chu Wright
Erin Lillian Yeomanson
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES AND ENGLISH WITH STUDY ABROAD
Millie Jane Turner
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES AND SPANISH WITH STUDY ABROAD
Matthew Chan
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES AND SPANISH WITH WORK ABROAD
Katie May Fox
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES WITH GEOGRAPHY
Ellie Gabriel
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT
Benjamin Eedy
Samuel Neil Evans
Jake Louis Green
Daniel Andrew Johnstone
Harry Mason
* Alex Mitchell
Patrick Wilkins
Kieron Josh Milne Young
IN EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES WITH STUDY ABROAD
Olivia Marie Agnes Rodriguez Drigui
Charlotte Mary Louise Durant
Simran Karia
Jake King
Jade Taylor
IN HUMAN BIOSCIENCES
Erin Alexandra Kay Bishopp
Isaac Bowyer
Lydon Tate Brewster
* William Brookes
Archibald Campbell-Colquhoun
Harrison Jake Friday
Oscar Harmer
Monica Lydiana Marie Kitchen
Sophie Madalena Kristeleit
Gemma Nicholas
Ellen Oakley
Alyssia Shaw
Alexander Gilbert Smith
Clara Stancombe Postigo
Xenia Truman
Tomas Wear
Charlotte West
IN NUTRITION
Rachael Elizabeth Allen
Hector James Berry
Hoi Wan Cheng
Rachael Fee
Cameron James Alastair Grant
Phoebe Keast
Ellie Mae Langman
Tin Yiu Ryan Lee
Natasha Rao
Chester Ribbons
IN SUSTAINABILITY AND EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES
Lauren Summers
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
Friday 19 July // 11:45
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF POSTGRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN CLINICAL PHARMACY
* Jack Symonds
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER IN SCIENCE IN MEDICAL IMAGING (DIAGNOSTIC RADIOGRAPHY)
Hoi Ching Au
Robert Michael Barnes
Rebecca Louise Dade
Philippa Downton
Katie Anne Harvie
Chun Him Kiang
Jemma Rhodes
Sin Yi Erica Sze
Nia Tate
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN DIAGNOSTIC RADIOGRAPHY AND IMAGING
Lisa Marie Allen
Chantelle Laura Ash
Aaron Bateson
Hajara Begum
Amanda Susan Brown
Jamie Edward Jeffrey Brown
Charlotte Cayton-Smith
Topaz Valentine Dewey
Amy Claire Digby
James English
* Tolulope Fagbadegun
Martyn Finney
Sarah Finney
Lynn Hastings
Frederick Marshall
Cora Lucy Mason
Claire Meadows
Emma Louise Morley
Isabelle O’Dowd
Iwona Piotrowska
Crystalle Sammuller
Jessica Sergeant
Emily Smalley
* Jacqueline Snow
Adrian Staiger
Katie Thomas
Matthew Turner
Radek Vanis
Zach Warren
* Christian Waters
Deanna Louise Wilton
IN HEALTH SCIENCE (MEDICAL IMAGING)
Keeley Louise Duffy
Holly Eve Lawrence
Christy Mina Ng
IN MEDICAL IMAGING (DIAGNOSTIC RADIOGRAPHY)
Estelle Jasmine Adde
Yasmeen Alam
Tsz Fung Jethro Au-Yeung
Erin Bailey
Jennifer Elise Beadsworth
Darcy Amelia Clarke
Kira Ann Clements
Isabelle Dalton
Nicole Damonte
Jemima Elizabeth May Davies
Matilda Mae Donaghy
Imogen Dracup
Thomas Martin Drechsel
Francisca Eady
Isobel Edwards
Haleena Elias
Kezia Eshun-Parker
William Foster
Lauren Gaffney
Jan Rhoel Olivarez Gallardo
Eleanor Georgina Hall
Yuen Tsing Ho
Georgia Amber Hollett
Rebecca Jayne Houghton
Jodie Elizabeth Howard
Ching Hui
Samuel Joseph Jones
Adam Charles Kirkham
Mason Kirkham
Molly Knight
Emily Lavery
Lauren Lawrence
Rosemary Lower
Rebekah Tihana Martin
Alyssia McMahon
Courtney Messenger
Alexander Rhys Miles
Teaghan Murphy
Sophie Nagy
Asha Partridge
Jayu Patidar
Wan Siti Norzaqiah Abdur Rafaea
Apsana Rai
Alisha Ram
Nimra Rashid
Lucy Caroline Frances Ratcliff
Shon Reji
Jessica Marie Rivers
Hannah Rushman
Bella Yashika Kumaree Sawock
Nicole Sherry Simpson
Georgina Deborah Stidston
Daniel Storey
Jennifer Sutter
Gabriel Thacker
Alexander White
Owen John Williams
Chung Sum Max Wong
Amy Elizabeth Yazdi-Davis
Akshaya Yogaranjan
Annabelle Young
Aysun Yurdakul
Nodirabegim Yusupova
Nathaniel Zenda
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
Friday 19 July 15:00
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN MEDICAL STUDIES
Salman Alharthi
Thesis: MagneticImagingandSpectroscopy MethodsforDeterminingSpinalMuscle FunctioninVivo
Dima Abdulrahim Arafah
Thesis: ExploringFactorsAssociatedwith theUtilizationofEmergencyServices byChildrenwithAsthmainQatarand FormulatingMultilevelRecommendations toMinimizeNon-UrgentEmergency DepartmentVisits
Monica Lamici Ayine
Thesis: AlternativesplicingofVEGF-Aand Bcl-Xindiabeticnephropathy:potentialfor noveltherapiesandprognostictools
Pedro Miguel Cardoso
Thesis: InvestigatingtheuseofBayesian predictionmethodsinprecisionmedicine approachesinDiabetes
* Neil Chanchlani
Thesis: Predictinganti-TNFtreatment failureinpatientswithinflammatorybowel disease
Aaron Choi
Thesis: Nonpharmacologicalinterventions forpsychoticsymptomsinpeoplewith dementia
Amy Charlotte Dawes
Thesis: Investigatingbodymassindex associatedgeneticlociusingnextgenerationsequencingandbiobankdata
Megan Louise Elley
Thesis: Neuron-microgliainteractions duringgamma-frequencyoscillations
Wyn Firth
Thesis: Theroleofmitochondrial translocatorprotein18kDa(TSPO)in regulatingastrocytemetabolism
Ryan Frankum
Thesis: Splicingfactorsandtheirupstream regulatorsaseffectorsofcellular senescenceandageingphenotypes
Josan Gandawijaya
Thesis: AnovelroleforJanusKinase andMicrotubuleInteractingProtein1 (JAKMIP1)inneuronalcytokinesignalling viatranscriptionalmodulationofSignal TransducerandActivatorofTranscription3 (STAT3)expression
Laura Maria Güdemann
Thesis: Acausalinferenceframeworkfor comparativeeffectivenessandsafety researchusingobservationaldata,with applicationintype2diabetes
Joshua Harvey
Thesis: Aroleforepigeneticmechanismsin Lewybodydementias
Maneka Haulder
Thesis: Modellingthecontributionof geneticsandclinicalmeasurestobirth weightandriskoflarge-for-gestationalageinmothersandbabiesofEuropeanand SouthAsianancestry
Jasmin Joy Hopkins
Thesis: Expandingknowledgeofthegenetic andphenotypicheterogeneityofcongenital hyperinsulinism
* Vasileios Karageorgiou
Thesis: Weak-InstrumentandPleiotropyRobustMethodsforMendelian randomisation,withApplicationstoMental Health
Simeng Lin
Thesis: Usinggenomicapproachesto characterisetheimmuneresponsesto biologicals
Lachlan Ford MacBean
Thesis: Investigatingthemolecularchanges resultingfromsystemicinflammationand amyloid-betaimmunisationinAlzheimer’s disease
Ailsa MacCalman
Thesis: Characterisinggenomicregulation inhumanpancreaticdevelopment
* Kinan Mokbel
Thesis: PharmacogenomicsofMedically ImportantAdverseDrugEffects
Kitty Ellen Parker
Thesis: Evaluatingdesignfeaturesand analysingtheintra-clustercorrelation coefficientsforpupilhealthoutcomesin school-basedclusterrandomisedcontrolled trials
Millie Sander
Thesis: Characterisingmodelsof Alzheimer’sdiseaseanddementiawith Lewybodies:withfocusontranscriptomics
Michael Wilhelm Schrauben
Thesis: Developingepigeneticand transcriptomictoolstomodelAlzheimer’s diseasein-vitro
Luke Slade
Thesis: Theroleofhydrogensulfide supplementationinCaenorhabditiselegans ageinganddiseasemodelsofmitochondrial dysfunction
Deniz Turkmen
Thesis: Conventionalandgeneticfactors influencingresponsestocardiovascular medication
George Vere
Thesis: Theimportanceofmetabolic activityingoverningDCcapabilityto mediatefungalallergicinflammation
Jason Weetch
Thesis: ExploringIdentityandIdentification inDementiaAdvocacyGroups:AMultiphaseMixedMethodsInvestigation
Gregory Thomas Wheildon
Thesis: DNAmethylationprofilingin neurodegenerativedisease
Jiping Zhang
Thesis: TreatingDiabeticInflammation usingAMP-ActivatedProteinKinase Activators
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
Jinxia Zheng
Thesis: Modulationofepithelialmesenchymaltransitionsandalternative splicinginprostatecancerprogression
Anna Duckworth
Thesis: RoleofTelomeresandSex HormonesinPulmonaryFibrosis
Anastasiia Kovalenko
Thesis: ViolencePreventionInterventions: ChangeProcessesandProgramme Effectiveness
IN MEDICAL STUDIES (QUEX)
Saleh Shekari
Thesis: Studyingtheeffectsofgenetic factorsonthefemalereproductivelifespan
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN GENOMIC MEDICINE
* Jessica Beattie
Ferhat Dogan
Lynda Doyle
Lucy Harris
* Juma Hamimu Kabanja
Zaineb Noor
Vijal Parmar
Ali Rasch
Katie Emma Whitcombe
* Rosie Wilkinson
FOR THE DEGREE OF POSTGRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN GENOMIC MEDICINE
Alison Finn
IN LEADING CLINICAL RESEARCH DELIVERY
* Yuko Francis
* Andrew Paisey
* Heather Palfrey
Govind Soni
* Sophia Taylor
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF MEDICINE, BACHELOR OF SURGERY
Lispeth Abraham
Paul Adamson
Zain Ishtiaq Ahmad
Obatobi Adeoti Akinlolu
Emine Zeliha Akpinar
Olgun Aksaray
Khaled Al Bushe Ade
Mohammed Al-Bajari
Zain Ali
Lara Andreski
Dominic Ian Annable
Emily Appaya
Robert Walter Collingwood Arbuthnott
Zaynab Arshad
Amy Florence Artingstall
Benjamin Bailey
Elouise Marie Baker
* Aarani Balakumar
Senuri Vikma Bandara
Priya Banerji
Jay Anthony Bean
Ben Thomas Berryman
Thomas Charles George Bettley-Smith
Edward Morgan Biebrach
Millie Eleanor Blakeburn
Roberta Elizabeth Bland
Sophie Blummers
Harrison Boult
Poppy Genevieve Bowyer
Georgina Billie Brand
Chloe Harriet Bridle
Katie Dinah Briggs
Nicole Helen Brown
Charlotte Cynthia Browning
Marco Tulio Bruni
Giorgia Francesca Huckvale Bruno
Nina Eleanor Buxton-Madgin
Jack Carabin
Lily Chadwick
Ka Kiu Cheris Chan
Timothy Wai Lok Chau
Wai Chon Cheong
Patrick Izuma Oluwaseun Oluwayomi Chineme
Elyanna Estelle Choi
Sam Choroszewski
Ehtesam Ahmed Chowdhury
Lavinia Cochetti
Maria Joao De Melo Vieira Coelho
Thomas Anthony Coton
Caitlin Louise Cox
Thomas David Cracknell
Anna Julia Franziska Cramer
Morwenna Ruth Craze
Alice Clare Crocker
Maria Cufley
Benjamin Jeffrey Curry
Ella Daly
Ruth Tharuki Amaya Daniels
Emma Catherine Davies
Jack Davies
Jolene Davis
Carolina Daws
Anithra Riddhi De Mel
Ruggiero Di Lecce
Aimee Helen Elizabeth Douglas
Olivia Downs
William John Drake
Sian Dugmore
Justin Michael Thomas Duncombe
Matthew Alex Campbell Earp
Frances Andrea Eslabra
Alexis Everall
Megan Ferguson
Benjamin Fincher
Kharis Amelia Flower
Emily May Fooks
James Connor Forbes
Kira Louise Ford-Busson
Christopher Ben Patrick Forde
Kitty Alice Forster
Annabel Mary Fox
Kesri Amaris Gajadhar
Harrison James Gallagher
Rosie Gault
*
Timothy Peter Gilbert
Sebastian Oscar Mckirdy Gladwell
Samantha Gold
Clara Gomez Lillo
Joshua Lawrence Grant
William Greig
Anna Gurung
Nimhara Hadagiri
Amber Lowri Harding
Catherine Harris
Joshua Paul Harris
Maisie Caitlin Harvey
Alice Hawker
James Francis Hollamby
Lucy Jennifer Dale Hollands
Joshua George Holloman
Rebecca Jane Howes
Lucy Olivia Hudson
Nicole Hugec
Dorin-Eduard Iftinca
Mollie Elaine Ingham
Olivia Jadeja
Ieva Jakaityte
Elizabeth Megan James
Zachary James-Knights
Charlotte James-Pajwani
Bethan Jennifer Jarman
Aharabie Jeyabavan
Anisia Jicol
Woohyun Kang
Catherine King
Emma Louise King
Elena Kirwan
Albert Jan Kuzniar
Thomas Lambert
Cara Sophie Lancaster
Cleodie Davina Lucy Lawson
Catherine Lee-Kim-Koon
Clara Jayne Anne Lennon
Thomas William Lewis
Mark Leyton
Kai Li
Yolanda Littleboy
Anna Katherine Longley
Caleb Mageean
Hania Majedin
Abdul Majumder
Xanthoula Makri
Harris Mangal
Ragesh Manoharaj
Manavi Manu
Stuart Kerr Marsh
Ferdinand Mayer
Isabelle Kathryn Mayne
Robyn McLean
Laurence McLellan Bastidas
Jack Meller
Rida-E-Buttool Memon
* Atena Metsel
Ashling Mary Miller
Sylvia Misztal
Muhammad Zarif Miszua Anuar
Rehan Mohiuddin
Ruscka Moonoosamy
Aimee Charlotte Mortimer
Miriame Nadine Mostefai
Mazin Mukhaiber
Zoë Kate Mulligan
Robert Murray
Hana Nasiri
William Nicholas Timothy Naylor
Alexander Nejad
Emily Elizabeth Nicholson
Joseph Edward Oates
Cody Joanne Odell
Dellan Elizabeth Oke
Mojolaoluwa Olarinmoye
James George Oliver
Opeoluwa Oluwaseyitan Olubode
Rose Isobel
Sophie Pattison
Rachel Paxford
James Andrew Maurice Peck
Nicholas James Pendrigh
Francesca Emily May Perry-Poletti
Miriam Joy Phillips
Peter Francis Phillips
Daisy Jacqueline Port
Daisy Ann Price
Harry Thomas Price
Eleanor Chantal Priestnall
* Aaron Wyn Pritchard
James Pyke
Hateem Rafeeque
Prami Rai
Maisy Pema Rainbow
Ishani Rakshit
Zoe Louise Mounir Raouf
Hannah Renee Redpath
Rimaz Riyal
Maya Kaarina Robberstad
Samuel Robson-Brown
Dominic Ryan
Hawa Aminda Sankoh
Pablo Esteban Santander Soria
Alina Sydney Peischl Schmid
Lucas James Sebborn
Camrun Jay Ende Shah
Jack Allan Shaw
Azizi Sheik-Ali
Miles James Shepherd
Jacob Damian Mackay Sinclair
Kabilaan Siriganesan
Janarthan Sivananda
Thomas Lloyd Skellon
Eleanor Louisa Mary Smyth
Lily May Starling
Abigael Kati Tamblyn
Grace Kui Ying Tang
Annabel Clare Taylor
Finlay Taylor
Odette Masi Tobaiwa
Alice Mina Tomkins
Jason Nam Tran
Harry David True
Augusta Trussell
Lyuben Truykov
Heidi Abigail Seren Turner
Sasha Verrall
Gaia Vetere
Friday 19 July // 15:00
Virginija Vilkelyte
Jack Walker
Chathuni Disara Warnakulasuriya
Fernando
Harriet Evie Wayt
Ella Grace White
Hannah Jayne Wisely White
Jacob Bancroft Whitmarsh
Emma Jayne Williams
Jessica Lauren Williams
Connor Kai Yahata McGowan
Qian Zhang
Eleni Angeliki Zoumi
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN ADVANCED MEDICAL STUDIES
India Catherine Porter IN MEDICAL STUDIES
Molly Cumming
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
PRESENTATION OF GRADUATES
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN NEUROSCIENCE
Victoria Louise Abbott
Camille Baker-Smith
Finlay Barnes
Matilda Rose Braithwaite
Skye Cook
Kyra Crous
Meg Curtis
Isobel Mary Fallon
Charlotte Louise Foote
Mia-Rose Gillison
Talin Jagdish Edward Gogna
Lucy Gomm
Jessica Gristwood
George Christopher Dylan Haynes
Lara Higgins
Mia Honeghan-Bates
Rosie Hughes Hunnisett
Lauren Jane Johnson-Smith
Riana Kakkad
Hazel Kelman
Harry Le Roux
Alexander Lowe
Caitlyn Milena MacDonald
Benedetta Marcello
Eleanor Alice Marchant
* David Neil McBride
Toby McDonald
Annika Emma Melrose
Ethan Jamie Millar
Evie Morgan
Eleanor Louise Mummery
James Myers
Isabella Olivia Pollitt
Ella Jane Porter
Abigail Louise Raybould
Elena Cristiana Rossetti
Scarlett Sophia Sarsby
Indra Sellars
Hollie Smith
Joshua Smith
Amelie Florence Somerville
Lana Stewart
Briony Troughton
Carolina Marie Tucker
Katherine Tyler
* Dillon Vijaya
Poppy Charlotte Wallis
Sebastian Whitman
Natalie Grace Wickett
IN NEUROSCIENCE WITH PROFESSIONAL PLACEMENT
Natalia Weronika Arendarczyk
Kieran Becker
* Amani Gardner
Oliver Gibbs
Maisie Johnson
Ellie Moodie
Tahlia Alice Parker
Thomas Seymour
Jacob Neil Thomas-Hegarty
Jessica Mary Wigmore
* Ben Winney
Rebecca Wood
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES
FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE IN EXTREME MEDICINE
Renée Louise Farrar
Orla Joanne Fitzpatrick
* Alice Taylor
IN HEALTH RESEARCH METHODS
* Benjamin Paul Kent
IN HEALTHCARE LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT
Ranjith Kumar Govindarajalu Kumar
Muhammad Khaleelur Rahman
FOR THE DEGREE OF POSTGRADUATE CERTIFICATE IN HEALTHCARE LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT
* Ashwath Raju Chemala Venugopal
FOR THE DEGREE OF POSTGRADUATE DIPLOMA IN EXTREME MEDICINE
* Gemma Aldridge
Kshitija Ravindra Bhutkar
Presenterreturnstotheirseat
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENTS
So many of our students have achieved great things over the past year. Here we feature just a few examples where our students have excelled in academia, sport, arts, entrepreneurship and community.
Exeter medical student becomes first British student to win international racial justice award
A University of Exeter medical student has been awarded the Racial Justice in Medicine Award by the American Medical Student Association (AMSA), for supporting aspiring medical students and tackling inequality in teaching materials.
Naabil Khan, a third year student, was presented the award at the Future Physicians for Change conference in Washington DC. It is the first time a British student has won the award, which recognises exceptional individuals who have done unparallelled work and seek to mitigate health disparities.
Naabil’s achievements outside of her medical studies include hosting the Very Junior Doctors podcast which introduces life as a medical student in a friendly, accessible, personal manner, creating the Skin For All website which shows different skin conditions on a range of skin tones, and founding the Future Dr newsletter which encourages student participation in both extracurricular and super curricular activities covering over 12 medical specialities.
Data Science student leads new paper on Multiple Sclerosis
MSc Data Science student, Pavel Loginovic, has led on an important paper published on research into a genetic risk tool that could spare young people from going blind and also help diagnose MS earlier. Pavel is taking a break from his Medicine studies at Exeter to study the MSc. The research developed from a summer studentship with the INSPIRE programme, which supports students to engage with research.
Pavel said “Leading this analysis while staying on top of my medical studies has been a challenge and an immense opportunity for growth, professional and personal. I’ve enjoyed the academic journey so far, and I’m excited for what’s to come.”
Powerful research outlining discrimination and lack of diversity honoured by Hutton Prize for Excellence
Millie Urquhart and Mathys Reiss have both won the 2023 Hutton Prize for Excellence for their research projects. The award is given annually to undergraduate or postgraduate students in either the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences or the Business School. It rewards, encourages and inspires those who put ethical conduct and transparency at the forefront of government, business and the professions.
Millie’s research explored how African migrant women experience unsatisfactory perinatal care and health outcomes in the French maternity system. Mathys’s research showed how third sector institutions lack BAME volunteers and sets out recommendations on how to improve diversity and participation across the sector.
Thousands of students have trained to become active bystanders
Nearly 3,000 students have engaged with the University’s active bystander training which gives them skills to intervene if they see someone else being harassed or experiencing unpleasant behaviour.
The training has been open to all students across all campuses for the past two academic years and will continue to be offered in the future. It instils an ethos of proactive involvement, encouraging individuals to challenge and intervene, allowing them to leave the session having practised in a supportive environment.
Bystander Intervention Training has been open to all students and among the many who have signed up to take part have been committee members of sports societies. Already students who have participated have reported occasions where they’ve checked on fellow students, managed to diffuse a situation, or diverted attention away from an individual who was receiving unwanted attention.
Sea, sand and sound legal advice
This summer, Law students have widened access to justice with the Law on the Beach project. They have been working with local solicitors to provide beachgoers with free legal advice in Exmouth and Teignmouth.
The Law School recognises the financial and geographic challenges people face in accessing professional legal advice and runs its own Community Law Clinic. In their final year students can be part of the Clinic by taking the Access to Justice module. Over two terms, they work alongside local solicitors gaining experience of client interviewing, exploring areas of law in depth, and preparing legal paperwork.
During the two days of Law on the Beach, students provided advice to many people on topics such as family, property and employment issues.
Exeter rugby has starring role in Six Nations 2024
A strong contingent of rugby stars from the University of Exeter were on show and in supporting roles at the Six Nations Championship earlier this year.
Ten players with ties to the University were selected for their nation’s squads for the prestigious tournament. 21 year-old, Dafydd Jenkins, was named captain of the Wales Men’s squad. Dafydd, who also represents the Exeter Chiefs, has been studying Exercise and Sport Sciences.
Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, who also plays on the wing for the Exeter Chiefs and is studying medicine, received his first call to the England Men’s squad for the Six Nations. Immanuel played alongside Henry Slade, an alumnus of the University. Joe Bailey, studying Exercise and Sport Sciences, played in the Six Nations Under 20s England Men’s squad. Lizzie Hanlon, an alumna of the University, played for England in the Women’s Squad (the Red Roses), receiving her first cap at Twickenham playing Ireland.
In support of the Red Roses, graduating Exercise and Sport Sciences students Maisy Allen and Katie Buchanan were called up for the training squad before and during the tournament. The Red Roses won the Grand Slam Six Nations title. Maisy, Katie, and their fellow Exercise and Sport Sciences graduate Nancy McGillivray all play for the Exeter Chiefs and alongside Lizzie Hanlon, have been offered transitional contracts to play with the Red Roses.
Meanwhile, Ross Vintcent, an Economics student, was called up for the Italian squad. Sam Skinner, another alumnus of the University, was also included in the Scotland squad for the championship. Elliot Young, studying Anthropology, played in the Under 20s Men’s squad for Scotland.
Medical student’s study links playing music to better brain health
A new study that links playing an instrument with better brain health, came about thanks to one of our medical students.
Gaia Vetere, who has been studying on our Truro Campus and is graduating this summer, reached out to the PROTECT team who are researching how brains age. Gaia and the team decided to explore the relationship between music and brain health with those taking part in the online PROTECT research, and published their study earlier this year.
Gaia said “As a pianist I was interested in researching the impact of music on cognition. Being fairly new to the world of research and publishing, this was a challenging but also truly enriching experience.”
20 hour walk for period poverty
In February, graduating medical students Ella Daly and Maisie Harvey from our Truro Campus completed a 20 hour continuous walking challenge, raising more than £2,500 to help tackle period poverty in Ghana.
They travelled to Ghana in April, as part of their self-funded medical elective, to shadow doctors in hospitals and outreach clinics. In Ghana, 95% of schoolgirls miss 20% of school due to their menstrual period, so Ella and Maisie used their free time there to produce an education programme and distribute sanitary products that they’d bought with the money they raised. In advance of their trip, Ella and Maisie trained to become women’s health ambassadors which enabled them to hold six period product education sessions and distributions across Ghana, reaching 370 girls and capturing the interest of the children and men of the communities they visited.
A local leader who helped the pair with translation and provided organisational support, is now going to undertake training to continue the education programme.
Cornish nature search reveals new spider species
A spider species previously unknown to science has been discovered on the University of Exeter’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall.
Several tiny jumping spiders were collected during the annual BioBlitz nature survey last year which was co-organised by Finley Hutchinson, a BSc Conservation Biology and Ecology student.
Spider experts thought the species was unlikely to be a Cornish native, and sent it to Dmitri Logunov, Europe’s leading jumping spider expert, at Manchester Museum.
No record of the species was found anywhere in the world – but it is related to other species known in the Caribbean, so probably arrived in the UK on imported plants.
The species has been named Anasaitis milesae.
Psychology student represents Team GB in Sailing
Matilda Nicholls, graduating Psychology student at the University, has regularly represented Team GB in sailing internationally throughout her studies.
Earlier this year, Matilda won bronze in the ILCA 6 – the women’s single-handed dinghy series – at the Princess Sofia World Cup in Palma. Matilda has also represented the University several times in the British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS), including winning gold in the BUCS Fleet Racing Championships, as well as being part of an all women’s BUCS Match Racing team.
Matilda is currently a training partner for the Team GB ILCA 6 Olympic representative (Hannah Snellgrove) selected for the Paris 2024 Olympics. She is supporting Hannah with her training ahead of the Olympic sailing regatta.
Matilda said, “It’s been a long summer of hard work and training but it has allowed me to gain lots of experience and insights ahead of the next Olympic cycle ... I am really excited to use all I have learned this summer to go on and win a medal at the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic Games.”
Exeter apprentice wins at Multicultural Apprenticeship Awards
A University of Exeter apprentice is celebrating after winning at the Multicultural Apprenticeship Awards. Mamadou Kone, who was one of six shortlisted apprentices studying at Exeter, won in the Transport and Logistics category.
Mamadou chose a Degree Apprenticeship as a way of accessing higher education and developing his skills and knowledge after focusing much of his childhood and teenage years on pursuing a career in football. He is now an apprentice on the Chartered Manager Degree Apprenticeship programme, where he combines studying for a degree in Responsible Business Management with a full-time job working for Amazon.
Mamadou described his first year on the programme as ‘incredible’, culminating in a promotion to the position of Area Manager, overseeing a team of 100.
“It was an honour to be shortlisted for this prestigious award alongside so many other inspiring apprentices, so I am thrilled to have actually won it! It signifies that those around me recognise my commitment, my efforts and determination to succeed on what has been a challenging journey.”
BSc Animal Behaviour student wins £4,000 funding bid
Galatea Hoyle, who has been studying BSc Animal Behaviour on our Penryn Campus, together with a group of friends successfully bid for £4,000 of funding from the Wildlife Trust. Galatea and friends bid for the funding through the Igniting Innovation Challenge to support the creation of their podcast, Generation Nature. Their bid was successful as the team showed passion, creativity and drive during the three-stage application process. In addition to the funding, they have also been paired with an experienced communications expert to act as a mentor for 12 months.
Generation Nature is a podcast of stories for nature for young people, by young people. Galatea and team are hoping to use the podcast to address the reservations many young people may have about getting involved with nature, as well as to showcase incredible stories about nature and share their own passion for nature. Galatea is graduating this summer and the podcast is currently in production and due to launch later this year.
STORIES FROM YOUR TIME AT EXETER
Exeter secures global top 10 position in THE Impact Rankings
The University of Exeter has retained its position as number one in the world for its pivotal research, actions and commitment towards clean water and better sanitation in the latest influential rankings.
Exeter has been ranked first in the world for the second year running in the Clean Water and Sanitation category of The Times Higher Education Impact Rankings 2024, released in June this year.
The University also ranked 10th overall, and 2nd in the UK, in the influential rankings, in recognition of its steadfast commitment to sustainability, improving health and tackling inequality.
The rankings, established in 2019, measure universities’ overall impact through their work towards meeting the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). The overall ranking is produced based on individual data for SDG 17: Partnership for the Goals, plus their best three results on the remaining SDGs.
Exeter achieved an overall score of 96 out of 100 to secure its position in the global top 10.
University of Exeter rated leading institution in the country for ecology and evolution research
The quality of research undertaken by the University of Exeter in the fields of ecology and evolution has been ranked as the best in the country by a new international league table.
The rankings, compiled by Research.com, also place Exeter 14th in the world for the discipline, above the likes of Oxford, Cambridge, Stanford and University of California, Berkley.
It reveals that Exeter is home to a number of the most highlycited researchers, among the most of any institution, including Professor Kevin Gaston, who is ranked second overall.
Exeter features amongst top institutions for graduate employers
The University of Exeter has featured in a list of the most targeted institutions by top graduate employers.
Exeter is listed 10th most targeted university nationwide by the Times Top 100 Graduate Employers, published in ‘The Graduate Market 2024’.
Compiled by independent research company High Fliers, the list ranks UK universities most targeted by leading UK national and multi-national graduate employers.
The report forecasts improvements in the level of graduate vacancies available in 2024, which are expected to increase by 1.5%. Graduate vacancies are set to increase significantly with engineering and industrial employers, with extra opportunities for graduates available in the public sector.
Exeter hosts the British Science Festival
Exeter hosted the 2023 British Science Festival. This annual event is a celebration of the people, stories and ideas central to science. Over 70 free events were held on campus and throughout the city, offering a diverse range of activities, from talks to interactive sessions.
The Festival’s headline speaker was Hamza Yassin, a renowned wildlife cameraman, photographer, author, and winner of Strictly Come Dancing in 2022. Our President and ViceChancellor, Lisa Roberts, had the pleasure of conversing with Hamza about his life, career, and passion for nature at an event held in Exeter Cathedral.
Exeter secures global top 30 place in Sustainability Rankings
The University of Exeter has risen into the global top 30 in an influential environmental and social impact ranking.
Exeter is ranked 30th overall in the QS Sustainability Ranking 2024, which recognises the steps universities worldwide are taking to tackle the greatest Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) challenges. The University was also placed 15th= in Europe, and 10th= in the UK.
The rankings are calculated using publicly available information. Information has also been previously submitted by universities to QS in relation to sustainability goals.
Pioneering research centre designed to revolutionise the future of water supplies officially open
A pioneering new £30 million research facility, designed to explore sustainable solutions to challenges facing the water sector, has been officially opened. The Centre for Resilience in Environment, Water and Waste (CREWW) is a joint facility between the University of Exeter, South West Water and Research England, and is based at the University’s Streatham Campus.
CREWW has been established to undertake research into some of the most pressing environmental challengesnamely how we can manage our precious natural resources in ways which are sustainable, innovative and resilient in the face of climate change and population growth.
Exeter retains top 15 position in Complete University Guide 2025
The University of Exeter has retained its position in the top 15 of the latest influential league ranking.
Exeter is ranked in 14th place – up one position - in the Complete University Guide’s league table 2025. The University has also been ranked 2nd in the South West region.
Professor Amanda Chetwynd, Chair of the Complete University Guide Advisory Board, said: “The competitive landscape within the top 20 underscores the exceptional standards upheld by UK universities.”
Camborne School of Mines celebrates a double anniversary and the launch of a new Degree Apprenticeship programme
In 2023, the Camborne School of Mines celebrated the 135th anniversary of its inception, and 30th anniversary of being located at the University’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall.
Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal was welcomed to the Camborne School of Mines by students, staff and representatives from the Cornish community during a special visit in October. The Princess Royal toured the mining school to gain a deeper understanding of its crucial role in global sustainable mining and in the development of the UK’s Critical Minerals Strategy.
Following the tour, The Princess Royal was invited to unveil a special plaque, officially commemorating the launch of the Camborne School of Mines’ new Degree Apprenticeship programme.
Exeter secures top 50 place in new European rankings
The University of Exeter was ranked =47th in Europe in the inaugural QS World Universities Rankings: Europe league table. Exeter’s position is based on its ranking in 12 key indicators. The University’s strongest performance was in the ‘Sustainability’ (24th) and the ‘Citations per Paper’ (42nd) categories. The new rankings are produced by global higher education analyst QS Quacquarelli Symonds, and represent the only significant regional ranking of solely European universities.
OUR HISTORY
The University of Exeter received its Royal Charter in 1955, although its origins can actually be traced further back to the nineteenth century.
Our ‘founding father’ was Sir Stafford Northcote, a prominent politician in the Disraeli government, who seized on the popular enthusiasm for learning following the Great Exhibition. In 1855 he backed the establishment of a School of Art in Exeter, offering subjects ranging from construction to freehand drawing. A School of Science quickly followed.
Following Sir Stafford’s death, Jessie Montgomery became secretary of the University Extension Committee in 1888, and put forward an ambitious plan, leading to the Exeter Technical and University Extension College being created, with generous
funding from the University of Cambridge. By 1895 students had formed a guild and in 1898 the first student magazine was published. In 1900 the title of Royal Albert Memorial College was adopted, which is where the students’ RAM bar of today gets its name. The College offered external degrees of the University of London and teacher training.
Scots philosopher Hector Hetherington became Principal in 1920 and pushed for university status. To succeed, a more impressive home was needed and in 1922 a local benefactor, Alderman W H Reed, was persuaded to buy the Streatham Estate. Shortly afterwards, the University Grants Committee visited the campus and awarded the status of University College and an annual government grant.
In 1926 John Murray was appointed Principal of the University College and led an expansion programme which included the opening of the Washington Singer building in 1931 and Mardon Hall two years later.
University status was awarded in 1955 with James Cook our first Vice-Chancellor. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II visited the following year to present the charter and unveil the foundation stone of the Queen’s Building. In the 1960s we secured sufficient government funding to radically develop the campus; over a dozen major new buildings were constructed, including the Great Hall and the Physics building, while student numbers rose from 1,400 to 3,300.
Higher education funding was tight in the 1970s and 80s but Exeter saw some positive developments. In 1978 we became a two campus university when St Luke’s College merged with the University to become its School of Education. A new library was built in 1983, thanks to a gift from the Ruler of Dubai in recognition of our research and teaching on the Arab world.
By 1991, we had 6,500 students, and in 1993 the Camborne School of Mines in Cornwall became a part of the University. We also became a founding member of the research-intensive 1994 Group.
The new century saw an unparalleled period of progress and success, beginning in 2001 when His Highness Sheikh Dr Sultan bin Muhammad Al-Qasimi, the Ruler of Sharjah and an Exeter graduate, provided a new building for the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies. In 2002 we secured government backing for the Peninsula Medical School, a joint project with the University of Plymouth, and two years later opened our Penryn Campus with Falmouth University in Cornwall. In 2007, we were named University of the Year at the Times Higher Education Awards.
In recent years we have invested significantly in our campuses, constructing new student accommodation, refurbishing labs and study spaces, and developing new buildings such as the Forum in Exeter and the Exchange in Cornwall, which seamlessly merge academic and social space through spectacular architecture. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II returned to our Streatham Campus in 2012 to officially open the Forum.
Other significant developments included the creation of the Environment and Sustainability Institute – an interdisciplinary research centre at Penryn – and the Research, Innovation, Learning and Development building, a partnership with what is now called the Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, which was part-funded by the Wellcome Trust and The Wolfson Foundation.
In 2012 we were invited to join the prestigious Russell Group of research-intensive universities, and in 2013 we were crowned The Sunday Times University of the Year. In the same year we also accepted the first students into the new University of Exeter Medical School, created after we formed our own medical school following our successful 10-year partnership with the University of Plymouth. In 2014 the Research Excellence Framework, which assesses the quality of universities’ research, saw us awarded an additional £3.8 million for research, the third highest gain amongst English universities. We were named Sports University of the Year 2016 by The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide.
2017 saw us open the Living Systems Institute (LSI) on our Streatham Campus. The Institute pioneers novel approaches to understanding diseases and how they can be better diagnosed.
On the Penryn Campus the Stella Turk building was completed in 2019, enabling the continued growth and success of a range of subject areas. In 2020, we were awarded our fourth Queen’s Anniversary Prize in recognition of our world-leading research for combatting the effects of marine plastic pollution.
President and Vice-Chancellor, Professor Lisa Roberts took up her post on 1 September 2020. The following year Professor Roberts launched the University’s exciting Strategy 2030 which aims to use the power of our education and research to create a sustainable, healthy and socially just future.
The 2021 Research Excellence Framework review showed that we are doing more research, of better quality, with a bigger impact on the world than ever before. Our world-leading research impact grew more than any other Russell Group university, more than 99 per cent of our research was rated of international quality* and 12 of our subjects were in the Top 10 for world-leading impact.**
We ranked Top 10 in the Russell Group for student satisfaction in six out of seven themes in the National Student Survey 2023.
The last 12 months have seen us secure a ‘solid’ Gold standard for our commitment to providing world-class teaching in the Teaching Excellence Framework assessment. Our prestigious Gold rating was underpinned by Gold ratings in the two aspects of the assessment – Student Experience and Student Outcomes. We were of only four Russell Group institutions to achieve this ‘solid’ Gold assessment. The National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Exeter Biomedical Research Centre (BRC), and the Centre for Resilience in Environment, Water and Waste (CREWW) Building were also officially opened.
Today, our courses and research cover every aspect of the sciences, humanities and social sciences. We attract 30,000 of the best and brightest students from more than 150 countries around the world.
OUR ACHIEVEMENTS
RATED ‘TRIPLE’ GOLD in the 2023 Teaching Excellence Framework. Gold Overall rating, with Gold aspect ratings in both Student Experience and Student Outcomes.
TOP 10 in the RUSSELL GROUP for student satisfaction in six out of seven themes in the National Student Survey (NSS) 2023.
MORE THAN 99% OF OUR RESEARCH is rated of international quality in the latest Research Excellence Framework (REF 2021) with 12 OF OUR SUBJECTS IN THE TOP 10 for world-leading impact.
UK LEAGUE TABLE RISES: 11th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2024 and 14th in the Complete University Guide 2025.
We achieved the ATHENA SWAN SILVER AWARD for the advancement of gender equality and a BRONZE RACE EQUALITY CHARTER MARK for our commitment to race equality.
TOP 50
30TH in the QS Sustainability World University Rankings 2024, demonstrating how we are tackling the greatest ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL and GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES.
We’re home to the UK’S TOP FIVE MOST INFLUENTIAL CLIMATE SCIENTISTS – the only UK climate scientists to secure places in the global top 21 –according to The Reuters Hot List.
4TH in the British University and College Sport (BUCS) Points 2022-23 Overall league and 1st in the South of England and Wales.
RANKED 10TH GLOBALLY in the Times Higher Education Impact Rankings 2024*.
Exeter graduates are among the TOP 10 MOST TARGETED by LEADING EMPLOYERS in the UK, as highlighted in The Graduate Market in 2024 report by High Fliers Research.
*TheTHEImpactRankingsareglobalperformancetablesthatassess universitiesagainsttheUnitedNations’SustainableDevelopmentGoals (SDGs).Exeterisplaced1stgloballyforCleanWaterandSanitation; 6thglobally(1stintheUK)forLifeBelowWater,=7thgloballyfor ResponsibleConsumptionandProduction;12thglobally(1stintheUK) forClimateAction;Top 20globally(2ndintheUK)forZeroHunger.
WHAT DOES YOUR TIME AT EXETER MEAN TO YOU?
There often isn’t a clear and direct path to roles in the real world! I think you need to be proactive, and willing to volunteer your time to start making links. You need to be genuinely interested and passionate about the cause you want to pursue. Don’t worry if your course does not feel very specific. When I graduated from Exeter, I had no idea how to apply my course to real world roles! But the skills and knowledge I gained through my course have been invaluable when starting out in the charity sector.
Izzie Ballantine Dykes Philosophy and Theology, 2016
During my time at Exeter, I have enjoyed deepening my knowledge of such an interesting sector of law whilst sharing this space with so many amazing, like-minded people, both students and staff. Studying in such a great environment has really made my time at Exeter much more special. Exeter is such a great place to meet so many amazing people. Being part of this community for four years has really been so instrumental in my time being so magical.
Max Bennett
Law with Business/Commercial Law, 2022
I loved living in Cornwall during my time at university and would not trade that experience for the world. My advice to recent graduates would be to spend time doing lots of different things. Casting a wide net for experience isn’t a bad thing and it really makes you take a step back and think about what you really want out of life. You can’t possibly know what you want to do for the next 50 years straight out of university so allow yourself the grace and space to figure that out.
Caitlin Bynre History, 2015
Exeter is a fantastic University with its teaching and research excellence, alongside the campus, the location and the people you meet. There are so many opportunities open to you and who wouldn’t want to be able to write half of their dissertation on a beach, or on a rowing boat doing the Topsham ten (not sure if that even exists anymore!). I studied at Exeter because it had a charm about it that no other university had for me - I wouldn’t have chosen anywhere else. Plus, I was extremely lucky that on top of that Exeter was one of the leading universities for my course and had some of the most inspiring and engaging lecturers.
Katie Baker English Literature, 2008
An education from the University of Exeter is about so much more than just a line on your CV. It’s an incredible opportunity to explore your interests and potential, to discover new things, and to build relationships that will last a lifetime. Luckily those are also all skills that will serve you well in your career and in your personal life thereafter. The highlight for me, and what will stay with me forever, are the people I have met, the discussions I have participated in, and the kindness I have received.
Tristan Coleshaw Modern Languages, 2020
I chose to study at Exeter due to the quality of the facilities and the breadth of topics available for my chosen course. Taking advantage of the opportunities that university presents you with can really help you make more informed decisions when it comes to post-university life. If you’re looking for a career in research specifically, don’t underestimate the importance of your dissertation, and the research methods you use as padding out your experience. If, like me, you’re not certain what you want to do, don’t be afraid to try things, and don’t be scared if you don’t enjoy them. Finding out what you don’t like can be just as valuable as realizing what you do like when finding a job that works for you.
William Cafferky Politics, 2016
There have been many highlights for me during my time at Exeter. However, the biggest for me was graduating in the presence of my family and friends! My dream since I was a kid was to one day walk up the ramp in my graduation gown and collect my degree certificate and make my parents proud. To say that becoming the first to graduate in my family was one of the proudest moments of my life would be a massive understatement!
Radwaan Djama Neuroscience, 2022
I enjoyed how international my experience in Exeter was. I got to meet people from all over the world, to live among them, and learn a lot from them. It expanded my horizons a lot. The University of Exeter was one of the most prestigious and recognized universities available within the scholarship programme I was a part of. At the time, though I was studying engineering, I very much wanted to pursue a career in business. The Engineering and Management course seemed like a great fit for what I wanted, and my experience at Exeter and how it has influenced me since underscores how great that choice has been for me.
André Luis Martins Filho Engineering and Management, 2016
STUDENT LIFE...
...FROM THEN TO NOW
THIS IS NOT GOODBYE...
Congratulations on completing your studies and welcome to your community of University of Exeter alumni. Today you have joined a supportive global community of more than 185,000 alumni willing to help you achieve your full potential.
WELCOME TO YOUR ALUMNI COMMUNITY
Our alumni go on to do amazing things and we hope you’ll keep in touch to tell us your story, get involved in our events, and continue to play an active role in your Exeter community.
How we help you
• Free career support after graduation
• Regular virtual and in person alumni events worldwide
• Alumni discounts and offers
• Free access to thousands of online journals
• Regular news and events updates by email plus a free annual magazine
• A number of global social and professional networks for you to join and enjoy
• 20% discount for you, and your family and friends on postgraduate study at Exeter
For more information, visit exeter.ac.uk/alumni
How you help us
Our alumni and friends have helped Exeter become one of the very best universities in the world. Alumni support the University in many different ways. Some volunteer their time helping current students. Others donate to support our students, our research, or our facilities. Some are ‘country contacts’, organising alumni networks and events in cities around the world. Some simply inspire us with their incredible achievements.
Keep in touch
The Global Advancement office helps the University build long-term relationships with its alumni and supporters. Please stay in touch, and if you have any questions please contact us:
Email: alumni@exeter.ac.uk
Tel: +44(0)1392 723141
Web: exeter.ac.uk/alumni
/exeteralumni
@exalumni
/company/university-of-exeter-alumni
@exeter_alumni
WeChatWeibo
Exetra, the recent alumni network organises regular events for Exeter graduates in London. Find them on facebook.com/groups/exetra.alumni
You are always welcome at our events and of course back to campus. Until then, we wish you the best of luck as you take your next steps, and we look forward to keeping in touch during your lifelong association with Exeter.
Ensure your details are up to date to keep receiving our communications and alumni benefits: exeter.ac.uk/alumnisupporters/contactus/updatedetails
WELCOME TO OUR 8,000 NEW ALUMNI IN 2024
WE’RE IN TOUCH WITH OVER 185,000 ALUMNI IN 183 COUNTRIES SUPPORTING EXETER STUDENTS PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
10,000 ALUMNI VOLUNTEERED LAST YEAR TO SUPPORT EXETER STUDENTS, DONATING MORE THAN
17,000 HOURS OF THEIR TIME
5,000 ALUMNI MADE A DONATION TO HELP STUDENTS