Annual Report 2016
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Annual Report 2016 Clare College Cambridge Contents Master’s Introduction .................................................................... 3 Teaching and Research .............................................................. 4–5 Selected Publications by Clare Fellows ....................................... 6–9 College Life ........................................................................... 10–12 Access & Outreach ..................................................................... 13 Financial Report ..................................................................... 14–15 Development ....................................................................... 16–17 List of Master & Fellows............................................................... 18 Captions ..................................................................................... 19 2 Master’s Introduction Graduation is one of the most enjoyable aspects currently underway to find her replacement. In the 5 years that she was at Clare, she advanced the of my role as Master. It is a real pleasure to admit Development operations and we wish her all the best in her future career. each student to their degree: a moment in time that marks the culmination of three years of hard work In the limited time available outside of their studies, our students continue to excel in many fields. in libraries, lecture theatres and laboratories. It is Our choir have once again toured extensively, and their latest recordings have received exceptionally also a moment that marks the beginning of the next complimentary reviews. In sport, our men and women rowers have had an excellent year, as have our stage of their lives. As they move on – to work, to hockey and rugby teams, and the women’s football team won Cuppers. further study, or indeed in other directions – I reflect Our alumni continue to do excellent work in a variety of areas. Professor Anthony Appiah gave the that 2016 has been a year of many changes and BBC’s Reith Lectures on the theme of Mistaken Identities. Our alumnus of the year for 2016 was challenges. There have been promotions for Fellows, Professor Graham Serjeant (1957) who visited College in March to give a fascinating lecture on his and several changes in College office-holders. Our work combatting Sickle-Cell disease. Professor Sir David Cannadine (1969, Honorary Fellow) has been students continue to combine academic excellence appointed President of the British Academy; and we elected two new Honorary Fellows of Clare: with impressive achievement in extra-curricular Professor Sir Malcolm Grant (former Fellow), and Professor Robert Mair (1968). areas. We have also had the excitement of a most generous benefaction from alumnus Andy Currie The long-awaited refurbishment of Old Court is now one step nearer. We have entered talks with (1974) and his wife, Dawn, which is catalysing our Historic England on our scheme for the conservation work and the development of the North Passage. campaign for the restoration of Old Court. As mentioned in last year’s Annual, our scheme consists of two elements. First, we need to renovate the buildings, including a new roof, new wiring, plumbing and more en-suite accommodation and Our academics generate research of the highest calibre. As you will see from the list of their publications public rooms. The second element of our plan involves building in the narrow strip of land which lies (pages 6-9), the scale, scope, and sheer variety of the published work that they produce is truly between Clare and Trinity Hall, the “North Passage”. This part of the development extends as far as the remarkable. Their labours are not without recognition at the highest levels: Clare Fellow Ottoline river, using the footprint of the existing buildings to create a new café room which will have stunning Leyser, who is Professor of Plant Development and Director of the Sainsbury Laboratory, has just been views over the Fellows’ garden and the Cam. This room will be used as a social space and serve tea, appointed a DBE; and Professor Andrew Holmes, who is President of the Australian Academy of Science, coffee and snacks all day, thereby relieving pressure on the overcrowded, existing buttery. Old Court is has been appointed as a Companion of the Order of Australia. Several of our Fellows have received one of the country’s great treasures. With that privilege comes obligation: we are the keepers of these promotions within the University, with Dr Wendy Pullan (Architecture), Dr Phillip Jones (Oncology), and magnificent buildings and must preserve them for generations to come. Dr Helen Thompson (Politics and International Studies) all promoted to professorships this year. We live in uncertain times, and recent political events here and abroad have caught many people There have also been some changes in the holders of our College offices. After a long and distinguished by surprise. It should, however, come as no surprise to anyone that here at Clare – and indeed in period as Senior Tutor, Dr Patricia Fara stood down from this role at the end of the academic year. Cambridge – our mission to advance education, learning, and research continues unabated. As a We are immensely grateful to Patricia for her sterling work overseeing the tutorial side of the College. College, we are immensely grateful to all who support us. Thanks to your support, we can face a Patricia is succeeded as Senior Tutor by Dr Jackie Tasioulas, who is particularly well-qualified for the challenging future with renewed optimism. role as, aside from her “day job” as a lecturer in the Faculty of English, she has spent many years administering our student support funds as Financial Tutor. We are very grateful to Dr Fred Parker for taking on the role of Financial Tutor in Jackie’s stead. We have also made a new appointment of Professor Jonathan Goodman as Academic Dean. The Academic Dean’s role is to coordinate the involvement of the fellowship in College life: with over 100 active members of the fellowship, this is an essential role, and we are grateful to Jonathan for taking it on. A further change is that Francisca Malarée, Lord Grabiner QC Development Director since 2012, has elected not to return from maternity leave, and efforts are Master 3 Teaching and Research Undergraduate Numbers 2015–16 Undergraduates by country/region of origin Teaching and Fellows A number of Clare Fellows have been promoted into senior Subject Year Year Year Year Years Total 1 2 3 4 5-6 UK academic positions: Helen Thompson (Politics and International Studies), Wendy Pullan (Architecture), and Phil Jones (Oncology) Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic 2 1 2 5 EU were made Professors this year. Architecture 2 2 4 Overseas Asian & Middle Eastern Studies 1 3 2 6 Clare has been fortunate to be able to appoint some outstanding new academic Fellows in 2016: Dr David Labonte (Zoology), Chemical Engineering 1 2 1 4 8 Dr Matthew Kenzie (Physics), Dr Matthew Dunstan (Chemistry), Classics 5 3 6 1 15 and Lorenzo Maniscalco (Law). Computer Science 4 2 2 1 9 8% Economics 7 5 4 16 7% Education 1 1 2 Engineering 9 12 7 8 36 English 10 7 9 26 Geography 1 1 2 4 History 10 7 11 28 History of Art 1 1 3 5 Human Social & Political Sciences 8 8 9 25 Land Economy 2 2 2 6 Law 8 10 7 1 26 Linguistics 2 1 2 1 6 Management Studies 1 1 Mathematics 9 7 8 2 26 85% Medical and Veterinary Sciences 15 17 6 15 53 Modern & Medieval Languages 16 10 10 7 43 Music 2 4 3 9 Natural Sciences 29 25 47 15 116 Philosophy 1 1 2 4 Psychological & Behavioural Sciences 2 3 1 6 Theology 6 3 2 11 Total 154 136 144 47 15 496 4 Graduate Student Numbers 2015–16 PhD theses successfully defended by Clare graduate students 2015-16 Campbell G: Active tectonics of the Tien Shan, Central Asia Hosker L A: ‘Donne sole’ in post-unification Italy: the works of Research postgraduates 271 Chettle A J: The role of the immune response in the outcome of Tommasina Guidi and Emilia Nevers Taught postgraduates 25 infection by murine norovirus Litina C: Development and performance of self-healing blended Jourdan K R: Through the lens of Levinas: an ethnographically- cement grouts with microencapsulated mineral agents Total 296 informed case study of pupils’ practices of facing in music making Sheldrake M W A: Responses of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and Labonte D: Biomechanics of controllable attachment in insects mycoheterotrophic plants to long-term fertilisation in a tropical forest Cant A F: Representations of the Peruvian agrarian reform, 1968–75 Taylor L: The evolution of cell shape in plants Graduate Students by country/region of origin Dixon P R: Barriers to cooperation in post-Cold War conflict Wedeux B M M: Impacts of human disturbance on the ecology of interventions tropical peat swamp forests Kerr J: A global view of changes in deep ocean [CO3 2-] over Yates L R: Evolution of the breast cancer genome UK pleistocene glacial cycles Etherington M K: Magnetic field effects on triplet states in organic EU Schifano N: Verb-movement: a pan-romance investigation semiconductor devices Somervell T E S: Reading time in Paradise Lost, The Seasons, and The Hughes A E: Disruption of human motion perception by camouflage Overseas Prelude patterns Walker K M: Creole family histories and interethnic intimacy in Middleton S A: Modernism, the left and the problem of culture in Southeast Asia, c.1890–1960 England Waxse B: Examining connexin-43 gap junction remodelling by the Murrell D S: Exploring ensemble methods for physicochemical cytoskeleton, an unconventional myosin motor