Head and shoulders shot of Professor Dapo Akande

Professor Dapo Akande

Chichele Professor of Public International Law
LLB, LLM
University Academic Fellow since 2023

I am a generalist public international lawyer, who not only works on a wide range of particular sub-disciplines within the field of international law but is also committed to exploration of those aspects, concepts and areas of the field that connect it together as a field of study and practice. I have worked and published on the law relating to the use of force, the law of armed conflict, international criminal law, international dispute settlement, the law of international organizations, particularly of the United Nations, the immunities of states and state officials, international human rights law, and international economic law.

Prize Fellowship Examinations

The Prize Fellowship examinations took place this week. The College thanks all candidates who participated. The Fellowship Elections will be made on Saturday 4 November 2023.

29 September, 2023

A head and shoulders shot of Charlotte Linton

Dr Charlotte Linton

BA, MA, MSc, DPhil
Post-Doctoral Research Fellow since 2023

I am a social anthropologist and designer whose work is situated at the intersection of visual, material and economic anthropology, textiles and ethnoecology. I am interested in the relationships that craftspeople have with the environments from which they extract and use resources during commodity production. I identify historical and contemporary links that concern the exploitation of ecosystems, workers and underrepresented communities. I have carried out ethnographic work with Harris Tweed weavers in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland (2015) and received a DPhil in Anthropology from the University of Oxford (2021) with a thesis based on twelve months of apprenticeship-based fieldwork with natural dye craftspeople on the island of Amami Oshima, southern Japan. A monograph based on my doctoral research has been published with Duke University Press titled Dyeing with the Earth: Textiles, Tradition and Sustainability in Contemporary Japan (2025). My new research explores the intersection of textiles and agriculture in diverse geographies. Using comparative ethnography, I am seeking to understand how small-scale producers of natural fibres and dyestuffs are adapting their practices in the context of challenging environmental, social and economic conditions. I ask whether a grassroots approach to regenerative land stewardship and aspirations to work more ethically and sustainably might trickle up, impacting the wider fashion and textiles industries at scale.

A headshot of Matan Mazor

Dr Matan Mazor

MSc, PhD
Post-Doctoral Research Fellow since 2023

I use a combination of behavioural testing, human neuroimaging and computational modelling to study the cognitive machinery underlying humans’ internal metacognitive models of their own minds. Among the questions that keep me and my group busy are: what are the cognitive benefits of having an internal representation of one's own perception and cognition, and what happens when this representation is disturbed, biased, or not fully developed? In what way does a self-representation interact with memories of one's own actions and experiences, and with the feeling of being in control over one's actions? To what extent do people represent their own minds over and above a generic representation of minds? What is the scope of the human capacity to represent the hypothetical possibility of being someone else, and how does this capacity interact with moral decision-making and ethics?

Professor John Cardy awarded Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics

Professor John Cardy FRS has been awarded the 2024 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics. The award, shared with Alexander Zamolodchikov (Stony Brook), is for profound contributions to statistical physics and quantum field theory, with diverse and far-reaching applications in different branches of physics and mathematics. 

 John Cardy was a Senior Research Fellow at All Souls from 1993 to 2014 and has since been an Emeritus Fellow.  He came to Oxford from UC Santa Barbara.  His work at All Souls on statistical physics and quantum entanglement is central to what the prize celebrates.  

14 September, 2023

Seminar Series on Medieval and Renaissance Music

This long-running series of seminars, convened by Dr Margaret Bent, considers all aspects of medieval and renaissance music. It runs on Zoom in Michaelmas and Hilary Terms and generally attracts a large international audience. Usually, a presenter speaks for around 30 minutes and then engages with invited discussants for another half an hour. The floor is then open for questions and lively general discussion. Each term’s seminars are announced in advance on this page and attendees are asked to register at the following link:

Events in this series

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