Page 17 - Keble Review 2014
P. 17
Welcoming New Fellows
Dr Sarah Apetrei
Fellow in Ecclesiastical History
Sarah Apetrei first came to Oxford in 2002 to study an MSt in Ecclesiastical History at Wycliffe Hall. She then moved to Keble, where she completed her DPhil, and has since been Liddon Research Fellow, British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow and Fellow by Special Election at the College. She has tutored extensively in Theology and Religion and last year she was also Director of Studies for the subject. Sarah’s current research interests are in the role
of religious experience in the changes taking place in Britain 1640-1714, intended for publication as Mystical Revolutions.
Professor Beth Greenhough
Tutorial Fellow in Geography
Beth Greenhough joins Keble from Queen Mary University of London, where she was a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Geography. Her work involves drawing on the breadth of social science and humanities research to better understand the interactions between population dynamics, environmental change and life science research and the ethical, legal, social and cultural issues raised by innovations in the life sciences. She has published widely on such controversies as the commercialisation of biomedical information in Iceland, the repatriation of human remains, and the use of laboratory animals.
Professor Jeremy Tomlinson
Professorial Fellow in Diabetic Medicine
Jeremy Tomlinson arrives from the University of Birmingham to assume a new chair in Diabetic Medicine in the Oxford Centre for Diabetes, Endocrinology, and Metabolism (OCDEM) at the Radcliffe Department of Medicine. His research interests combine the action of steroid hormones alongside understanding the mechanism that contributes to obesity, insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes. Jeremy was a graduate of the University of Oxford’s Medical School in 1995.
Dr Danyu Yang
Research Fellow and Tutor in Mathematics
Danyu Yang is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the Oxford-Man Institute of Quantitative Finance, having obtained her DPhil in Mathematics at Oxford in 2012.
Her research areas are in Rough Path theory, stochastic analysis and their applications, especially in mathematical finance. Her arrival strengthens the College’s existing interest in research on partial differential equations.
Professor Stanislav Živný
Research Fellow and Tutor in Computing Science
Stanislav (or Standa as he is better known) Živný is an Associate Professor at the Department of Computer Science and a Royal Society Research Fellow, having spent six years at Oxford as a doctoral student then postdoctoral researcher. His research interests are in algorithms and computational complexity, discrete optimisation and constraint satisfaction. Before coming to the UK, he studied computer science in his home country the Czech Republic, the Netherlands and Finland.
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