°ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û

Alumni and Development news

  • Photo of BYD's new battery factory in Qinghai

    Why is the world's transition to renewable energy moving so quickly?

    The first of the Easter term 2019 China Centre 'China in the World' seminars was held on Thursday, 30 May 2019 in the Webb Library. Professor Peter B Littlewood's wide-ranging lecture located China's current developments in energy technologies within the context of the long-run development of world energy supply, innovation and pricing.

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    Why is the world's transition to renewable energy moving so quickly?
  • Catherine Eagleton

    Smithsonian curator to lead St Andrews museums

    Congratulations to Dr Catherine Eagleton (1995) who has been appointed a new Director of Museums at the University of St...

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    Smithsonian curator to lead St Andrews museums
  • Photo of panel: Mr Stephen Perry, Lord O'Neill, Prof Peter Nolan (Chair), Prof Kerry Brown, Dr Jin Zhang, Lord Stephen Green

    WPP - China Centre event: China in the World

    WPP and the China Centre, °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û, jointly organised a meeting on ‘China in the World’. The event took place on Tuesday 30 April 2019 in the Frankopan Hall, °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û.

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    WPP - China Centre event: China in the World
  • Wood Doors

    Rustat Report on China's Role in the World

    On 27 March 2019, this Rustat Conference offered a timely opportunity for experts to discuss the changing role that China plays in the world.

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    Rustat Report on China's Role in the World
  • Photograph of Bailey Weatherbee

    Into the black box of human life

    Gates Scholar-Elect Bailey Weatherbee will arrive at °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û later this year to investigate the early stages of human life and seek to find out why many pregnancies fail.

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    Into the black box of human life
  • Bishop's mitre

    Archive of the month: College crests

    In recent weeks, the observant among you might have noticed that some of the coats of arms and crests carved...

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    Archive of the month: College crests
  • Photo of Hannah Sanderson and Beatrice Wood

    Women's football team compete in final

    This year’s Women’s Football Cuppers Final will kick off at 4pm on Thursday 25 April at Queens’ College Sports Ground...

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    Women's football team compete in final
  • Photo of John Cornwell

    John Cornwell wins Wilbur Award 2019

    John Cornwell, Fellow Commoner and Director of the Science and Human Dimension Project, has won the Wilbur Award 2019 in...

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    John Cornwell wins Wilbur Award 2019
  • Photograph of Tyler Shores

    Technology may be making us unhealthy and miserable

    Senior Research Associate Dr Sarah Steele, College Postdoctoral Associate Dr Christopher Markou (2014) and PhD student Tyler Shores organised the...

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    Technology may be making us unhealthy and miserable
  • Professor James Clackson

    Professor James Clackson elected as Vice-Master

    Following the departure of Professor Ian White, who has left the role of Master to become the Vice Chancellor of...

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    Professor James Clackson elected as Vice-Master
  • A photo montage showing four people standing in a line

    Good luck to our 2019 Boat Race quartet

    Good luck today to Kate Horvat (2018), Charlotte Jackson (2012), Tim Nugent (2015) and Hugh Spaughton (2017) as they take part in this year’s Boat Race along the Thames.

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    Good luck to our 2019 Boat Race quartet
  • Professor Cecilia Mascolo

    College Fellow wins European Research Council funding

    College Fellow Professor Cecilia Mascolo is one of five University of Cambridge researchers to have won Advanced Grants from the European Research Council (ERC), Europe’s premier research funding body.

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    College Fellow wins European Research Council funding

Hear from our alumni

  • Ilana Cohen

    Ilana Cohen

    Human, Social and Political Sciences (2022)

    I arrived at °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û in 2022 as a Harvard Social Studies Exchange student. Initially, I was compelled to pursue the program due to the academic freedom it offered, excited to work closely with leading thinkers in self-directed studies around climate change ethics. Upon starting at Jesus, though, I realised that I also gained the opportunity to join an incredible community of wonderfully eclectic and deeply welcoming scholars and peers. My Jesus experience was also formative for me as a climate justice activist. Sharing knowledge and building relationships with Cambridge...

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    Human, Social and Political Sciences (2022)
  • Mark and Janet Hayes

    Mark Hayes and Janet Livesley

    Architecture (1976) and Architecture (1980)

    We first met in 1980 when Mark returned to Jesus to study for the postgraduate diploma in Architecture and Janet joined the college on the same course. Graduate dinners in Upper Hall were a highlight of the week and an opportunity to meet socially with other Jesuans. Part of our studies included trips to Zambia and an earthquake-hit area in Southern Italy. We were married in the College Chapel just after completing our studies in the summer of 1982 and remained in Cambridge for a period following Mark’s election to...

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    Architecture (1976) and Architecture (1980)
  • Johnny Harounoff and Stephanie Posner

    Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (2013) and Classics (2012)

    We met 10 years ago as undergraduates living in the same staircase in North Court and have since been studying and working in the United States. The College was so accommodating to us by providing us — and other Jewish students — with kosher facilities and by supporting the creation of the College's first Jewish Society. For us, the College is full of happy memories thanks to the friends we made and for all of the kindness shown to us from the porters, professors and staff. That sense of community...

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    Asian and Middle Eastern Studies (2013) and Classics (2012)
  • John Arrastia

    Law (1995)

    I came to Cambridge at the suggestion of a Professor who was visiting the US. I borrowed the funds to study there. What appealed to me at Jesus was that it was so inclusive and embracing. I played golf with the Porters and rugby with the staff. I dined with the other students, socialised with the Fellows, danced with the Master’s wife, and really got to know people. My friends and colleagues were engineers, doctors, politicians, religious scholars, undergrads, lawyers, professors – basically every stripe of humanity one could find...

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    Law (1995)
  • Lene Northwood

    Criminology (1996)

    As a person who grew up on the opposite side of the planet to a family that had no history of attending university, the idea of me attending Cambridge was, quite frankly, laughable. Then I fell in love with Criminology and wrote a thesis that caught the attention of the College. It is just one example of the incredibly outward looking approach that, in the decades that I have known the College, has defined °ÄÃÅÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹û. One letter with a now familiar letterhead, quite literally raised my expectations of life...

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    Criminology (1996)