Sir Tim Hitchens

President of Wolfson College
College department
President's Office
presidents.office@wolfson.ox.ac.uk
01865 274102
President's Office

Sir Tim came to Wolfson in 2018 after 35 years in the British Diplomatic Service. He studied English at Christ’s College Cambridge. His last overseas posting was as British Ambassador to Tokyo. Before that he was Africa Director. His postings took him to Pakistan, Afghanistan, France and Japan. For four years he was Assistant Private Secretary to The Queen.

Sir Tim is also Chairman of the Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation (a charity which funds scholarships for young people to travel to Japan) and he is a Commonwealth War Graves Commissioner

If any college members would like to make an appointment with the President, please contact presidents.office@wolfson.ox.ac.uk.

Tim Hitchens
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OxfordXML: The Law and Economics of AI

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Add to Calendar OxfordXML: The Law and Economics of AIThe Buttery
Location
The Buttery
Speakers
Dr George Barker
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
Abstract:

With the launch of ChatGPT 3.5 by Open AI in November 2022 people gained unprecedented direct experience of AI using an exceptionally advanced Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT) Model. Public interest in AI as a result surged, with a 900 % increase in searches on AI. Governments have in turn moved to start addressing AI’s perceived risks, both using existing law, and regulation, as well as by creating new AI specific laws and regulations. In February 2024 the UK Government for example announced its proposed strategy to regulating AI that will work through existing law and regulators based on five principles, while in March 2024 the EU passed the EU AI Act that adopts a more centralised, and prescriptive model. Thus only in the past two months, we have already seen both new law and regulation of AI, and greater variation in the nature of such law and regulation between countries. This talk will briefly review the law and economics of AI, and discuss emerging issues in relation to the application of law and regulation to AI, including recent developments and divergences in the EU, UK and US approaches, with particular attention given to the fast developing application of existing competition law in the EU, UK and US through AI inquiries and investigations. Research being undertaken on developments in other areas of law and regulation relating to AI, including copyright, contract, tort and criminal law, will also be briefly discussed.



Bio

Dr George Barker member of Wolfson College Oxford University, Honorary Associate Professor at the Australian National University. Doctorate in Economics from Oxford University, and a Bachelor of Laws and Master of Economics (Hons). Director of the Centre for Law and Economics at Australian National University (ANU) from 1997-2017. Olin Fellow in Law and Economics at Cornell University in 2000, and Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics (LSE) (2015-2018); the Centre for Law and Economics at University College London (2010-2015); and Oxford University 2008. Founding Member of the Editorial Board of the European Journal of Law and Economics. Authored books, and articles and given expert testimony on the economics of law including: competition law, trade law (the Effects of China joining the WTO Cambridge University Press 2003), corporations and labour law (the economics of trade unions), intellectual property law (especially copyright), taxation law and environmental law; and the economics of industry regulation, including the digital economy, communications, internet, energy, transport, mining, agriculture, insurance, finance, pharmaceutical, software, and media industries; and on the economic role of government, the economics of public policy, public finance, public sector management, social services (education, health, and welfare) and income distribution. Provides expert economic testimony before courts, ministers, Parliaments and regulatory agencies in Europe, North America and Asia Pacific, and in arbitration disputes in the Hague. His work has been cited in the UK House of Lords, by the High Court of England and Wales and by the European Commission. Elected Honorary Fellow of the Law and Economics Association of NZ. Past President of the Australian Law and Economics Association, a Founder and Past President of the Law and Economics Association of New Zealand. Chief Analyst and Economic Advisor at the NZ Treasury 1984-1997. Member of the Governing Board of Wolfson College, Oxford University from 1990 – 1992, Board member of LECG Asia-Pacific Ltd (1997-2005), Celtic Pacific Ltd, and Upstart Investments Ltd (1999-2003), KEA Global and past Chairman of KEA Australia (2001-2010).
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Discussion: Law's Knowledge in Times of a Changing Climate

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Add to Calendar Discussion: Law's Knowledge in Times of a Changing ClimateThe Haldane Room
Location
The Haldane Room
The Law in Societies Cluster and the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies will be holding a discussion as part of the joint event with the 2024 Annual Socio-Legal Lecture, which will be delivered by Professor Annelise Riles.



A key theme of Prof. Annelise Riles’ multi-faceted work is to explore law as a set of knowledge tools. This workshop builds on this theme and explores how the knowledge resources that law draws on are shifting in the age of surveillance capitalism, which harnesses data as a tradeable commodity. The governments seek access to big data for solving public policy challenges, such as the climate crisis. But do potentially enhanced ways of representing social worlds also enhance state law’s capacity of socio-legal ordering? What are the risks of climate smart technologies?



Three presenters will share their ideas with us in short presentations, leaving plenty of time for a broader discussion with the audience.



CHRIS DECKER

A changing role for state law in the age of surveillance capitalism?



LISA VOELZMANN

Harnessing big data for tackling climate change?



BETTINA LANGE

Surveillance capitalism and environmental regulation – changing techniques of law?
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Annual Socio-Legal Lecture: 'Everyday Ambassadors: Lessons from Socio-Legal Studies for a Fractured World'

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Add to Calendar Annual Socio-Legal Lecture: 'Everyday Ambassadors: Lessons from Socio-Legal Studies for a Fractured World'The Buttery
Location
The Buttery
Speakers
Professor Annelise Riles
Booking Required
Required
Professor Riles is the Executive Director of the Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Studies at Northwestern University and a Professor of Law and Anthropology. Her scholarship spans a wide range of substantive areas including human rights, managing and accommodating cultural differences, and the regulation of the global financial markets. Professor Riles work is known for its methodological contributions as well as for its contributions to the study of international institutions and expertise. She has conducted legal and anthropological research in China, Japan, and the Pacific and speaks Chinese, Japanese, French, and Fijian. Her publications span a range of topics, including comparative law, conflict of laws, financial regulation, and central banking.



Professor Riles is also the founder and director of Meridian 180, a multilingual forum for transformative leadership. Its global membership of 800+ thought leaders in academia, government, and business work together to generate ideas and guidance on the most important problems of our time, including global financial governance, environmental governance, and data governance.



The annual lecture will be followed by drinks to which all those who attend are welcome.



Please ensure that you register using the provided link.

Wolfson in the USA

Submitted by isobel.holling on

Over two weeks, Wolfsonians came together at a series of alumni events to share memories of their time at Oxford, build professional networks and celebrate with Sir Tim Hitchens, President of the College, and Huw David, Wolfson’s Development Director.

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May Day Concert

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Add to Calendar May Day ConcertThe Hall
Location
The Hall
Booking Required
Not Required
All are welcome to celebrate May day with the President's May Day Breakfast Concert - showcasing a variety of home-grown Wolfson talent with free coffee and croissants provided.
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The God and the Goddess: Parallel histories of Allāh and Allāt in pre-Islamic Arabia.

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Add to Calendar The God and the Goddess: Parallel histories of Allāh and Allāt in pre-Islamic Arabia.The Levett Room
Location
The Levett Room
Speakers
Ahmad Al-Jallad
Booking Required
Not Required
This talk will examine the emergence of two pre-Islamic Arabian theonyms, Allāh and Allāt, tracking their development across the epigraphic record spanning more than a millennium before the rise of Islam and across the Peninsula.

As a Lunch Table event, members of the AWRC are invited to join Ahmad for lunch in Hall at 12.30. The talk, beginning at 1.15 in the Levett Room, is catered with tea/coffee and cakes (all welcome).





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China's techniques for constructing histories: a study of state projects

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Add to Calendar China's techniques for constructing histories: a study of state projects
Speakers
Prof. Sunyoung Park
This lecture will take a look at how history is being made in modern China, focusing on national research projects and exploring traditional and modern efforts to create history.



Sunyoung Park is professor in the Department of History at Sejong University, Seoul. She holds a Ph.D. in East Asian Modern History from Nanjing University.
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Standards & Monk

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Add to Calendar Standards & MonkThe Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Location
The Leonard Wolfson Auditorium
Event price
£15 | £10 Wolfson Members | Students Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
Wolfson College Music Society presents Standards & Monk.



A Jazz concert with Alex Ho (piano), Mark Kavuma (trumpet), and Tommy Remon (guitar), with a selection of standards from the Great American Songbook and compositions by Thelonious Monk.



5pm Sunday 9 June 2024



Leonard Wolfson Auditorium, Wolfson College, Linton Road, Oxford, OX2 6UD



£15 | £10 Wolfson Members | Students Free

Tickets available on the door of the event (cash only).

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Life Drawing Class

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Add to Calendar Life Drawing ClassThe Haldane Room
Location
The Haldane Room
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
Accessibility
There is provision for wheelchair users.
Wolfson Arts Society invites you to a Life Drawing Class with Artist Stacey Gledhill (& life model)



Tuesday 30 April 2024 | 6.30PM-8.30PM



Haldane Room, Wolfson College



Please bring your own materials with you, including, paper, pencils, and charcoals.



The class is restricted to members of Wolfson College and there is no cost to attend.



Please register with the Event Manager, on the door of the event.

Places will be allocated on a first come, first served basis