Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾ç

Women of Wolfson: Different Paths to Success

International Women's Day
Date 14/03/2024 at 17.30 - 14/03/2024 at 19.00 Where Dining Hall

Join Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çPresident, Professor Jane Clarke, along with a panel of inspirational Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çwomen who will be discussing their academic and professional journeys, their experiences as women in their professional lives and the challenges they have overcome.

International Women's Day

Speakers

Junior Research Fellow Dr Florence Nabwire is a Prince of Wales Global Sustainability Fellow at the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), and an Honorary Fellow at the MRC Epidemiology Unit. She has a PhD in Biological Science from the University of Cambridge (Queens’ College) and was awarded a  to conduct her PhD research at the MRC Human Nutrition Research Unit. Before moving to the UK in 2013, she practiced as a Public Health Nutritionist at , where she designed and implemented a pioneering programme integrating nutrition and food security into HIV care services, at over 300 government health facilities in 25 districts in Uganda. Her current research at CISL aims to identify drivers of food consumption behaviours of urban households with pregnant women and young children, and to develop strategies for achieving sustained improvement in household diets in the contexts of urbanisation and climate change in sub-Saharan Africa.

Postgraduate student Mariana Gnecco Polania is a biologist from the Colombian Caribbean and is studying for an MPhil in Conservation Leadership. Mariana is the co-founder of Blue Indigo Foundation, an NGO in the Caribbean region that focuses on coastal and marine conservation and restoration. Her career goal is to lead marine ecosystem management projects that are financially sustainable over time and provide alternative livelihoods for local communities, particularly fisherfolk. 

Junior Research Fellow Dr Farhana Rahman is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the Department of Politics and International Studies. Previously, she was a JSPS Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Tokyo, a Non-Residential Fellow at the Centre for Asia Pacific Refugee Studies at the University of Auckland, and a Fellow at the Harvard University Asia Center. Farhana holds a PhD and MPhil from the University of Cambridge’s Centre for Gender Studies. Her first book, After the Exodus: Gender and Belonging in Bangladesh’s Rohingya Refugee Camps, is forthcoming mid-2024 with Cambridge University Press. For her extensive contributions to the field of gender and development, Farhana was the 2021 recipient of the Paula Kantor Award from the International Center for Research on Women.

Alumna and former staff member Dr Jennifer Ruggier completed her PhD in History in 2023. Jennifer wrote her thesis on medieval Welsh identity, exploring how Welshness was expressed within a predominantly English history writing tradition. Undertaking her PhD part-time, Jennifer worked throughout. Teaching English as a foreign language when the lockdowns started in 2020, Jennifer began working at Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çto support the College's response to the COVID-19 pandemic. She then moved into the position of Project Manager in 2021 and supported Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çstaff to streamline their business processes. She recently took up a position at Cambridge University Press and Assessment as a Junior Business Analyst. 

Alumna Sardarni Navleen Kaur MBE completed an Mphil in Educational psychology and social development at Wolfson. Her focus was on educational intrinsic and extrinsic motivation in Sikh children residing in the UK. As the founder of , Navleen works to provides a safe and secure space to assist women in releasing, relaxing and recuperating from trauma and violence. She is also actively involved with Strengthening Faith Institutions in providing safeguarding training to places of worship. She received an MBE for services to Women and to Interfaith Relations. 

Postgraduate student Grace Batley is studying for an MPhil in Education (Knowledge, Power and Politics). Grace is interested in fragmented masculinity in post-industry towns and how this intersects with power. Grace’s research comes from lived experience. In taking a non-traditional route to Cambridge, Grace has had many encounters with education along her way. Including failed GCSEs, dropouts and disengagement. After returning into the education world as a dinner lady, Grace came face to face with the transformative powers of education, particularly in areas of high deprivation.

Undergraduate Suman Sharma is studying English.  As a child growing up in North-East England, the public library was her sanctuary.  Despite this love of books, Suman was encouraged to study science and her first degree was in Chemistry and Biology. She then worked for BT, marketing to global industrial accounts, until starting a family and tutoring business. When the children left home, Suman decided to fulfil her childhood ambition which had always been "bubbling in the background" and joined Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çCollege as an English undergraduate.

Details

The event is free, open to all, and there is no need to book. 

The panel discussion will be followed by an International Women's Day Dinner, open to all Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çmembers, staff, and their guests. Please book your place through the .

 

Access

This event will take place in the Dining Hall on the first floor of our main building. There is step-free access with a lift and an accessible toilet.

For more details please view our .

What's on

A group of travelers with camels rests near the Great Sphinx and pyramids of Giza at sunset, under a dramatic, cloud-filled sky.

‘Like a sandstorm roaring in its violence’: Perceptions of weather in ancient Egypt

10/06/2025 at 17.30

How can anthropological theory help us understand how ancient cultures interpreted and responded to weather phenomena?

A triptych of abstract images: a smooth round stone nestled in a curved rock, distorted eyeglass frames scattered on a white background, and a high-contrast black and white microscopic image resembling organic or cellular structures.

Art Exhibition: Âé¶¹ËÞÉáµçÊÓ¾çat 60

14/06/2025 at 10.00

Celebrating Wolfson’s 60th anniversary year, this exhibition highlights the range of  artistic disciplines and styles that have made up our exhibitions over the years.

A woman with wavy brown hair and red lipstick stands outdoors in bright sunlight, surrounded by blurred autumn foliage.

Lunchtime Concert - Pamela Gitani (pianist)

14/06/2025 at 13.30

A piano recital with works by Bach, Debussy, Chopin and more.

A playful illustration showing the Greek letter tau with a smiley face, equated to two smiling pies topped with whipped cream, symbolizing that tau equals two times pi

Tau (Ï„) Day estimation event

18/06/2025 at 18.28

Estimating Ï„, the true circle constant, in a fun event with pies and other mathematical snacks.