Cecilia Corsini

Cecilia started her DPhil in International Relations at Oxford in 2019. Her research interest lies in the areas of global governance, humanitarian action and global health. For her DPhil project, Cecilia investigates the causes of competition and cooperation failures among UN agencies operating in humanitarian emergencies.

Adrian Kreutz

Adrian is an Assistant Professor in Political Science at the University of Amsterdam. He was previously The Queen's Scholar at the Middle Temple, where Adrian was called to the Bar of England and Wales, and Departmental Lecturer in the Philosophy of Social Science at the University of Oxford, teaching at Lincoln College and the Blavatnik School of Government. Adrian studied for his DPhil in Political Theory at New College, University of Oxford, supported by a DPIR Doctoral Scholarship.

Cesar Fuster Llamazares

My research interests lie in understanding how individuals think about economic inequality and its sources. I use experimental methods to uncover individuals’ attitudes towards policies that aim at reducing economic inequality such as including immigrants into the welfare state, increasing taxes on the super-rich or decreasing the salary gap between highly and lowly paid occupations. Apart from looking at public support for certain policies, I also explore how individuals justify market inequality in the first place.

Faye Curtis

Faye Curtis is a doctoral candidate in International Relations at The Queen’s College, Oxford. Her thesis examines changing norms around the deployment of women in state combat, and is generously supported by an Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Studentship as well as the Queen's College Waverley Scholarship.

Faye is a visiting Lecturer at Sciences Po, where she teaches an undergraduate course on Women, War and Peace. Faye also teaches Qualitative Research Methods at Oxford's Department of International Development.

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