Britain | Cancellarius culture
The tricky politics of choosing Oxford’s next chancellor
The winner is likely to make some people cross
Oxford University is often accused of being out of touch. This is unfair. As a senior Oxford fellow recently observed to his vice-chancellor, “Nonne et tibi et mihi certum clarumque videtur, Insignissima Vice-Cancellaria, rerum publicarum et loca et tempora turbulente mutata esse?”* Little more, surely, needs to be said.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Cancellarius culture ”
Britain August 24th 2024
- The trial of Lucy Letby has shocked British statisticians
- Mike Lynch was Britain’s first software billionaire
- Britain’s government pulls the plug on a superfast computer
- The tricky politics of choosing Oxford’s next chancellor
- Youth clubs in Britain have been vanishing
- Britain’s boom in public inquiries into past disasters
Discover more
Are British voters as clueless as Labour’s intelligentsia thinks?
How the idea of false consciousness conquered the governing party
The best British companies to work for to get ahead
A new ranking of firms by pay, promotions and hiring practices
How the best British employers find and promote their staff
No degree? Some employers care much less than others
A tiny island fights the scourge of plastic on the beach
A Northern Irish experiment in recycling
A sticking-plaster policy for Britain’s strained courts
Magistrates get more power. Will they get punch-drunk on it?