Trinity Monday 2008 - Fellows and Scholars
Trinity College Dublin was founded as a corporation consisting of the Provost, the Fellows and the Scholars. Scholars are elected annually in various subjects on the result of an examination held in Trinity term. Scholarship or research achievement of a high order is the primary qualification for Fellowship, coupled with evidence of the candidate's contribution to the academic life of the College and an effective record in teaching.
Traditionally, the election of new Fellows and Scholars is announced by the Provost on Trinity Monday (12th May this year) at 10.00 a.m. from the steps of the famous Examination Hall. Six Professorial Fellows, Two Honorary Fellows, Thirteen New Fellows and Seventy One Scholars were elected this morning.
Professorial Fellowship
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISION IN CHAPTER 5, SECTION 7 OF THE STATUTES,
Frank Barry (Prof) | John Boland (Prof) | Harald Hampel (Prof) |
Patrick Honohan (Prof) | Declan McLoughlin (Prof) | Cliona O'Farrelly (Prof) |
HAVE BEEN ELECTED TO PROFESSORIAL FELLOWSHIP.
Frank Barry (Prof)
Frank Barry is Professor of International Business and Development at Trinity College Dublin. He was previously Associate Professorship of Economics at UCD. He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, the European Commission, the Harvard Institute for International Development and other international and Irish state agencies. Professor Barry’s main work over the last decade has been on foreign direct investment and the Irish growth experience. He holds a PhD in Economics from Queen’s University, Ontario, an MA in Economics from the University of Essex and a BA from UCD, and has held visiting appointments at the University of California, the University of Stockholm and the University of New South Wales.
John Boland (Prof)
Professor John J. Boland received a BSc degree in chemistry from University College Dublin and a PhD in chemical physics from the California Institute of Technology, where he was an IBM graduate fellow and recipient of the Newby-McKoy graduate research award. From 1984 to 1994 Professor Boland was a member of the research staff at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Centre (New York). In 1994 he joined the chemistry faculty at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he was appointed the J.J. Hermans Chair Professor of Chemistry and Applied and Materials Science.
Professor Boland moved to the School of Chemistry at Trinity College Dublin in 2002 as a Science Foundation Ireland Principal Investigator and currently serves as the Director of CRANN Institute. Prof. Boland’s research interests focus on understanding nanoscale processing and materials properties for advanced device applications, including the development of new protocols for assembling, fabricating, and testing nanometer-scale materials and device structures.
Harald Hampel (Prof)
Harald Hampel is Professor and Chair of Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin, based at the Adelaide & Meath Hospital incorporating the National Children’s Hospital (AMNiCH). He is a principal investigator at the Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience (TCIN) and heads the Laboratory of Neuroimaging & Biomarker Research.
Prof Hampel graduated from the University of Munich, Germany (M.D.) and started his medical training at the Department of Psychiatry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. From 1995 to 1997 he was an Ernst Jung Foundation for Science and Research Fellow and completed a Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Aging (NIA), Laboratory of Neurosciences, Bethesda, Md., USA. He attained a degree as Master of Science in Management at Cologne University, Germany in 2007. Major research interests are the development of biochemical (blood & CSF) and neuroimaging markers of neurodegenerative disorders (focus on Alzheimer’s disease). For his work in MR-based neuroimaging he received the Bernhard-von-Gudden Award, the Alois Alzheimer Award and the Paper Award of the Society for Human Brain Mapping. For his work on the development of core biological markers of AD he received the Award of the German Brain Foundation. For his achievements in clinical AD related research he received the Kraepelin-Alzheimer Medal.
Currently, Prof Hampel is principal investigator in major international research consortia, such as the Biological Marker Programme of the European Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (E-ADNI) of the European Alzheimer Disease Consortium (EADC) and of the German National Reference Center for Morphometric Neuroimaging (large-scale dementia multi-center reliability and validation trial), the European RCT on Lithium treatment in Alzheimer’s disease. He is one of the principal investigators of the recently approved Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Centre (CRC) and Medical Interdisciplinary Research Network in Dublin.
Patrick Honohan (Prof)
Patrick Honohan is Professor of International Financial Economics and Development at Trinity College Dublin. Previously he was a Senior Advisor in the World Bank working on issues of financial policy reform in developing countries. During the 1980s he was Economic Advisor to the Taoiseach. He also spent several years at the Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin, and at the Central Bank of Ireland. Professor Honohan is a graduate of UCD and of the London School of Economics, from which he received his PhD in 1978; and he has taught economics in both of those institutions, and at the Australian National University and the University of California, San Diego. He has published widely on issues ranging from exchange rate regimes and purchasing-power parity, to migration, cost-benefit analysis and statistical methodology, with applications to Ireland, Europe and the developing world.
Declan McLoughlin (Prof)
Professor McLoughlin qualified in medicine in 1986 from UCD, Ireland. After a few years in general medicine, he began training in psychiatry first in Dublin and then at the Maudsley Hospital in London. Professor McLoughlin obtained an Alzheimer’s Society Training Fellowship (1994-1997) in the Department of Neuroscience at the Institute of Psychiatry (IOP) followed by a Wellcome Advanced Fellowship (1997 – 2000), during which time he was awarded a PhD in molecular neuroscience. After this he was appointed as a clinical Senior Lecturer and also as honorary Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry in the Maudsley Hospital. In July 2007 he took up the new post of Research Professor of Psychiatry in Trinity College Dublin and St Patrick’s Hospital and is also a visiting Professor at the IOP.
Current research activities include projects on the molecular pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease and molecular neurobiology of depression plus randomised controlled trials in severe depression. His work is supported by the Health Research Board, Alzheimer’s Disease Society, Alzheimer’s Research Trust, and the Wellcome Trust.
Cliona O'Farrelly (Prof)
Cliona O’Farrelly is currently Professor of Comparative Immunology in the School of Biochemistry and Immunology at Trinity College Dublin. She is Chair of Cancer Research Ireland, a member of the Irish Council of Bioethics and a committee member of the Irish Society of Immunology. She obtained her primary degree in Microbiology and a PhD in Immunology from Trinity College in 1977 and 1982 respectively. After postdoctoral positions at St. James’s Hospital Dublin and Sussex University in the UK, Prof O’Farrelly became Lecturer in Biology at Harvard University from 1997-1990 where she taught immunology and began her research interest in comparative immunology. On her return to Ireland in 1990, Prof O’Farrelly was Wellcome Research Fellow at Trinity College before taking up Directorship of the Research Laboratories at St. Vincent’s University Hospital from 1993-2007. A recipient of the Irish Research Scientists’ Association Gold Medal, the Graves medal and the Conway medal, Prof O’Farrelly was also President of the Irish Society of Immunology from 2000-2007 and a Core Conway Investigator at the Conway Institute, University College Dublin.
Currently, Prof O’Farrelly and her research group are interested in Comparative Immunomics which uses combined in silico and molecular technologies to examine genes and proteins of the innate and adaptive immune systems from different species and in different organs. Their influence on hosts’ susceptibility to pathogens including Hepatitis C virus, Salmonella and Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a particular focus. They have published over 120 papers, reviews and book chapters and have raised more than 7 million Euro in research funds from SFI, the Health Research Board and Enterprise Ireland.
Honorary Fellowship
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISION IN CHAPTER 5, SECTION 9 OF THE STATUTES,
Adrian Hill (Prof) | Ronan Keane (Hon. Mr Justice) |
HAVE BEEN ELECTED TO HONORARY FELLOWSHIP.
Adrian Hill (Prof)
Professor Adrian V.S. Hill is Director of the Jenner Institute and Professor of Human Genetics at Oxford University. Prof Hill was a Foundation Scholar of Trinity College, Dublin before qualifying in medicine at Oxford in 1982. He now leads one of the major laboratories investigating the genetic basis of variable susceptibility to infectious diseases, particularly malaria and tuberculosis. He has also developed new types of vaccine that target the cellular immune system and has advanced these to clinical trials in several countries. Vaccines from his research group are amongst the most promising candidates for helping control tuberculosis and malaria in developing countries.
Prof Hill is a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, of the UK Academy of Medical Sciences, and of Magdalen College, Oxford, and has received several research awards including the Linacre Medal of the Royal College of Physicians and the Zoological Society of London Medal.
Ronan Keane (Hon. Mr Justice)
The Hon. Mr. Justice Keane was called to the Bar in 1954. He took silk, becoming Senior Counsel (called to the inner Bar) in 1970 and was appointed as a Judge of the High Court in July, 1979. He ran an extensive and broadly based practice before elevation to the Bench. He was the Head of the Stardust (nightclub fire where some 28 young people perished) Inquiry in 1981. He was President of the Law Reform Commission of Ireland from 1987 to 1992 where he worked together with the current head of Law School William Binchy. In 1996 he was elevated to the Supreme Court.
A gifted academic and a highly articulate and literate man, Mr Justice Keane has also been actively involved on behalf of the Council of Europe in seminars and discussions in a number of new democracies in Eastern and Central Europe concerned with giving advice and assistance in the establishment of genuinely independent court systems in those countries.
His publications include Law of Local Government in the Republic of Ireland, Company Law in the Republic of Ireland, Equity and the Laws of Trusts in the Republic of Ireland.
After his retirement, Mr Justice Keane was made an adjunct professor in the Law School of Trinity College where he regularly lectures and participates in research. Overall, he must be regarded as one of the leading lawyers of this country combining academic excellence with unrivalled practical skills and experience.
Fellowship
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROVISION IN CHAPTER 5, SECTION 6 OF THE STATUTES,
HAVE BEEN ELECTED TO FELLOWSHIP.
Frank Bannister (Dr)
Dr Frank Bannister is a senior lecturer in Information Systems and currently Head of the Department of Statistics in College. He completed his MSc in applied statistics in 1975 and subsequently worked in the Irish civil service and PricewaterhouseCoopers before returning to an academic position in Trinity in 1994. In 2000 Dr Bannister completed his PhD on the evolution of information and communications technology (ICT) usage in the Irish civil service. Since completing his PhD, he has continued to develop his interests in IT evaluation, e-government and, more recently, questions of privacy and trust in an on-line world.
Dr Bannister’s current research interests include the impact of ICT on public administration and governance, in particular the relationship between technology and power in public agencies and the innovative use of ICT in the public sector. He has published many journal articles and conference paper on these subjects. Dr Bannister has also written a book on the purchasing and financial management of IT, co-authored a book on the measurement and management of IT benefits and co-edited a book on risk and trust in public sector ICT. He is in regular demand as a keynote speaker. Recently invitations include giving the keynote addresses at eGov 07 and the annual meeting of the International Council for ICT in Government Agencies. Frank is a founding member of the European Conference on e-Government and a co-convener of the permanent study group on e-government in the European Group on Public Administration. He is the editor of the Electronic Journal of e-Government and a former co-editor of the Electronic Journal of Information Systems Evaluation as well as being a member of editorial board of a number of other publications. Dr Bannister is a Fellow of the Irish Computer Society and a Chartered Engineer.
Angus Bell (Dr)
Dr Angus Bell trained at the Universities of Edinburgh, British Columbia and Basle, and did research for two years in the pharmaceutical industry, before joining Trinity College in 1994. He is currently a senior lecturer in Microbiology.
Dr Bell’s main teaching expertise is in eukaryotic microbiology, molecular and cellular biology and parasitology. His research interests focus on malaria, which continues to be a disease of massive worldwide importance and, with the spread of drug resistance, one that is increasingly difficult to control. There is an urgent need for better understanding of the most virulent human malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, and the discovery of novel therapeutic approaches to malaria. Dr Bell’s research concentrates on aspects of the biochemistry and molecular cell biology of blood stages of the human malarial parasite P. falciparum, mechanisms of action of and resistance to antimalarial agents, and new antimalarial drug design.
Dr Bell’s laboratory is the largest malaria research group in Ireland and the only one capable of culturing P. falciparum. Dr Bell has been involved in 20 successful grant applications, has published more than 40 papers and has supervised 5 postdoctoral fellows, 10 postgraduate students and 3 research assistants/technicians. His major collaborators outside Ireland are in the U.K., U.S.A., France and Kenya.
Roberto Bertoni (Dr)
Dr Roberto Bertoni is a graduate of the University of Pisa and Trinity College. He has worked as a Senior Lecturer in Italian since 1999.
Dr Bertoni’s main fields of research include post Second World War literature, modern and contemporary narrative, Giuseppe Bonaviri and Italo Calvino. He has also researched ‘Mitomodernismo’ and contemporary poetry from Liguria. In 1999 he founded, and has since edited, the series of volumes ‘Quaderni italiani di cultura’. He is the founder and editor of the journal on line Carte allineate. He has spent much time devoted to translating into Italian a number of Irish writers. Dr Bertoni has also written some poems and stories.
Ursula Bond (Dr)
Dr Ursula Bond graduated from Trinity College with a B.A. in Biochemistry and went on to receive a Ph.D. in Molecular Biology from Washington University. Dr Bond was a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Washington University and Yale University of Medicine. She has been a lecturer in the Department of Microbiology at Trinity College since 1995 and Senior Lecturer in the School of Genetics and Microbiology since 2006.
Dr Bond’s areas of research include the molecular biology of yeasts specifically the effects of environmental stress on the genome and mechanisms of cell cycle regulation. She is also carrying out research into immune responses against cancer cells.
Andrew Bowie (Dr)
Dr Andrew Bowie is a Senior Lecturer in Immunology in the School of Biochemistry and Immunology, where he is currently Director of Research. He obtained a primary degree in Biochemistry from Trinity in 1993, and was awarded a Ph.D in 1997. His research interests are in the area of how the immune system initially gets activated by pathogens, leading to changes in gene expression. During his Ph.D and early post-doctoral years, Dr Bowie examined the role of oxidative stress in the activation of the immune transcription factor NF-kappaB. He then went on to study how viruses interact with, and seek to subvert the human immune response. After a brief lectureship in UCD, he returned to Trinity in 2001 to establish a new undergraduate degree programme, Biochemistry with Immunology, which began in 2002. As a principal investigator, Dr Bowie has continued to explore how viruses interact with the immune system, which has led to the discovery of new ways that viruses manipulate their hosts, as well as the identification of novel roles for human proteins in the immune response. His research group has won awards at international conferences for their work, and he has authored over 35 papers in leading peer-reviewed journals including The Journal of Experimental Medicine and Nature Immunology.
Patrick Geoghegan (Dr)
Dr Patrick Geoghegan has been a lecturer in the Department of History at Trinity College Dublin since 2001. He completed his Ph.D. at UCD in 1997 before working on the Royal Irish Academy's Dictionary of Irish Biography and then on the Trinity Access Programme. Dr Geoghegan has written books on the Irish Act of Union, Lord Castlereagh and Robert Emmet. At Trinity he teaches the history of the United States as well as Irish history, and he continues to teach on the Trinity Access Programme. Awarded an IRCHSS research fellowship in 2006, he has just completed a book on Daniel O’Connell which will be published by Gill and Macmillan in October. Dr Geoghegan is also the presenter of a weekly history radio show on Newstalk 106-108, Talking History, in which he debates historical issues from the ancient world to the present day.
John Harris (Dr)
Dr John Harris joined the Centre for Language and Communication Studies as Senior Lecturer in Psycholinguistics in 2004. He is currently serving a second term as Director of Research in the School of Linguistic, Speech and Communication Sciences. He is a graduate in psychology of NUI Cork and completed a PhD in Cognition and Communication at the University of Chicago.
Dr Harris’ current research interests are in the areas of bilingualism, second language acquisition, language teaching and the maintenance of Irish. Most of his work tends to have both a theoretical psycholinguistic focus and a policy focus. He has over 40 peer reviewed publications, consisting of papers in international journals, book chapters and research reports.
Last year Dr Harris edited a special double issue of the International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism (10(4), 2007) entitled ‘Bilingual education and bilingualism in Ireland North and South’. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the position of Irish at a critical point in the evolution of the language-planning and revitalisation enterprise on the island as a whole. Dr Harris has been the lead researcher in all the landmark national studies of the teaching and learning of Irish and modern European languages at primary level in the last 30 years. The Harris et al (2006) study of long-term national trends in pupil proficiency in Irish, published by the Department of Education and Science, led to immediate initiatives by the government to address the problems identified.
Liz Heffernan (Dr)
Dr Liz Heffernan graduated from Trinity College with an LL.B. degree and was subsequently awarded an LL.M. degree by Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia and LL.M. and J.S.D. degrees by the University of Chicago. A former law clerk at the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Chicago, and the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, she has taught at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia and at University College Dublin. Her current research interests include Evidence and Procedure. A former joint editor of the Dublin University Law Journal and former assistant editor of the Irish Jurist, Dr Heffernan is the author of Scientific Evidence: Fingerprints and DNA (2006) and Evidence: Cases and Materials (2005). She is Registrar of the School of Law.
Gerard Lacey (Dr)
Dr Gerard Lacey has been a Lecturer in Computer Science since 1998 and his research centres on the design of intelligent systems to cooperate with people in achieving real world physical tasks. He graduated in Computer Engineering (BAI) from Trinity College in 1991 and completed a PhD on mobile robot aids for the blind in 1999. Dr Lacey’s PhD work was awarded the PVA design award by the Rehabilitation Engineering Society of North America (RESNA). He has over 40 publications and has been published in leading journals such as the International Journal of Robotics Research and Robotics and Autonomous Systems.
In 2000 Dr Lacey founded a campus company, Haptica Ltd., and while there he developed an augmented reality surgical simulator for training surgeons in keyhole surgery. This work won numerous international awards including the prestigious European ICT prize and the Irish Software Association Technology Innovation award. Today leading medical schools around the world train new surgeons using the surgical simulator. Since his return to academia in 2005 Dr Lacey has attracted significant funding for research on systems to improve the quality of colonoscopy and hand hygiene in hospitals. Dr Lacey also conducts research on human-robot interaction and novel computer interfaces.
David Lloyd (Dr)
Dr David Lloyd holds a BSc in Applied Chemistry and a PhD from the School of Chemical Sciences in Dublin City University. Dr Lloyd spent three years as a post-doctorate in the School of Pharmacy, Trinity College before taking a position in De Novo Pharmaceuticals in Cambridge, UK, where he headed the company's ligand-based design discovery programme. He returned to Trinity in 2004 to take up a faculty appointment in the School of Biochemistry & Immunology as Hitachi Senior Lecturer in Advanced Computing. In June 2005 Dr Lloyd was appointed as Trinity’s first Associate Dean of Research with a brief to foster and build external research interactions for Trinity, and in July 2007 he became the Dean of Research for the University.
Paula Murphy (Dr)
Dr Paula Murphy is a lecturer in Developmental Biology in the discipline of Zoology, School of Natural Sciences. She is a graduate of TCD receiving a B.A.(mod), specialising in Genetics. Her Ph.D. was awarded by Edinburgh University (1991) for research carried out at the Medical Research Council (MRC) Human Genetics Unit on genes that regulate mammalian embryonic development. Dr Murphy took up her present academic position in 2001 after several research positions abroad; a post-doctoral fellowship from the European Molecular Biology Organisation at the University of Rome "La Sapienza" (1991-1993), a post-doctoral fellowship from the Human Frontier Science Program at the Ecole Normale Superieur, Paris (1993-1995), Researcher at the Biotechnology Centre of Oslo, funded as Guest Researcher by the Norwegian Cancer Society (1996-2000).
Dr Murphy’s research interests are in genetic regulation of morphogenesis, particularly of the developing limb. Currently funded projects include investigation of the spatial distribution of Wnt signalling pathway components in the embryo (SFI Investigator award), the interplay between mechanical forces and the regulation of developmental patterning genes (Wellcome Trust) and the implication of patterning genes in human congenital malformations (The Children's Research Centre, Crumlin Hospital).
Michael Shevlin (Dr)
Dr Michael Shevlin joined the School of Education (Trinity College) in 1996 after seventeen years teaching in mainstream schools. He was seconded to St. Michael’s House Research for two years to co-ordinate a national programme that facilitated school link programmes (mainstream and special schools).
Dr Shevlin works in the area of special needs education in pre-service teacher education and continuing professional development for teachers. He has researched and published on special education and developing inclusive education environments. He has also been involved in national policy development in special education through his involvement in the Special Education Review Committee, National Council for Special Education and the Expert Taskforce on Individual Education Planning and has acted as advisor to the Equality Authority on inclusive education.
Anthony Quinn (Dr)
Dr Anthony Quinn received the Bachelor of Engineering (Electronic) degree from UCD in 1988 (First Place, First Class Honours). He won the Hewlett-Packard award that year for development of a novel speech therapy device. He won the 1988 Anglo-Irish Scientific Scholarship of the British Council to study for a PhD in the University of Cambridge. He completed the PhD(Cantab) in 1992. He was Visiting Fellow at DCU before being appointed Lecturer in the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering in TCD in May 1993, a post he has occupied up to the present time. He lectured as Visiting Professor at the State University of New York, Stony Brook, in the Fall Semester of 1997, and spent the year 2004-05 as Visiting Researcher at the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague. In 2008, he will serve as Visiting Professor at the École Normale Supérieure de Cachan, Paris.
Dr Quinn is a pioneer in Bayesian methods for signal processing. This subject concerns formal probability methods for inference, and their role in the recovery of information from signals. His PhD thesis was one of the very first specialist treatises in what is now a vibrant field of research. He has published over 50 scholarly articles, and, in 2006, he published with a former student the first book (Springer) on the Variational Bayesian approach in signal processing. He has applied his work particularly to problems involving medical signals, such as thyroid response under iodine-131 radiotherapy, the segmentation of mammographic and brain MRI images, and the reconstruction of speech.
Scholarship
THE FOLLOWING HAVE BEEN ELECTED TO SCHOLARSHIP 2008:
Department | Name | |
---|---|---|
Biblical and Theological Studies | Georgia Natalie Aquing |
|
Business Studies and a Language | Konrad Grieger | |
Computer Science (BA) | Michael Clear | |
Dental Science |
Daniel Lenouvel John Tadhg Reidy |
|
Economic and Social Studies | Therese Grace Ilya Paveliev Lee Fintan Michael John Ryan Ian Edward Sinnott |
|
Engineering | Michael John Chaloner Day Donal Holland Niall Murphy Mikhail Volkov |
|
English Studies | Georgina Folan Karina Jakubowicz Joanna Rose Staunton |
|
European Studies | James Michael Kilcourse Katherine Tarlton |
|
History and Political Science | Caitriona Monica Ni Dhubhda | |
Human Genetics | Dermot Paul Harnett | |
Human Nutrition and Dietetics | Elizabeth O Sullivan | |
Law | Emma Louise Fenelon Mark Thuillier |
|
Law and French | Jack Andrew Paterson | |
Law and German | Ah-Young Koo Christopher O'Hara |
|
Management Science and Information Systems Studies | Enda McGreevy | |
Manufacturing Engineering with Management Science | Rory Alexander Vesey Stoney | |
Mathematics | Myles Denyer David Hughes Clare Patricia McCormack |
|
Medicine |
Anica Bulic Christopher Carroll Ruik Chee Sara Naimimohasses Sinead O'Shaughnessy Elliott Woodward |
|
Midwifery (BSc) | Katharine Little | |
Natural Sciences | Colm Browne Matthew Alan Carrigan Ian Farley Oran Gilliland O Doherty Shane Francis Heffernan Moyra Lawrence Aidan Michael O'Flannagain Shane Plunkett Brendan Liam Quigley Sean Timothy James Ryan |
|
Nursing (BSc) | Emma Delany Cahill | |
Physics and Chemistry of Advanced Materials | Aleksey Shmelov | |
Physiotherapy |
Jarlath James Lyons Ciara Elizabeth McCallion Emer McGowan |
|
Psychology |
Marie Boland Darina Elizabeth Errity Patrick Stephen McHugh |
|
Theoretical Physics | Kyle Edward Ballantine Christopher David Andrew Blair Brian Denvir James Thomas Matthew Gough Tim Harris David McGuire Sam Palmer |
|
Two Subject Moderatorship | Economics & History | Jean Acheson |
Music & Philosophy | Giovanna Baviera | |
English Literature & History | Gerard Noel Farrell | |
History & Modern Irish | Micheal Pio Hoyne | |
Economics & Mathematics | Anne Catherine Jennings | |
English Literature & French | Padraic Lamb Stephen Christopher Stacey |
|
Economics & Mathematics | Jonathan Gerard Michael Wyse |