Category Archives: Uncategorized

200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Mike Bintley, lecturer and personal tutor in English

Mike Bintley is a Senior Lecturer in the School of creative arts, culture and communication. 

Mike’s teaching focuses on the literature, material culture, and archaeology of medieval England and Scandinavia, with research interests in landscape, environment, settlements, and plant-life. He joined Birkbeck in 2018, after teaching at UCL, Oxford, and Canterbury Christ Church University. 

One of his BA English Foundation students says: “I struggled a lot in school with bad health and it’s taken me a while to return to education, but Mike was always compassionate and patient and I can’t fault him in the slightest. He has also won the personal tutor of the year award. If I ever had any questions or concerns, Mike was more than happy to assist, and was attentive – he seems to care deeply for his students’ welfare. I seldom waited long for a response and always felt able to reach out. On top, he is clearly passionate about his subject and any student lucky enough have him as their personal tutor is extremely privileged. He is an immeasurable asset to the university, and I hope he is aware of the impact he has left on myself and other students.” 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Michael O’Neill, Chair of Citigroup and CEO of Bank of Hawaii

Michael O’Neill is an experienced financial services executive who has led major financial institutions in the United States and elsewhere. He has a formidable reputation for turning around businesses that were experiencing difficulties and in need of restructuring.  According to bankdirector.com, O’Neill is “one of banking’s most successful turnaround artists”. 

He is also a former Birkbeck student, moving back to London in the mid 2000s juggling evening classes to study the history of Early Modern Europe. 

Career highlights include being Chief Financial Officer of the Continental Bank Corporation in Chicago (1993-1995), Vice Chairman and Chief Financial Officer of the Bank of America in San Francisco (1995-1998), Chief Executive Officer of Barclays PLC (1999), and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Bank of Hawaii Corporation in Honolulu (2000-2004).  

He joined the Board of Directors of Citigroup in New York to help lead Citigroup through the Great Financial Crisis. Citi is the leading global bank, with around 200 million customer accounts. It does business in more than 160 countries and jurisdictions. From 2012 to 2018, O’Neill served as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Citigroup.  

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Mia Cooman, Law student

Mia Cooman received her Law degree from Birkbeck and personifies the ‘Birkbeck effect’. She became a graduate trainee at Vardags law firm in September 2023 having previously worked for them as a Client Relations Specialist. She has garnered 10 years of experience providing managerial support at top tier law firms in the City. 

Vardags refers to itself as “an elite team of Britain’s best divorce lawyers specialising in high net worth, complex and international divorce cases. Vardags has handpicked the best and brightest from the UK’s leading universities, the Bar, other Magic Circle matrimonial law firms, and leading City firms to create an award-winning, ambitious team of divorce lawyers.” 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Matthias Jugel, co-founder and CTO of UBIRCH GmbH

Matthias Jugel was part of the team responsible for developing a vaccine passport drive in Germany as part of UBIRCH GmbH, which developed the technology that allowed those in the EU who had been vaccinated against Covid-19 to travel. Matthias studied computing science at Birkbeck in the early nineties and this led him to where he is now, a Big Data software specialist, Chief Technology Officer and one of the founders of UBIRCH.  

Matthias and his team were able to use blockchain technology to create a QR code that would work offline to verify a person’s vaccination status. This application of the technology was developed under highly pressurised circumstances in a matter of weeks and may have revolutionary applications for pharmaceuticals, car insurance and manufacturing industries. 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Martin Eve, lecturer of literature, technology and publishing and founder of Open Library of Humanities

Award-winning academic, Professor Martin Eve is known for his leading research into contemporary American fiction and the histories and philosophies of technology, his work as a disability campaigner, and his immense contribution to promoting free open access to research. 

Named in 2021 by the Shaw Trust as one of the 100 most influential people with disabilities in the UK, Martin was the youngest full professor of English in the UK in 2016, before the age of 30. During his undergraduate degree, Martin developed rheumatoid arthritis and vasculitis, leading to a stroke and other long-term health complications. He became painfully aware of the inaccessibility of research spaces while undertaking his PhD while on immunosuppressive IV drips and vowed that he would “strive to undo this culture and refuse to be an agent of exclusion.” He went on to found the Open Library of Humanities, an award-winning publisher of academic work in the humanities that is free for all to read. 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Mark Lowcock, Distinguished Non-resident Fellow at the Center for Global Development

Sir Mark Lowcock is a British economist and accountant who has had a career spanning nearly 40 years in international development. He served as the Head of the United Nations (UN) Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) between 2017 and 2021. In this role he was responsible for coordinating the COVID-19 Global Humanitarian Response Plan, which was the international community’s primary fundraising vehicle to respond to the humanitarian impacts of the pandemic in low- and middle-income countries. Before his work with the UN, Sir Mark served as Permanent Secretary of the Department for International Development (DIFD) from 2011-2017. 

Mark has written two books.  Ten Generations, a social and family history, was published in 2020.  Relief Chief: A Manifesto for Saving Lives in Dire Times was published in May 2022. 

He holds a BA in Economics and History from Oxford University and an MSc in Economics from Birkbeck College, University of London and was made a Fellow of Birkbeck in 2020. 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Marianne Elliott, Fellow, peace campaigner and lecturer in history

Elliott was an historian of eighteenth-century Ireland when she became one of seven commissioners in the Opsahl Commission, an independent enquiry into the views of ordinary people in Northern Ireland about peace and reconciliation. The Commission’s fundamental premise was that the resolution of the conflict had to involve everyone in Northern Ireland: they had to take “ownership” of the process. The commissioners invited submissions from any group or persons and held confidential focus groups and private sessions in eleven different venues throughout Northern Ireland, as well as in school assemblies. The Commission became an essential, early stage in the peace process that led to the Good Friday Agreement. The experience allowed Elliott to reflect on lack of public understandings about democracy and political accountability, the embeddedness of a “dependency culture”, and the importance of historical memory. These were insights that she reflected upon in her aptly named book, When God Took Sides: Religion and Identity in Ireland – Unfinished Business (2009).  

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Margaret Sharp, House of Lords Liberal Democrat

Baroness Sharp of Guildford is the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for further education, higher education and skills in the House of Lords. A vocal campaigner on the needs of part-time students, she helped secure concessions from the Government that ensured part-time students were not forgotten in the higher education bill. She was elected a Fellow of Birkbeck in 2005. 

‘My admiration for Birkbeck and its students stems from the fact that studying for a degree part-time, after a full day’s work, is a tough way to do it,’ she says. 

‘I realised this when I was teaching at LSE in the 1960s, and 40 years on, it remains the tough way but also the sensible way of seeking to widen participation and open the doors to lifelong learning.’ 

‘It was because the Government’s white paper on higher education of 2003 lacked this vision and made not even one mention of the part-time route to degrees that I took up the cudgels on behalf of part-timers. To add insult to injury, the Government also proposed a system of up-front loans to pay the fees of full-timers, loans which were not available to part-timers. 

‘Together with colleagues in the House of Lords, where Birkbeck has many friends, we were able to soften the pill a little, but we continue to battle against this overt discrimination and try to instil into ministers the need for a far more flexible approach to higher education which embraces part-time education rather than leaves it on the side-lines, if they are to realise their ambitions on widening participation.’ 

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Maeve Heneke, lecturer in psychosocial studies

Nominated by students Antoine Decressac and Cecilia Danielsson 

Maeve Heneke is the person I want to nominate. She was teaching the Approaches to Study and was the very first teacher I had in about 40 years and the first contact I had with university education. As a mature student I was extremely worried I would feel out of touch, academically deficient. From day one she focused on what I could do well and gently (but firmly) pointed at the areas I could improve upon. She would sit with every single student and review face to face the assignments, explaining the grade received, going through every point that would help improve our skills. Emails were always answered. Maeve is a tough grader but fair and entirely committed to the success of the students she teaches. I left the course confident that I could do well in academia and she is the reason I am still studying at Birkbeck. 

I came back to Higher Education because I was recovering from a serious brain injury. Maeve had taken a great deal of interest in my personal health situation, especially as I had acquired a condition that made speech and language production frustrating. She gave polite and encouraging feedback about my piece, saying that it was enjoyable. However, she had the difficult task of delivering a critical analysis to a student recovering from trauma, who also needed positively to re-examine the tenets of their capabilities. Without dressing up her thoughts, or sugaring the pill, she had the skills of being direct as quickly and effectively as possible. She was so trustworthy, the only action I could initiate was to absolutely take her at her word, and follow her advice. I am now completing my final year, and Linguistics forms a large part of my life. I plan to continue studying an Applied Linguistic Masters after graduation and plan to do a Ph.D. around my interests in Neurolinguistics. Without the initial support of Maeve Heneke, it is doubtful I would have continued past the first year.  

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200th Anniversary Birkbeck Effects: Les Moran, professor of law and LGBTQ+ rights activist

Professor Les Moran is a former head of Birkbeck’s School of Law and one of the key players in establishing the Law School’s international reputation. His cutting-edge scholarship, and campaigning on behalf of LGBTQ+ rights, shows scholarship and activism at its best. Les was also instrumental in putting criminology and justice policy research on the map at Birkbeck. 

Professor Moran has written and researched extensively on matters relating to sexuality and law, criminal justice, with particular reference to hate crime, law and visual culture and the judiciary. He has a keen interest in multidisciplinary and empirical legal research. 

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