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Ceremony schedule for winter 2025
Wednesday 22 January 2025
Ceremony 1 at 10am
Winter 2025: Ceremony 1
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing]
(A procession of University senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good morning. I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest of welcomes are for you, our graduands and your family and friends who join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it in person and maybe are watching this via a live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns, our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly baths and invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement.
The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is "Be still and know" and I hope that at some point today, you can find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that brought you here. And I know that many of you have had to overcome many challenges on that journey to get to this day. Struggling to balance your studies with home life in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubts of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in, and you've seen it through.
For many, today will mark the end of your academic journey, a journey that started all those years ago at nursery or kindergarten where you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor could be fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun. That half your food on your mouth, the other half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio, and the hated phrases were "no more ice cream" and "time for bed". Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay, where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, and you too have forgotten it the next morning and hated the phrases, "wifi not available" and "the assignment deadline is tomorrow". But at least there was no one to say "no more ice cream" and "time for bed".
Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here and we're humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex. So graduands in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels were a good idea, or whether your flies are open. And praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. But what an array of laps we've arranged for you this morning. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow.
Now I'm beholden tell you or remind you, I know some of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet, and you getting it might just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree. But seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality.
Over the years we've had handshakes, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs dancing and press ups. I've gone along with all of them, but please, if you do press ups, that you're most welcome to do, don't expect me to do them with you. I can get down, I'm not sure I can get back up at my age. And family and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please have your cameras ready and feel free to make some noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anyone is here on their own today, then I'll be your family or friend. So no one's here alone.
Okay. I call upon the Vice Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Mr. Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands Sussex class of 2024. It's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. I'm Professor Sasha Roseneil. I'm the Vice Chancellor and president of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
As our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. Today is celebration for you and of you and of all that you've achieved during your time at Sussex. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and intangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, and from the encouragement of your friends and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university.
You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've generously provided scholarships that have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you. Our graduands, if you are able, would you please stand up and turn and face the audience, your friends and loved ones behind you, and offer your thanks with a big hearty round of applause? Thank you. Please do be seated again.
As a university, we at Sussex are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. And that extends to our celebrations today. This is an important event, not only in the lives of our graduates, but for everyone in the auditorium, some of whom have traveled a very long way to be with us. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come each year from over 130 countries around the world, and we have people in the audience of many different nationalities and faiths. And amongst everyone gathered here, there will be a huge diversity of opinion and belief about almost every matter under the sun. And that diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing, something that Sussex as a university seeks to uphold and support.
We have a foundational commitment to freedom of speech and academic freedom. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving enormous concern amongst Sussex students.
Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And so as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I would like to emphasise that the university supports and will always support freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity that's at the heart of our university community. And that is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I'd like to thank you all for all that you've contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity, a warm, open and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to realise that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility alongside your academic work. Many of you have taken part in an impressive range of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups, and as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. Many of you are today receiving a spirit of Sussex Award for positive involvement with the community. From serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes and creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend your commitment to your extracurricular activities well done on all that you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great pleasure of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how the experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They record encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduates will feel the same in the years to come.
Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you are leaving a university with a global reputation, a university that has equipped you with the knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively, to work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective. You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. The breadth and depth of their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time.
Some of you might have seen our "Impossible until it's done" campaign on our website, on banners and buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, we are highlighting the work we are doing to tackle pollution in rivers, to find new ways to treat dementia, and to improve young people's mental health using AI and digital tools. We know the great value of our research, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes and ambitions with wider audiences.
And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seeks understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about right across the disciplines. One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics.
And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect. In the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS World rankings. This year we have nine subject areas in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th for employment outcomes in the UK. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked top in the UK for Business and Management research income. This funding is being used to tackle global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation and digital technologies.
All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology and influencing the policies of governments, as well as making a positive difference to the protection and regeneration of our natural environment. Now I know that many of you graduating today have had extraordinary and sometimes difficult life journeys. All of you have been through the disruption of the COVID-19 pandemic, and some of you have struggled with mental and physical health issues. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your student days, but each of you has had a unique journey through your time at Sussex with its ups and downs.
Whatever your Sussex story though, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were challenging, intellectually rigorous, that you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. And that you are leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources that will stand you in good stead. And also that you've made connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future. You'll take many different paths now as you join our community of more than 200,000 alumni around the world.
Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists and academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile but no less significant lives and careers. People whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways every day across the globe. In more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, Sussex alumni are sharing the benefits of their experience here to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree, the fact that the sacrifices you made were worth it. That the belief in yourself that made it possible has come true. And celebrate those who helped you reach this point in your journey. In short, celebrate.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
I call upon the Head of the School of Global Studies, Professor Geert De Neve.
[Head of the Head of the School of Global Studies, Professor Geert De Neve, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Geert De Neve:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology...
Laurie MAY-MILLER
For Anthropology and International Development (with a study abroad year)...
Bishoy ZAKI
For Geography…
Charlotte HEENAN
For Geography and International Relations…
Daisy YEO
For International Development with a Language…
Maria Antonette BAYA
For International Relations…
Finn WRIGHT
For the Postgraduate Certificate in International Security…
also awarded the prize for the Best Dissertation in International Security Oluwatobi Daniel OYETOKI
For the Postgraduate Diploma in International Relations…
Eunji KIM
For the degree of Master of Arts in Anthropology of Development and Social Transformation…
Emily Brooks,
Morgan GIAMPAOLO
Luba KHALILI
Jessica Jade ROCHESTER
For Conflict, Security and Development…
Thomas AFFORD
Also the recipient of the Jesse White Masters Scholarship Hamzah AHMED
Khulood Ahmed Sheikh AL-LABANI
Ibrahim Fathi Ibrahim ALGHADAMSI
Koshin Abdi HASHI
Diepriye Tonjo KORUBO
Also jointly awarded the Lisa Smirl Prize for the highest Dissertation Mark in Conflict, Security and Development Daniela Alexandra QUINCHE PACHON
Ryad SHKAIR
For Environment, Development and Policy…
Sapargul Abdinabievna ABDINABIEVA
Ryoka BETTO Marie CLERC
Iva MARKOVIC
Tshoganetso MASUNGA
Isaac MCHALE
Ayomide Michael OJO
India PEARCE
Also jointly awarded the the Ann Whitehead prize, for the best Postgraduate International Development Dissertation Betul Aybike SAHIN
Ashqua Muqueem Ahmed SHAIKH
Petar TABAKOV
Millie WALLACE
Yang ZHANG
For Food and Development…
Maria Cristina AYALA NIOCHET
Yuk Tong CHAN
Also awarded the prize for the best dissertation in the MA Food and Development Oliver Martin
Zachary Louis
Dale Morris
Dohyeon MUN
Samuel Oluwaseun OLATUNJI
Helen RUSSELL BROWN
For Gender, Violence and Conflict…
Basudha GUHA KHASNOBIS
For Geopolitics and International Affairs…
Lela Jasmine Furaha AHMED BOURDETTE
Theo DYER
Petra JIRANKOVA
Charlie LOCKE
Toby POWLSON
For Human Rights…
Sophia BARKWAY
Hannan EDDE
Also jointly awarded the Ann Whitehead Prize, for the best Postgraduate International Development Dissertation
Paulina Patricia ILABACA MENDEZ
Azusa KATO
Ekram Adem MOHAMMED
Also jointly awarded the Ann Whitehead prize, for the best Postgraduate International Development Dissertation
Kaori MUTSUKADO, congratulations.
Ayane SANDERS LAD
Shavinda Pumudi SISIRAKUMARA
Krisztina Katalin SZEKELY
For International Political Economy…
Dilsu Oyku AYDIN
Ayrton FAGG
Christopher MARTIN
Francesca WOOD
For International Relations…
Athija ALSERKAL
Kayode ANIFOWOSE
Sunday EGBUNWA
Israa Malik ELFARMAWI
Axel William Eric MCMULLEN
Mai NISHIYAMA
Peter PHELPS
also awarded the prize for the Best Dissertation in International Relations. Sangeetha SUNDARARAJAN
David Oluwafunsho TAIWO
Juba THIEP
Jantarathimas WATCHARASIRI
For Migration and Global Development…
Joan Alejandra Sophia DAVIES
Bethany DURLEY
Yucel KAPLAN
also awarded the prize for the best dissertation in the MA in Migration and Global Development.
Ying Yee LI
Francesca PAINI
For Migration Studies…
Kyoka OIMATSU
For Social Anthropology...
Emily COLLIS
Nozomi IMOTO
Cristina MACKERRON
Tegan MCLEAN
James William TURNER
Xinglan WU
Figen CELIK KARAASLAN
For Social Development…
Regina MEDINA MORA URQUIZA
Yuki MORIKAMI
Rose NABALAYO WABUKE
Megan O'NEILL
For the degree of Master of Science in Climate Change, Development and Policy...
Jonathan Mickael ANDREAS
Max Fox
Onaolapo GBENRO
Laurence JOHNSON
Edwin KIPSANG
Moira MANGALINDAN
Joy Blessed MUGANDA
Katie MUSGROVE
Ekeoma Malvina ONUOHA
Edward RIMAN
Also the recipient of the Peter Carpenter Prize for Climate Change
Sebastian RODRIGUEZ VARGAS
Lucy VARLEY
Diarmid WALKER
For Social Research Methods…
Laurel Dean Jo HILLS
Peter Martin Creffield RIDDELSDELL
Abigail SEWELL
Orlagh STEVENS
Tanya WIJESINGHE
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Incidental War: Targeting, Software, and Bureaucracy
Rupert BARRETT-TAYLOR
For the thesis;
Characteristics, Drivers and Predictability of Flood Events Events in the Tana River Basin,
Kenya Augustine KIPTUM
For the thesis;
¡Mujer y Taxista! Analysing the experiences of women in Malaga's male-dominated passenger transport sector.
Belen MARTINEZ CAPARROS
For the thesis;
How 'global' is Global Health Security? Subaltern agency in International regimes of infectious disease control
Dean Matthew James MOULL
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Global Studies.
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
I call upon the Professor Law and Social Justice, Amir Paz-Fuchs, to present Caroline Lucas,
Professor Amir Paz-Fuchs:
Chancellor, vice chancellor, colleagues, graduands, friends and families. The recipient of today's award really truly needs no introduction. So I'm gonna talk about myself. When I accepted the offer to join Sussex Law School and we moved to Brighton, we did the customary thing where I come from. And that is to make everyone else jealous. So we explained that we're between the Sea and the South Downs National Park, that the city hosts the most popular international pride festival, but we saved the kicker for last, that it has the only green MP in Parliament. True story. QED.
Caroline Lucas, of course, recently stepped down as that green MP because she probably heard that sitting MP's can't receive this award so she could finally receive this honour today. It was only in 1989 that Green Party local counsellors were first elected. Caroline Lucas was elected as local counsellor in 1993, became a member of the European Parliament in 1999, the first leader of the Green Party in 2008, the first member of parliament representing green member of Parliament representing Brighton Pavilion, where we currently are in 2010. The fact that she was a Green Party's sole MP was not an obstacle to her receiving awards, including The Most Influential MP, The Most Ethical Politician - maybe that's a low bar, MP of the Year, People's Choice MP of the Year.
But beyond her individual work, Caroline Lucas built the foundations for the next generation of dreamers and activists as she stepped away from parliament. The Green Party now has four MPs and over 800 local counsellors. More broadly, green agenda seems to be integrated into public discourse, education, and consciousness, although it has never been obvious. Caroline Lucas's story and legacy offers one of the most striking examples of the saying, often and wrongly attributed to Mahatma Gandhi. First, they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you and then you win. How did and how does she do it?
I'm going to suggest here that the secret lies in a less known fact about Caroline Lucas. And that is she's already even before this ceremony, Dr. Lucas. Indeed, as you would expect, Dr. Lucas wrote her PhD on Elizabethan literature. Now, you may think that her future political path diverged dramatically from the state inquiries into Shakespeare, Marlowe, and the like. But you'd be wrong. There is a clear line between the motivation that drew Dr. Lucas to the study of women in Elizabethan romance and her politics from then onwards. And that line is entrenched in the literal and metaphorical understanding of storytelling in the conviction that sometimes what separates imagination and reality is only time. And in the humility that leads to curiosity about people's lives, concerns and perceptions without which there is no empathy. And thus no good literature and no good politics.
As she notes Charles Dickens and Elizabeth Gaskell did not only change Victorian's perception of the reality of urban poverty and public health, it led them to imagine a different one. That motivation has led Dr. Lucas to imagine not only a more sustainable planet, as we all know, but also very early on a world without nuclear weapons, then an economy that does not slavishly follow growth metrics. And most recently a world in which we can address death itself differently. It is no surprise that her book, which weaves together our literature, literary heritage in our political future is titled "Another England". Few people have encouraged, probed, and inspired us to in her own words in the book, imagine and pursue new and better hutures than the recipient of today's degree.
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Doctor of Laws honoris causa, Caroline Lucas.
[Applause]
[Caroline Lucas shake hands with Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
By the authority of the Senate. I'm delighted to confer upon you the degree Doctor of Laws honoris causa. Many congratulations.
[Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, Caroline Lucas goes to the lectern to deliver her oration.]
Doctor Caroline Lucas:
Thank you so very, very much Chancellor. It is a huge privilege to be awarded this honorary doctorate by the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I am truly grateful you've kindly said that the award is in recognition of my achievement in politics. Although you did also hint at the literary background. But in fact, I'd like to share a few thoughts about the importance of my first love and the focus of my first doctorate, which as you've heard was in English literature. And I hope that doesn't seem too perverse. I know awards in art subjects are being made tomorrow, not today, but in the words of one of my favourite novelists, Emma Forster, only connect. I passionately believe that if more politicians spent more time reading fiction and poetry, we would have a far wiser and a far more compassionate politics. Thank you. And here is why.
First, because literature cultivates our imagination. And in many ways, you know, political failure is I think a failure of imagination. A failure to imagine, for example, what it's like to be a refugee so desperate to flee persecution that you are willing to take your life in your hands and step into a dangerously overcrowded dinghy. Because in the words of the British Somali poet Warsan Shire. No one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark. No one puts their children in a boat unless the water is safer than the land. Anyone, anyone at the home office or anywhere in government who has anything to do with drafting refugee policy should be required to read Warsan Shire.
And second, literature embraces complexity. You know, my favourite words in the whole of Shakespeare, are from King Lear, where the Earl of Gloucester says to Edgar, “And that's true, too”. The siren voices of right-wing populists would have us believe that there are simple answers to the multiple crises that we face today. They seem unable to understand that several things, multiple things can be true at the same time. And that's true to four little words that I believe could work wonders in helping to diffuse the polarisation and intolerance that scars today's political discourse.
And third, literature nurtures hope. Hope that things can and will be better. Not the kind of hope that's little more than a gamble, like sitting on your sofa clutching a lottery ticket. Rather the kind of hope that gifts us a profound sense of purpose. The kind of hope that the US writer Rebecca Solnit, describes as strong enough to propel you off the sofa, outta the house. And in her words is like an axe to break down doors with in an emergency because as she says, to hope is to give yourself to the future. And that commitment to the future is what makes the present inhabitable. Making the present inhabitable right now means urgently tackling the accelerating climate and nature crises.
And our challenge is not to accomplish as much as possible, it is rather to expand the very limits of the possible so we can accomplish what is scientifically necessary, not what is just deemed to be politically convenient. And that means cultivating hope building tomorrow, today in our actions. And in so doing, accelerating the better future that we know is out there As the Booker Prize-winning novelist, Aati Roy reminds us; another world is not only possible, she is on her way and on a quiet day I can hear her breathing. I hope everyone receiving an award today can hear that other world breathing.
And I hope that they have every possible opportunity to help create that better world. And so I'd like to end by thanking you again for the honour of this degree by congratulating all those who are receiving awards at this time. And by expressing my very best wishes for the future success of everyone associated with this wonderful ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
I call upon the Director of the Institute of Development Studies, Professor Peter Taylor.
[Director of the Institute of Development Studies, Professor Peter Taylor stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Peter Taylor:
Chancellor,
I present to you for the degree of Master of Arts in Development Studies...
Prince ADU-APPIAH
Ishita AGARWAL
Andres Felipe ALEGUE GIRALDO
Arifa Mamane AMADOU ARIFA
Bernardo ARCE FERNANDEZ
Raheel ASLAM
Lucia AWAD GUTIERREZ
Aliha Jannah BABAR
Michaela BECCONSALL
Mohammad Shafiq BESMIL
Deeksha BILLA
Lauren CASHMORE
Chitranshi Charu DHAMI
Ross DUNCAN
Emma EVANS
Bianca FORMENTON MACOLA
Chuchu FU
Shiyona Ann GIJO
Syed Hammad HAIDER
Thomas MARSDEN
Christopher Harding MAYHEW
Deep MEHTA
Tara MOHANDAS
Salome MONTERO SOLIS
Mandira MURALI
Nooreen MUSHEER
Aishath NAHUMA
Simon Kariuki NDUNGU
Van Ngoc Tuong NGUYEN
Antonin Lucas Quentin OLSZAK-OLSZEWSKI
Rebecca Anuoluwapo OLUWAPONMILE
Kirti PATIDAR
Aleksandra PIATEK
Jose Alejandro RODRIGUEZ DIAZ
Ibanrapsbun RYNJAH
Than Zin SANN
Woo Palak Jignesh SHAH
Ali Afnan SYED
Tomoko TAZAWA
Chintya TJUSANTO
Lingmin XU
Mariia ZAKHARCHENKO
For Gender and Development…
Jyldyz ABDYLDAEVA
Aisha Ahmad
Marian ANSAH
Natalie Claire
Arnold Amna Ashraf Ronisha BHATTACHARYYA
Faith CHIAZOR
Simin Ibnat DHARITREE
Arina HATATE
Aminata JAITEH
Honoka KANEKO
Naa Komley KLEMESU
Sunderta LASHARI
Nelly Wanjiku MUNGE
Frida Mariana QUEVEDO COVARRUBIAS
Emma Simon Shreya TAMRAKAR
Firewoyni Solomon TEWOLDE
For Globalisation, Business and Development…
Yuwa ARIMOTO
Anushka BHANSALI
Soru HIRATSUKA
Durdana MAHFUZ
Ellena MOUZOURIS
Jada ORLEBAR-EARLE
For Governance, Development and Public Policy…
Esther Temitope ADEYEMO
Mary Ebube CHIEJINA
Maria Cecilia FIOCCHI
Nikita JAWA
Ya Fatou B JOOF
Ana KOURCHENKO MENDOZA
also the recipient of the IDS award for the best overall result and for the highest dissertation results, Caitlin Anne MCCOY
Maria Alejandra ORMENO OVIEDO
Josedomingo PIMENTEL CAVALIE
Aarushi SHARMA
Hemangi SHARMA
Rachna VYAS
For Poverty and Development…
Nancy LEGGETT
For Power, Participation and Social Change…
Ximena CANSECO MICHEL
Mariel MIRANDA MIRANDA
Daniel ORREGO CABANILLAS
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
for the thesis;
A gendered ideational political economy analysis of policy reforms in India's Maternity Benefit Act (1919 to 2017)
Meenakshi KRISHNAN
For the thesis;
Intersectional-Subjectivities, Embodied-Experiences and Everyday- Responses among the Maasai Community amidst Environmental Changes: A Mara Ecosystem Insights
Eunice Eunice MUNERI
For the thesis;
Illegal gold mining in Ghana: Revealing the hidden face of South-South collaboration,
Akua TWUMASI-ANOKYE
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the Institute of Development Studies.
[The Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Keith Jones, goes to the lectern to present any late graduands]
Professor Keith Jones:
Chancellor,
I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in International Relations...
Ali SOHAIL
For the postgraduate diploma in Climate Change, Development and Policy…
Ugwunna Godswill Iroegbu
For the degree of Master of Arts in Conflict, Security and Development...
Diepriye Tonjo Korubo
Temitope Oluseun Olayiwola
In International Relations...
Salman Assaf S Aboethnin
For the Doctorate of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Going nowhere fast: Infrastructure, place and power in the Western Italian Alps
Gabriel Popham
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Graduates, if you are able to, I'd like to ask you to all stand and on the stage as well.
[Graduands and staff stand]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Thank you very much. I formally confer degrees on all those of the aforementioned. Congratulations Sussex graduates.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Thank you. Please take a seat. Well, congratulations again. Wow, that was quick. Congratulations everyone again, including our honoris causa Dr. Lucas, Thank you for your inspiring words as ever. Interlaced more with literary references that, I've heard before, which is fantastic and a joy, but it also reminded me about with regards to hope, which is so crucial and even more crucial at the moment when you're dealing with kind of, they're reading the dogs, they're reading the dogs. If you knew who that was, well done.
Hope is incredibly powerful and necessary. And I remember reading this is what reminded me when you were speaking, uh, a fantastic definition of positivity, which is positivity is not thinking it's all gonna be great. Positivity is thinking, whatever it is now, it can get better. And so that's a fundamental thing to hang on to. So thank you for reminding me of that as well. The other two takeaways I've got from this morning ceremony are one, you know, Jose came dancing on and I responded with possibly the worst dad dancing that I've done in years. I am a dad, so I can hide behind that, but nevertheless, and also, I'm gonna get a baby. I'm just gonna carry a baby around because immediately people want you.
Anyway, you all smelled lovely as well, which is a bonus for me. So as your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and to each other as alumni and see your relationship with Sussex as a lifelong one. And whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even further academic study, or simply some time out, I wish you all the best.
In closing the ceremony the chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring or impart some wisdom. I'm never more conscious than I am at the winter graduations of being the least smart person in the room. But here's some thoughts that you are free to ponder, ignore or even better approve, improve upon. As your Sussex chapter ends, the future begins and it's imperative that you get to write your future, that you have some say in your story, because if you don't, someone else will.
There is one thing that you can and will always be better than anyone else in history. And that's being you. That's what makes you special. And you get the opportunity every day to be a better you. That is your gift. Another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a really healthy place to be. You all have, we all have a wonderful personalised resource, a handbook made, especially for you, just for you full of pointers, how to be a better you. It's called your past. You can access that to learn on, to improve on choices that you made before, that weren't so great, and repeat things that you did really well. And if you read and listen to other people's past, you can learn from that too. So dip into those whenever you can, but don't live there. Regrets are pointless. Living is now the present. And that gift is that you get the chance to be better every single day. And then there's your future, as I said, it's yet unwritten, but waiting for you to write it and write it with as much positive language as you can muster. Fill your future with ambition, hope, dream and joy. Resist filling it with guilt, fear, anger, regret. I'm not sure if you can manifest physical things, but you can manifest a mindset.
A few days ago I spoke to a really close friend of mine that I've known since my university days, and she just lost her home in the California fires. And she's not a wealthy celebrity or anything like that. She's an everyday lawyer and lived in a normal neighbourhood. And she's been told that it'll take between three to five years to rebuild her house and her community. And I asked her how she was feeling right now. And she said that she was upset that she couldn't save personal things like photographs, but everything else could be replaced. But she added, I believe that my life will get better. And I said to her, well, then it will. 'cause you just decided it will. She could have said, I'm scared of the future. I'm worried about how we're going to effectively start again at this age. And that would've been her present, and that would've been the direction that ahead would've been pointing. It would take a lot more effort to get to a positive place from there.
So whenever you can try to give yourself the most positive, hopeful platform to start from, it's challenging to find perspective when one is overwhelmed. So, like my friend, I tried to reach for a simplicity that I think that helps me. I found the healthiest place to be in is one of gratitude. Feeling grateful makes you feel lucky all the time. It brings a semblance of calm that opens doors to your own, vast reserves of empathy and compassion. When negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just crappy life stuff, you know, you just, you deal with it and you move on. When it happens to someone who feels unlucky, it feels personal and defining and stressful, and it compounds. Yet, why does it always happen to me? What did I do wrong? Why am I so unlucky? An existent existential cry to the universe for help? A lucky person doesn't ask those questions. They're just too busy looking for solutions and to their next decision.
Sometimes it is a challenge to find gratitude, but the more you look for it, the easier it becomes to access until it's just a habit. It's just who you are. So take hold of your narrative and use it to consistently improving. Be unconditionally you. Now I often hear people say things like, well, they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them. You know, if they respect me, I'll respect them. If they're not gonna show me respect, I'm not gonna show them respect. All of these things are conditional. What it says to me is that you, they're all based on the act of someone else. So in that, in those scenarios, who's really controlling the narrative? Be nice, listen, respect, because that's just who you are. If the other person doesn't reciprocate, then that's them being them. You be you.
When we feel overwhelmed by anything, grief, anger, anxiety, regret, fear, envy love, beauty, we can lose even momentarily perspective. If we then have to make a decision in that head space, we may make decisions that we wouldn't have made if we were feeling calmer. So feel all the emotions, because you have a right to every one of them. But find a route back to perspective. The quickest route is to talk to someone, get another viewpoint. Even just hearing yourself saying it out loud, can help clarify things and then find your way back to gratitude. Then make your next decision. I mean, that may sound like a long-winded process, but the more you do it, the quicker it becomes just a word on planning and life.
A lot of people will be thinking about planning and stuff. Now, planning is great. It's really, really useful. It allows you to see and build your steps towards a goal. But planning is linear, right? It has to be. It's one sort of rung of a ladder falling the next, life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, the WTF World Tennis Federation, in case you're wondering, that's normal. So be okay with your plan and okay, when it's disrupted, that's just life. As I've intimated before, you have no idea what your future holds. So you may as well fill it with positivity. It may not change the outcome, but your journey to it at least, will be far healthier.
Now, I've got lived experiences of these, some of which you may know. Now, you may be aware that Sussex was my first choice many years ago when I first applied to universities. And I didn't get in. Apparently my grades weren't good enough. So I waited 25 years till all those people who were responsible for me not getting in, had either retired, were in prison, been deported, or just died. And I just came back in as chancellor. So, you know, where was linear planning then? I wanted to act right since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle that came to the house said to me, well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up? And I said, actor. And my dad said, it's pronounced doctor. Sadly true. So a career seemed absolutely impossible. But the dream was always sitting there behind, you know, a sea of fear and doubt. And at the age of 30, I sued the last company I was working for, for breach of contract. Couldn't get any kind of job for two years while that rattled through the legal process. And at 32, I thought, well, I'll have a go. I've got nothing to lose. And I or anyone else could not have foreseen that. Two years later I'd been a successful TV show, and it would be the start of a joyous career. Again, take that linear planning.
So don't define yourself by a bad day, a bad week, a bad month, or a bad year. I had a bad decade once. I came out of it. And don't be afraid of making mistakes. It's the human condition. Just make sure that each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making the same old mistake. That's the definition of an idiot. And I can't fail. I just can't. So I don't, 'cause I haven't given myself that option. I can learn or succeed, or even better, both.
Gary Oldman, the actor, said; I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised that what people thought of me was none of my business. So again, let them be them. You be you. And a quote attributed to George Elliot says, "It's never too late to be what you might have been." It's never too late. So in short, strive every day to be the best you. But who are you by the way? And who are we? We are always our next decision. And if that decision is kind and compassionate about other people, about ourselves, then we are being a better us.
As I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, whatever people you meet, leave that situation, leave that person in a better place than how you found it. Whether that be your neighbours, your friends, strangers, yourself or the planet. It hasn't worked with my kids' bedrooms yet, but I'm, I'm still picking up after them, so I'm working on that one. So I hope you take your gifts of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world, to each other and yourselves so you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you that you have the choice to be. And by the way, the answer to the life, the universe and everything is 42. If you know, you know. Good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you. For this day, I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing]
(Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Ceremony 2 at 1.30pm
Winter 2025: Ceremony 2
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of university senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here.
I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you - I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press ups, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press ups today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day, too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support.
We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective. You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time.
Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies.
All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment. Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future.
You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I now call upon the Deputy Head of the School of Law, Politics and Sociology, Professor Jo Bridgeman.
(Applause)
[the Deputy Head of the School of Education and Social Work, Professor Janet Boddy, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Jo Bridgeman:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Criminology...
April Moyle, James Quin
For History and Politics…
Keir DEVENEY BILLINGE
For Politics and Sociology…
Adna Osman
For Sociology…
Maria SZLENKIER
For the degree of Bachelor of Laws in Law…
Nessma MOHAMMED, Monica Anupama MONGARE, Obiaraure Chinomso Andrea OKORIE, Louis WEBER
For Law with Business and Management…
Diana ALNAHAHEEM
For Law with International Relations…
Aaya OTHMAN
For Law with Italian…
Alara DEREN
For Law with Media…
Kameron NIMOH-BROWN
For Law with Spanish…
Shevindi RATNAYAKA MUDIYANSELAGE
For the Postgraduate Diploma in For Law…
Hannah Louise French
For the degree of Master of Arts in Corruption and Governance...
Anthony Ayeromi OMOAKE, Megan CHANDLER, also awarded the prize for the Highest Mark in the Corruption and Government's dissertation supported by Good Corporation Pascal DILLABOUGH-LEFEBVRE, Daniel GALLAGHER, Anka GREINER, Louise MACHARETH SILVA, Eva MACIAS, Aiah Yornie Dunstan SODENGBE, Anusha TEERUTH.
For Criminology and Criminal Justice…
Dalal Mohammed H ALOTAIBI, Rawan Abdulaziz A ALTHOBAITI, Isabel BRACKSTONE, Jacob Chapman, Evelyn Hardman, Madeleine Levy, Tabitha Ngonyo NG'ANG'A, Tobias Ifeanyichukwu NNADI, Ezinne Akudo ONUOHA, Lea PAYET, Sarah Frederica May POYNDER, Megha Rajesh SHARMA, Elise STUART, Natkamon WATTANAPONG, Megan Wright.
For Gender Studies…
Rafal Bassam Salih AL NASSAR, Stephanie Vanessa AVALOS YANEZ, also awarded the prize for the best Gender studies dissertation Tallulah BARKER, Sharanya CHAKRABORTY, Jacqueline HOLLYHEAD, Shalom Peace MAKINDE, Kazuto MORISHITA, Lindsey Amoruso RIPPERT, Constanza Gabriela del Pilar SANTIBANEZ MANCILLA, Manaka SEKI, Anna SUENAGA, Wei Jia WANG.
For Law…
Grace BAWARA, Also awarded the prize for the best performance on the MA in Law Connor Byrne, Thomas Chatfield, Oluwafunto DADA, Leo GHORISHI, George Haddock, Jessica Harrison, Reanna Johnson, Luke Kimber, Paola KRYEMADHI, Cleo Monique LATTIN-RAWSTRONE, Carolyn Strandlie LEMENS, Kelly LOBBAN, Elvis OPPONG-MENSAH, Jack Patterson, Also awarded the prize for the highest LLM dissertation and the prize for the best performance on the MA in Law Ella RAYE, Breagh Rose, Angus Simpson, Lily SISSONS, Rozerin ULGUT, Rhiannon VESEY HOLT, Amber Adela White, Sophie Wilson, Phoebe Woolard.
For the degree of Master of Laws in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice…
Also awarded the prize for the best performance on the LLM in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Ben George Anderson, Beatrice Bentley, Digvijay BHUYAN, Rebecca Louise Cox, Jade KILDEA, Muhammad Zayad NADEEM, Jacqueline Atieno OMOL, Also the recipient of the Draper Law Scholarship Alicia RABINA, Kaat VANSWARTENBROUCK, Pradyuman VASHISHTH.
For Information Technology and Intellectual Property Law…
Yeliz BASARAN KAYA, Ipek Seden BAYKARA, also awarded the prize for the best performance on the LLM in Information Technology and Intellectual Property Law Teodora DRANGAZHOVA, Ilayda GULEY, Bilge GUNEY, Ruth Oluwaseyi MAKINWA, Fachran Dirgantara MUHAMMAD, Emine TASKIRAN.
For International Commercial Law…
Nasruddeen S S A S H ALTARARWA, Nalan Atlan, Goksun Nimet DEMIRDAG IMAM, Tugce DOGRAMACI, Chima Emmanuel EBENE, Emre EKMEKCI, Esra Sultan KOC, Abdullah Mohammed A KOMAN, also awarded the prize for the best performance on the LLM in International Commercial Law and the prize for the highest LLM dissertation mark Hannah MOUSSA, Sardar Muhammad MUNEEB, Paz NAVARRO BERNAL, Saeideh RAMEZANI NEJADKHAKIANI, Sivakami SEKHAR, Seydanur SIMSEK SEVMEZ, Jasmijn TOPS, Ezgi YILMAZ.
For International Financial Law…
Mohammad Salem S ABOBAKER, Yazeed ALSULAYMI, Cansu CIMSIT, also awarded the prize for the best performance on the LLM in International Financial Law and the prize for the highest LLM dissertation mark and the prize for the best overall performance on the LLM Solumto Bernard CHUKWUMA-NWAFOR, Numair Eyad I MADINI, Kayleen MIGUNA, Deborah Taiye OLOWOOKERE, Calvin Jeremie SOUBANA, Serhat YESILDAL.
For International Human Rights Law…
Abdullah Mohammed A ALSHAHRANI, Bhavleen N, Thirtha BOSU, Henry CURTIES, Hussain Ahmad Khan DAHA, Laurenta Nwabogor ESEZOBOR, Nana GHVALADZE, Claudia HENDRIKS, Denise Ivone MBOANA, Margaret MWAPE, Lucimar PRATA DOS SANTOS, Sumaya RAHAMAN.
For International Law…
Syed Jawad ABBAS also awarded the prize for the best performance on the LLM in International Law Emily Buckle, Pearlann Kim DCOSTA, Aakarshi JAIN, Yuki KASHIWABARA, Omar MULLA, Natchanon WACKVAREE.
For Law…
Ryhan Ali ABUSEDRA, Olabode Olubunmi ADEGOKE, Eman Saeed Abdulnabi Ahmed ALHUBAISHI, also awarded the prize for the best overall performance on the LLM in Law Ophelia GEARY, Karthik JAYAKUMAR, Nasser Ahmed Qassim Abdulla MALIK, Also a recipient of the prize for the highest LLM dissertation mark Lewis O’Connell, Maryam M H K QASEM, Maroof SANI, Anjali Indrajit SHELKE, Emin TURAN, Theodora Ekata UGWUAGBO.
Chancellor, I’ll now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis: The accommodation of Turkic peoples in politics and public life in Afghanistan: A rights-based approach
Moheb MUDESSIR.
Also awarded the Postgraduate Certificate for Social Research Methods and for the thesis:
Generate and Engage: The Autonomation of the Critical Targeting Functions of Lethal Autonomous Weapons Systems Through the Lens of International Humanitarian and International Criminal Law
Ioannis VALIAKOS.
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Law, Politics and Sociology.
[The Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Kate O’Riordan, goes to the lectern to present any late graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Kate O’Riordan:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Arts in Gender Studies...
Mariagorathy Ukamaka Onyenwosa
For Law...
Harriet Isabella Cox
For the degree if Master of Laws in Information and Intellectual Property Law...
Debsankar Banik Chowdhury
For International Law...
Muhammad Ahmad, Andrea Conde.
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you today and to other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
If I could ask you, if you can stand, and similarly on the stage as well,
[Graduands and staff stand]
I formally confer degrees on all the aforementioned. Congratulations graduates of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Please be seated, thank you.
Well, congratulations again, everyone. May I say that you smelled lovely. So, as your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and to each other as alumni and see your relationship with Sussex as one for life. Whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even further academic study, or simply some time out, I wish you the very best. I have to say I love these ceremonies. These are great. I mean, today we had a range of ages, we had range of backgrounds, we had at least two kids who came on who were little Harry Potters’. Did you see Elvis was in the building? This is as good as it gets.
But in closing the ceremony, the Chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring and impart some wisdom. And I already know from the brief meeting with you that you are all a lot wiser than I am. But here are some thoughts that you're free to ponder or ignore or even better improve upon. As this chapter, your Sussex chapter ends, the future begins and it's imperative that you get to write it. It has not been written yet. And that you have some say in your story, because if you don't write it, someone else will write your story. There is one thing that you can be and always will be better than anybody else at, and that's being you. That's what makes you special, because you are unique, and you get the opportunity every single day to be a better you. That is your gift.
Another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a useful place to be. The past cannot be changed. The future is yet to come. The present is real. And, you have a wonderful bespoke personalised, especially for your handbook, full of pointers, how to be a better you. It's called your past. You can access that to learn, to improve on choices that you made before. And if you did things well, then repeat those things and you know, you can easily learn from other people’s pasts as well to dip into those whenever you can. It's a resource. Regrets are utterly pointless. You know, I think every experience is useful. A regret isn't useful. And then there's the future yet as I said, unwritten, but waiting for you. And write it with as much positive language as you can muster. Fill your future with ambition, hope, dreams, joy, and resist filling it with fear, guilt, and anger. I'm not sure if you can, well, apart from the two Harry Potters’, that you can manifest real things, but you can manifest a mindset.
A few days ago, I spoke to a close friend of mine, and she and I have been friends since I was at university, and she lost her entire home in the fires in California. She's not a wealthy person; she’s not in the movies or anything like that. She's just an everyday lawyer. And she lived in a very normal neighbourhood, and she's been told it'll take between three and five years to rebuild her house and her community. And I asked her, I said, how are you? How are you feeling? How are you feeling right now? And she said, she was upset that she couldn't save some photographs because, you know, those were personal. She said, everything else can be replaced. And she added, but I believe that my life will get better. And I said to her, well, then it will, because you've just decided it will. You could have just thought, I’m scared about the future. How do I start again at my age? You know, everything I've lost. And that would've been her present. So, she would've been trying to move forward from that position. That negative - understandable. I'm not being judgmental at all. But, you know, that difficult position, takes a lot more effort to get positive from there than it does from starting from a positive place about your unwritten future. And it's challenging. It is challenging.
You know, one of the things when we're overwhelmed by anything, whether it's grief, whether it's anger, whether it's sadness, whether it's beauty, whether it's love. Whenever we're overwhelmed, we lose perspective, even momentarily. And if we must make decisions in that moment, they may not be the same decisions we would make if we were calmer. So, it becomes important to feel the emotion. Because you have a right to every single emotion there is. But then find your way back to perspective. Because if you can access perspective, then you've got a great chance of finding the healthiest state that your head can be in. And that's of gratitude. You know, if you are always grateful, you are in such a better place than so many people. Because feeling grateful makes you feel lucky. I feel lucky all the time. It's not tied to whether something good or bad happened to me today. That's just life stuff. You know? It's 'cause when negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just the crappy life stuff. You kind of go you deal with it, you move on. When it happens to someone who feels unlucky, it's always personal and defining and stressful, and it compounds as well. And it begs all those other questions. Why me? What did I do wrong? I gave to charity last week. I did a fun run, and now this has happened to me. You know? And so, they're all existential cries to the universe to kinda say, it's not fair. It's not fair. A lucky person doesn't ask those questions. They're too busy looking for solutions and moving on to their next decision. And sometimes it is a challenge to find gratitude, especially now we need to be more positive. As the vice chancellor mentioned, we live in a very turbulent world where, we also live in a world were, ‘They're Eating The Dogs, They're Eating The Dogs'. We, so we need to find that positivity in ourselves.
It is more challenging sometimes, as I said, but the more you do it, the quicker it becomes to access until it's just a habit. It's just who you are, to take hold of your narrative, to consistently improving unconditionally, be you. You must have heard this, when people say, ‘well, if they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them'. 'If they're not gonna respect me, I'm not gonna respect them'. You know, 'why should I listen to them if they're not gonna listen to me?'. Which all sounds reasonable, but that's all conditional, right? So, what it says to me is that you will act based on how someone else acts first. So, who's controlling the narrative there? It's not you. So be nice. Listen, respect, because that's who you are. If the other person doesn’t reciprocate, that's them being them. They've gotta work on that. You be you.
A word on planning and life, because obviously plans are made at times like this. Planning is great. It's really useful ‘cause it allows you to see and build steps to your goal, right? But planning is linear, right? It has to be. It's like rungs of a ladder, you step 1, 2, 3, 4, and then you get to the top. That's a plan. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor full of curve balls of the unexpected, weird coincidences, the WTF, -um, World Tennis Federation for the old people. That's normal. So be okay with your plan but be okay when it's disrupted. It's just life. As I said, your future is unwritten yet, and you may as well fill it with positivity. It may not change the outcome, but your journey to that point will be far healthier. And I've got lived experiences of the unwritten future. You may be aware, you may be not, that Sussex was my first choice when I applied to university many years ago. I didn't wanna go anywhere else, and I didn't get in. Apparently, my grades weren't good enough.
So, I waited 25 years until all those who were responsible for me not getting in, had either retired, had been deported, were in prison, or were dead. And I came back as chancellor. So, ha ha ha! Take that, Linear planning. And also, I wanted to act and write since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle came to a house and said to me, 'well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up?' And I said, actor. And my dad said, 'it's pronounced doctor’ -unfortunately true. So, a career seemed impossible but the dream was always there sitting behind a sea of fear and doubt. And at the age of 30, I sued a company I was working for with a breach of contract, and I couldn't get any kind of job for two years while it went through the legal process. And at 32, I had the chance to have a go. And I thought, well, I've got nothing to lose. I don't wanna be 70 years old and then regretting this moment. And no one, me or anyone else could have foreseen that within two years, I would be embarking on a relatively successful career. And again, take that, linear planning! Where were you then?
So, life as a disruptor, of course it can disrupt and bring negative stuff. If you really look at it, it can disrupt and take you to really positive things as well. So don't ever, ever define yourself by having a bad day or a bad week or a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once I came out of it. And don't be afraid of making mistakes. As long as each mistake is a new one. Don't keep making old mistakes. That's the definition of an idiot. And also, I decided I can't fail. And so I don't, yes, it really is that easy. I haven't given myself that option. I can learn or I can succeed, or both. Failure not an option. The actor Gary Oldman said, 'I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised, what people think of me is none of my business'. Let people be them. You be you. And a quote attributed to George Elliot says, ‘it's never too late to be what you might have been'. In short, it's never too late. Never too late. So, in short, again, strive every day to be the best you. If you wanna know, I can tell you that is your next decision. Your next decision is always who you are. And if that decision is kind and compassionate about other people, about us, about our environment, then we are being a better us.
As I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself, whoever you meet, try to leave that situation or person, if you can, better than how you found them. It hasn't worked with their bedrooms yet. I'm gonna have to find another tack to do that. I'm still picking up after them. So I hope you take your gifts of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world. Express it to each other and to yourselves so you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you. You have the choice to be.
And by the way, the answer to the life, the universe and everything is 42. If you know, you know, good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you. For this day, I officially declare this graduation closed.
Ceremony 3 at 4.30pm
Winter 2025: Ceremony 3
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing]
(A procession of University senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here.
I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts, loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many, today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'Time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00am lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'The assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow.
I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you, I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree. Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved.
It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech.
It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students.
Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since.
I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective. You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time.
Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is an outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment.
Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future.
You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that, too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I call upon the Deputy Head of the School of Education and Social Work, Professor Janet Boddy.
(Applause)
[the Deputy Head of the School of Education and Social Work, Professor Janet Boddy, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Janet Boddy:
Chancellor, I present to you for the Certificate in Higher Education...
Molly Hayes
For the Diploma of Higher Education...
Rohan Rahman
For the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Social Care...
Clara Bakari
For Social Work...
Mia Bittles
Katie DE CIANTIS
Madeleine ECCLES
Sophie Fletcher, and also the joint recipient of BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance
Bradley ISABIRYE
Charlotte Miller
Abigail Mitchell
Amber Nixon
Blue PETRAITIS-WILLIAMS
Lauren PORTELA-FELIX
also the joint Recipient of BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance Riley Reed
Jade SERVAT
Danielle Smith
Millicent WALKER-HYDE
Beth Whitby
Jenna White
and also the joint recipient of the BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance Rhiannon Williams
Charlotte Woodhouse
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education…
Ophélia GISQUET
Agnieszka GLOWKA
Helen Morley
Thomas Murphy
Nikoleta OSTREVA
Gerardo PUCHE JIMENEZ
Nicholas WHITTAKER
For Pedagogy and Practice…
Amal ABDULLE
Minty ACQUAH-MANKOE
Safin AHMED
Sehrish ALEEM
Tanjim ALI
Carlien Leonie BALDY-GRAY
Joanna Bentley
Tausif BHATTY
Luka BIANCARDI
Emma Burgess
Jack Burnage
Libby BUSHILL
Ed COWLARD
Alice Coyle
Kesia DAVIS
Charlotte Farrell
Abigail FLEMONS
Veronica Freeman
Ottilie FUGL
Scarlett FURNESS
Naomi Gibbs
Lucy GRASTY
Hannah Graveney
Rachel HAWS
Harrison HUBBARD
James Hughes
Natasha Hughes
Syeda Tahsin HUSSAIN
Zora HUSSAIN
Niamh HUTNELL
Amelia Kettle
Aliya KHAN
Arooj KHAN
Joshua Kitchener
Dylan Knott
Dillan Lad
Shumaila LODHIA
Yuness LOUNIS
Christy MOON
Jessica Moore
Raissa MOSENGO
Robin NEWBY
William Nicholson
Isabelle Nicola Thompson
Evelyn O'SHEA
Skye OEILLET
Katherine Parkinson
Zayba PATEL
Emily Phipps
Hajera RAHMAN
Rasa ROZAR
Anastasia Smith
Georgia Stanbrook
Felicity STATHER
Lianne STREETER
Sofya TRUKHINA
Clementina Tuck
Hamsa WARSAME
Tabitha Webster
Lorraine Williams
Isobel Willis
Hamna ZAHID
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Education in Art and Design…
Samiksha SUBRAHMANYA
For Business Studies…
Sarah Edwards
Philip Martin
For Computer Science...
Ines CARDOSO SOARES STAMP
Orion Robin VASILESCU
For Computing and Business Studies…
James Adams
For Design Technology…
Aimee BEARNE and company, we have a new recruit to the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ!
Elizabeth Cousins
Kate KIRVEN
For Drama…
Amara DARBYSHIRE
Sofia FALLEA
Sarah LKHAGVASUREN
Sophie LUCRAFT-MEE
For English…
Ellie Baker
Charlotte BYRNE
Alex CATHCART
Veronica Coates
Esme DE BULAT ATKINS
Amy Kelly
Roberta Lee
Amanda MORTENSEN
Finnley PEARCE
Jessica PELLING
Vivienne QUICK
Claire RAYNAL
George Sharp
Alexandra STEPHEN
Jordan WILLIAMS
For English and drama...
Megan JEFFERIES
For Geography…
Amelia CANAVAN-WHITE
Alexandra CARBALLO BROEN
Jessica Daley
Karen Dock
Eleanor Wright
For Health and Social Care…
Hannah North
For History…
Sannah DYER
Joshua Knight
Eleanor Massey HOWES
Isaac PYM
Matthew TRINDER
Dylan UREN THOMSON
Emma Wallace
Nathalie WREDE-QUINN
For Latin and Classics…
Edward Chan
Stephen Haynes
Olivia Pillinger
Izzy Shirley
For Mathematics...
Katie BURNISTON
Fletcher BURTON
Jack CROCKATT
Sophie CROSS
Callum Diplock
David GIRGIS
Kenna HOOK
Guillaume LE FLAHEC
Reilly MOULE
Annabel Porter
Ocean RAO DSOUZA
Donna STUART-TURNER
Christopher Ward
For Media Studies…
Nadine Stride
For Modern Foreign Languages…
Ronan BROWNE
Anna CARDASCIA
Paolo CAVALLARO
Diana CLAVIJO
Blanca DE DIOS GARCÍA
Solene DELICOURT
Caroline DURAND-DELGA
Julia GISPERT PÉREZ
Abigail Hughes
Izadora HUTCHESON-LOVETT
Kira Jardine
Gabriela Johnson
Alberto MAHAUAD CAMPODÓNICO
Layla Moore
Sophie PARISOT
Emmanuelle Pereira
Anaïs PRÉVOST
Josephine WOLFE
For Music...
Rosanna SUMMERS
For Primary...
Esther Tolulope ADELEKE
Emily Austin
Georgia BARKER
Georgina Barry
Sarah Bell
Eilish BONNAR
Rosie Bowman
Sophie-Louise Bullock
Emily Burton
Laura Chatfield
Adaora CHIME
Ossia DIMOGLOU TOHILL
Caroline Drury
Katharine East
Rebecca Folkard
Emily Gibbs
Aemilia Gillespie
Elliot Guest
Rachel Hall
Zaynab HAQ
Jocelyn Harris
Laura Harte
Hope HAWKSWORTH-PRATTEN
Madeline Hay
Martha LACY SCOTT
Tsz Tung LEE
Jasmine Merriman
Daisy Metcalf
Maisie Pollins
Elise Roberts
Sophie SKEATES-TUBB
Kayleigh SPENCER
Matthew STELLING
Louise TIDMARSH
Maeve TULLY
Serine TOUMI
Maeve TULLY
Joshua Warner
Isaac Watson
Phoebe White
Lily Wooldridge
Adam YOUSEMAN
For Psychology…
Lily COUGHLAN
Ella Dodge
Iyah MAHMOUD
Lauren Rice
For Science with Biology…
Shannon AZAVEDO
Ellen BULMER
Bethany Elliot
Chloe Ewen
Henry Turner
Amie WILKINSON
For Science with Chemistry…
Dinos APHAMIS
Thomas Hartley
Jonah Hillman
Chloe HOANG
Hannah Jackson
Holly Latta
Oscar OSPINA RODRIGUEZ
Isabelle Whittle
For Science with Physics…
Denina Addis
Brody CUNLIFFE
Carl HENNINGWAY
Inigo SACRISTAN ORTIZ
For the Postgraduate Diploma in Early Years Education (with Early Years Teacher Status)…
Bridget LE GRANGE
For Social Work…
Seun IBIDAPO
also awarded the John Simmonds Outstanding Achievement Award Sylvia Atieno KASINA
Hannah LETTS
Anushka LUTHER-SMITH
Benedicta MAWUENYEGA
Oluwatobiloba Deborah OLUYISOLA
Anaina Ann SANTHOSH
For the Master of Arts for Childhood and Youth Studies…
Akinsanya Adewale AKINOLA
Duygu Ayca DEMIRCI
Naomi Obehi ENORUWA
Jennifer FRAMPTON
Victoria Oluwatosin JOLOMI
Oghenekevwe Queen MMAMA
Adaobi Nneka OKOYE
Theresa Ekemma WILLIAMS-IBEMGBO
For Early Years Education…
Yvonne Ezinwanne DIBIO
Francesca VINCIS
For Early Years Education (with Early Years Teacher Status)…
Aleena AHMED
Adenike Florence AJAYI
Sophie ANDERSON
Tiffani HEADLEY
Daisy JORGENSEN
Rebecca MCGOUGH
For Education…
Jumoke Ruth ABODUNRIN
Grace Oluwadamilola ADENIJI
Israel Oluwafemi ADENIRAN
Jemima Bentley
Yan CAI
Harriet Freya CASSWELL
Confidence Onyinye CHUKWU
Ashley DAVIDS
Lashawnda Michelle DAVIDS
Ozlem DEMIRHAN TOPALOGLU
Sorry, I'm going to get it right. I'm sorry. Oluwanisola FAGUN
Chauvan HARDING
Leah JEPCHIRCHIR
Elias KIPCHIRCHIR
Hillary KIPKOSGEI
Stella KNIGHT
Ethel Ujunwa ONWUDINJO
Frank OPPONG
Ning RONG
Taofeeqot Teniola SALAUDEEN
George SARBAH
Rebecca SCHNEIDER
Emmanuel Olamiji SHOFUYI
Rachel Smith
Nikita SOUTHALL
Alison TEAGLE
Andrea UPHUS
Emmanuela Nnenna UZOMBA
Ngoc Quynh Anh VU
Jonathan Mark WAITE
Michelle Williams
Qianqian YANG
For International Education and Development…
Busayo Opeyemi ABAYOMI
Eunice Oreoluwa ADEKUNLE
Emma AHMED
Ijeoma Maureen AMAECHI
Isma AMJAD
Siotepoh D BROH
Carlitos Jorge CASSIMO
Rachel CATERER
Chilufya Mulenga CHILUFYA
Emily COLLARD
Dante D'AMICO
Blessing Tunde DADA
Ali Aftab GHIAS
Yuki IOKIBE
Emmanuel Temiloluwa JOSHUA
also awarded the Luke Akaguri Memorial Prize, awarded for the Best Dissertation, title, LGBTQIA+ student experiences in South Korean secondary schools: the exclusion within Sung education Min Soo KIM
Danielle Marshall
Eduarda MODELLI CUALHETE
Kate Rebecca MUNDAY
Victor Chukwubuikem NDUNNA
Kingsley Kelechi OMEIKE
Ibrahim SULEIMAN
Namse Peter UDOSEN
Xinyu WEN
For Social Work…
Elena CAMPBELL
Catherine McCarthy
Morgan Chukwunyelum OKONKWO
also the recipient of the Joan Cooper Memorial Award Gabriella RENNIE
Georgia VALENTI
Ruby ZATCHIJ
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Navigating gendered terrains: Female social workers’ perspectives on working with boys and young men who display harmful sexual behaviours.
Anna HUTCHINGS
For the thesis;
A study of professional connectedness and isolation in the learning lives of remote and peri-urban primary school teachers in Indonesia.
Imelda Dwi Rosita SARI
For the thesis;
Producing and policing elite bodies: A study of the construction of schoolgirl femininities in a private, independent girls' secondary school in England.
Louise Taylor
Chancellor, This concludes the list of graduands from the very wonderful School of Education and Social Work.
[The Provost, Professor Michael Luck, goes to the lectern to present any late graduands]
Professor Michael Luck:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Art in Education...
Janki Sahil Gadhia
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
May I ask if you can, for the graduands to stand up, and same on the stage, colleagues, if you wouldn't mind standing.
[Graduands and staff stand]
So by the powers invested in me by the Senate of the university, I formally confer degrees on all those aforementioned.
Congratulations, university of Sussex graduates.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Okay, please take a seat. Thank you. Well, that happened. Congratulations, everyone again. You all look terrific and you smelled lovely, which is sometimes even more important. What a fantastic ceremony that was. It was so lovely to set, to have so many kids come up, and this is your day as well. And so many of you were so kind about me and my work, and that's really humbling. And you know, what was even more humbling, was that my position as chancellor was almost taken away by a small child who refused to get up from the chair. So, this could have been a short-lived tenure for me today. But that was all fabulous. And thank you for your kindnesses.
So as your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and each other as alumni and see your relationship with the university as lifelong. And whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even further academic study, or simply some time out, I wish you the very best in closing the ceremony. The chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring or impart some wisdom, but I'm already, you know, by meeting you briefly, I know that you are all way more wise than I am. But I'll give you some thoughts that I've been thinking about. And feel free to ponder them, ignore them, or even better, improve upon them.
It struck me today, actually, with all the ceremonies today, that one of the things about these ceremonies, that I love so much about doing these ceremonies is that it's a room full of achievement. It's a room full of celebration. It's a room full of potential, and it's a room full of hope. And those are really fabulous things to be stepping forward, towards. And you know, right now as the as the vice chancellor alluded to in the opening speech that, you know, it's a very troubled world. There's lots of very challenging things going on at the moment. And so the ability to be hopeful and to see potential and to move forward, I think is more important than ever and to be positive.
And there was somebody that had wrote a very good definition of positivity, which is, positivity isn't thinking, everything's going to be turn out great. It's the things may be terrible now, but they can get better. And that is positivity, especially, you know, now at the moment with all things that are going in the world. And, you know, such things as they're eating the dogs, they're eating the dogs. I mean, you, yeah, we've gotta remain positive through all of that. No one was eating the dog anyway. Anyway, we need to say that. But as your Sussex chapter ends, the, the future begins.
And I do feel it's imperative, that unwritten future, that you get to write yours. Because if you don't have your say in your own story, someone else will write it for you. And there's one thing that struck me, that you can and always will be better than anybody else ever. And that is being you. That's what makes you special. And you get the opportunity every day to be a better you. And that is your gift. And another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a really useful and healthy place to be. The past can't be changed. Regrets are pointless.
You know, those are just things that you haven't learned from to learn from it and turn it into a positive. And as I said, the future is yet to come. And we all have a fantastic personalised resource made specially for us, a handbook, full of pointers on how to be a better you. And that's called your past. Dip into that you can access it to improve on things that you did before, that didn't turn out great, and to repeat things or improve things that you did before, that were good, to dip into those whenever you can. But as I said, don't live there. Don't live in the past. Living is now. Then the future, as I said, it's unwritten.
And when you write your future, I would urge you to fill it with as much positive language as you can. Muster some I've already mentioned. But fill your future with ambitions and with hope and with dreams and with joy and compassion and kindness, and resist filling it with fear, anger, and guilt. I'm not sure if you can actually manifest real things, but you can manifest a mindset. A few days ago I spoke to a, a really close friend of mine who I've known since my university days. And she had lost her home in the fires in California. And she's not a wealthy celebrity working in films or anything like that. She's just a regular lawyer and worked in a regular neighbourhood. And she told me that, she was told it would take between three to five years for them to rebuild their home and their neighbourhood. And I asked her, I said, how are you feeling right now? And she told me that she was upset she couldn't save some photographs because they were really personal, but she said, other than that, everything else could be replaced. And I said, well but how are you feeling about the future? And she said, I believe my life will get better. Absolutely believe it. And I said, well, then it will, because you've just decided it will.
You know, she could have just thought, you know, how do I feel? Oh gosh, I feel upset and depressed and scared, and how do I start again at my age and all the things I've lost? And none of it would've been being judgmental about it. That would've all been perfectly acceptable. But she didn't. She took a very, very positive platform to move forward. If she hadn't, if she'd taken a negative position first, a completely understandable one, getting to somewhere positive would've been a much longer journey. And it's kind of, it's challenging, to find perspective at times like that. I think when we're overwhelmed, you know, whether it's by be, grief or anger or sadness or love or beauty, you know, when we are overwhelmed, we lose perspective even for a short space of time. And if we have to make a decision in that short space of time, it may not be the decision we would make when we were calm. So it's absolutely important to feel everything. Oh my goodness. You have the right to every single emotion, but then quickly to find your way back to perspective. And the quickest way really is to talk to somebody. I mean, you just get another viewpoint. Even hearing yourself saying out loud can help clarify things.
And what, where it takes you to, is a place of gratitude. And that is the healthiest place to live. Live in gratitude because you feel lucky. I feel lucky all the time, and not because of something that happened today or yesterday. Just feel lucky. I feel blessed. I feel grateful. Because feeling that, I think, allows the doors to open to your own vast reserves of empathy and compassion. And when negative stuff, as it does happen to a lucky person, it's just crappy lifestyle. It's just stuff that comes along and you go, yeah, that's wasn't good, but it's gone. And you deal with the next thing. When it happens to an unlucky person, it begs all those other questions like, why me? Why does it always happen to me? You know, I did a fun run last week and raised money and for charity, and now this week this has happened. You know, everything becomes kind of transactional in a way. It becomes personal and defining and stressful, an existential cry to the universe for help. A lucky person doesn't ask those questions simply 'cause they're too busy looking for solutions and onto their next decision. So take hold of your narrative, use it consistently improving. Be unconditionally You. You must have heard this. Have you had people who kind of say, or are you the sort of person who says, 'Well, if they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them. If they respect me, then I'll respect them. If they don't listen to me, I'm not listening to them'. Which all sounds reasonable until you then think about who's really controlling the narrative here. It's the other person. It's not you. You are reacting the whole time. So be nice, respect, listen Because that's who you are. And if they don't reciprocate, that's them being them. That's their problem. You be you.
A word on planning and life. You know, planning is great. Really important, very useful, you know, obviously, 'cause it allows you to see the steps that build towards your goal. But, planning is linear, right? Straight lines like, ladder, you go one, step two, step three. So you get to the top. That's what a plan is. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor, full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, WTFs, World Tennis Federation for the -for the old people. That's just normal. That is what life does. So be okay with your plan, absolutely, and then be okay when it's disrupted. 'cause that's okay too. It's just life. You just have to think about your next choice at that time. You have no idea what your future holds. You really don't. So you may as well fill the journey to it with positivity. It may not even change the outcome, but your journey to it will be a lot healthier and just a lot more fun. Now, I've got lived experiences of the unwritten future and, you know, life as a disruptor, taking you somewhere.
So you may be aware that Sussex was my first choice for universities when I applied as an undergraduate. And I didn't get it because apparently my grades weren't good enough. So I waited 25 years until all those people who were responsible for, for me not getting in, were either very old, were in prison, had been deported or just dead, and I came back as chancellor. So he, hey! Where was linear planning then? Linear planning - zero, life - one. And also, I wanted to act and write since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle came to the house and said, 'well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up?' And I said, actor. And my dad said, 'it's pronounced doctor' and it's true story. So I wanted to do it since I was five. But you know, career seemed impossible. But the dream was always sitting there behind a sea of doubt and fear. And at the age of 30, I sued the last company I was working for, for breach of contract. And I couldn't get any kind of job for two years while the whole thing rolled through the legal process. And at 32, I thought, I don't want to be 70 years old and regretting not trying. So I'll have a go. And I would not have foreseen, and neither would anyone else, that within just two and a half years I'd be in a successful TV show and would just enjoy an incredibly joyous, fortunate career. So again, I have to say, take that linear planning! Linear planning - zero, life - two.
So don't define yourself by a bad day or a bad week, a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once, but I came out of it. And don't be afraid of making mistakes. Just make sure each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making the same old mistake. That's the definition of an idiot. And you are not that. And the other thing that I realised, which is, which may be useful to you, I realised I can't fail. Ha! how about that? I just can't. So I don't. I haven't failed for years simply because I have not given myself that option. I can either learn or succeed or both. That's it. There is no failure. You know, all those things. People go, you failed, you go, I learned something. Thanks. Goodbye. Gary Oldman, the actor - brilliant actor, said, 'I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised, what people thought of me was none of my business'. That's down them. I go back to that thing, let them be them. You be you. A quote attributed to George Elliot says, 'It's never too late to be what you might have been'. The message of that, it's never too late. Never. Don't ever let anyone tell you it's too late. So in short, strive every day to be the best you. Who is the best you, by the way? I can tell you that we are always our next decision. Always. Our next choice is who we are. And if that decision is kind and compassionate about people, about ourselves, then we are being the better us.
As I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, whatever person you meet, leave that situation, leave that person in a better place than how you found it or them. And, you know, that works for people, yourself or the planet. - It hasn't worked with their bedrooms, by the way. I'm still having to pick up stuff behind them. I'm gonna have to find another way of dealing with that. So finally, I hope you take your gift of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world, to each other and yourselves every day. So you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you. You have the choice to be. And by the way, the answer to the life, the universe and everything is 42. If you know, you know, good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you. For this day, I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Thursday 23 January 2025
Ceremony 4 at 10am
Winter 2025: Ceremony 4
- Video transcript
A full transcript of this ceremony will appear here shortly.
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of university senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.]
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here. I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you - I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed.
We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective. You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time.
Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about. One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics.
And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment.
Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future. You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I now call upon the Executive Dean of the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities, Professor Cornel Sandvoss.
(Applause)
[The Executive Dean of the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities, Professor Cornel Sandvoss. stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Cornel Sandvoss:
Chancellor, I present to you for the Certificate of Higher Education...
Holly Harland.
For the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Drama and Film Studies...
Tirion Lewis.
For Drama with French...
Cara MCEVOY.
For English (with a study abroad year)…
Elsa PAHL.
For English and History…
John Murray.
For History...
Imogen Sanders.
For History and Philosophy…
Aisha Khan.
For Media and Communications...
Mia CANNON JEWELL.
For Media Production…
Yi Rong CHAN, Yasmin WATSON-HELFRICH.
For Philosophy and Sociology…
Lily Bell.
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Filmmaking…
Edward Thompson.
For the degree of Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics in TESOL...
Fatima Ronke AKINGBADE, Ceylan AKTURK, Khoi DOAN MINH, Sayyora USIBALIEVA.
For Art History and Museum Curating…
Zoe BASHESKA, Daisy Ella Marama JESSOP, Olivia Keenan, Caitlin Marie MYERS, also the recipient of the Art Scholars Ma Award; Emily Pryke, Madeline Woodhouse.
For Contemporary History…
Lisa Fairbank, Sheng YANG.
For Creative and Critical Writing…
Kate Frances, Beth McLean, Akshayaa SURESH, Lauren UGHETTI, Nuur Aqilah ALI, Nisan CAPRAZ, Lubing CHEN, Xiaotian CHEN, Yudan CHEN, Upamanyu DHAR, Chengxun LI, Youwen WU, Jincheng YUAN, Laith ZEHNI.
For Digital Media…
Seda ATES, Ava AUBREY CONBOY, Haichang LOU, Khadejh Saddik A SENDI, Harriet Emily SKILLINGTON, Xueer XIAN.
For English, Literature, Culture and Theory…
Jessica Bone, Eleanor Browning, Ellie Bunker, Anna Magdalen KELESIDOU, Anna Morlin. Anna Magdalen KELESIDOU, Alia Jumana RAHMAN, Shambhavi SHUKLA, Lucas Yelland.
For Film Studies...
Thomas Joyce, Farzana Bint MOHAMMAD, Atreyo PALIT, Thomas TSOUKARIS.
For Filmmaking...
Alexina Burton, Amogh Jayant GHADI, Sophie Louise LEIJSER, Junzhe LIANG, Xihao LIU, Yi LIU, Shubham MATTA, Wiktoria PIATKOWSKA, Giovanni RIZZO, Nareeman Hany Elsayed Mohamed SHARAF, Devansh SONI, Amalia THOMAS.
For Gender and Media…
Vafa ALIZADA, Angela Miel BUENSUCESO, Dipanjana DASGUPTA DEY, Esraa Saleh Saleh ELSAYED, Judith FRAHM, Dushica LAZOVA, Khumbuzile MBUQE, Avril Estefania MURILLO GUTIERREZ Francesca SYLPH.
For International Journalism…
Eunice Olufikayo AMPITAN.
For Journalism and Documentary Practice…
Noah BATURE, Anna Eaton, Ravi Babubhai PARMAR, Jeevan Kochumalil RAJ, Chowdhury Mohammad SAYEDUL ABRAR, Bowen WANG.
For Journalism and Media Studies…
Mikaela Brookings, Valerie Chioma, Rebecca Taiwo OJEKUNLE, Aditya Ravi PALIMKAR, Maripaz Beatriz RIVERA, Hanyue SONG, Fahad ULLAH.
Chancellor, this concludes the first part of the presentation of graduands from the Faculty of Media Arts and Humanities.
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
I call upon Tim Hopkins, Associate Professor of Music, to present Tony McCaulay.
[Tim Hopkins, Associate Professor of Music stands and approaches the lectern to present Tony McCaulay.]
Professor Tim Hopkins:
Chancellor, vice chancellor, colleagues, graduands, friends and families.
'Last night, I didn't get to sleep at all', is the title of just one of the top 10 hit songs Tony McCauley wrote during one part of his artistic life to date as a songwriter, a producer, a novelist, a musical theatre composer, and an educator. It occurred to him in a state of jet lag while attending a songwriting event in Japan. We hope that there aren't any time zone issues today, or if there are, we hope that they inspire another top 10 hit. In a 2018 interview, Tony remarked that he never looked for awards and that sometimes it seemed to him he was much more likely to win them if he didn't think about them. We are very pleased to be able to help Tony continue this statistical trend of unsought honour as we welcome him to receive the richly deserved salute of an Honorary Doctorate of Music from us.
I should add that during his career, Tony must have been not thinking about awards a lot 'cause he's actually received a huge number of them, including the Ivor Novello Award nine times, twice as Songwriter of the Year. The Evening Standard Drama Award, and the Ivan Novello Award for Best Musical and other recognition such as an invitation to compose a piece marking the 60th birthday of her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth. Like honorary degrees, these things are not given out lightly. They reflect the respect of industry peers in very competitive fields. They mark a hugely productive creative life across highly competitive media, but they also reflect something else, something more profound. They mean that Tony's creativity has touched the emotional life of the public.
Statistics here too are more than impressive. Top 20 hit songs in the UK, with seven number ones, hit songs in the USA with three number ones. His songs have been sung by Elvis Presley, Tom Jones, Olivia Newton John, Gladys Knight, Donna Summer, Sonny and Cher, Glenn Campbell, Andy Williams, Cliff Richard, Silla, Black, Sandy Shaw, The Fifth Dimension, David Soul, The Hollies, Matt Monroe, Scott Walker, The New Seekers, The Drifters, The Foundations, Annie Lennox and John Bon Jovi and that is an edited list. This means that millions of people have heard Tony's music. They've carried it around inside them, they've connected it's stories to their inner lives and more are doing so all the time. As of today, his song 'Build Me Up Buttercup', which he also produced, has been streamed on Spotify over 545 million times.
Writing in the early 1600', The great Italian composer, Claudio Monteverdi as he went about the business of inventing opera, the then new art form on the block, was trying to analyse how storytelling through song actually worked. Like Tony, whose original training was in engineering, Monteverdi liked to work out how the moving parts of the whole acted together to be bigger than the sun. How the magical telepathy of a great song came about. Like Tony, he was great at passing on insights arising from his investigations. May we invoke one, which the enduring success of Tony's work bears out, the end of all good music is to affect the soul.
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Doctor of Music, honoris causa, Tony Macaulay.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar and honoris causa, Tony Macaulay shake hands in the middle of the stage. Chancellor bestows upon him the Certificate. Honoris Causa will then go to the lectern to deliver his speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
By the power vested in me by the authority of the Senate, gives me great pleasure to confer upon you the degree Doctor of Music, honoris causa.
Here's the proof.
(Applause)
Honoris causa, Tony Macaulay:
Chancellor, I just like to begin by thanking you and the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ for this very great honour. I'd particularly like to thank all those who champion me for this award. I'm very grateful to you all, thank you.
It's commonly said that someone who turns their hobby into a successful career never does a day of work in their lives. On that basis, I'm not entirely sure what it is I've been doing for the last 60-some years, but I do know that this given me a host of wonderful memories, a ready supply of fine wines and whiskey and the love of a beautiful woman. And more than that, no man can ask.
I didn't start out in music, I started out, as you've heard, in civil engineering. I trained here in Brighton and the only job I could get was designing sewage treatment plants, wonderful ammunition for my critics in the future. Sometime later, a journalist who loathed me wrote, "Songwriter Tony Macaulay used to work in sewers. Now instead of shovelling it, he writes it". Nice man, dead now… pity.
To the general public songwriters are an anonymous breed. The man sitting opposite you on the train could probably hung half a dozen of your hits, but in all likelihood, he will have no idea who you are. A songwriter friend of mine tells a good story on that theme. He was in a public toilet once, and the man in the next stool to him began to whistle one of my friend's big hit songs without considering the advisability of talking to strange men in public toilets. He said, ‘Oh, I wrote that song’. The man looked at him And he said, 'Who are you, then?' So my friend said, I'm Barry Mason. He said, 'I've never heard of you, and anyway, that song was written by Les Reed.' My friend said, 'Yes, yes. Les Reed wrote the music. I wrote the lyric.' A man said 'I wasn't whistling the bleeding lyric, was I?'
The music industry that I joined many decades ago was very poorly regulated. There were a lot of crooks and shysters in the business who exploited the young people they signed up to sing, play, and write and ripped them off shamelessly. I took a test case to the House of Lords and had the very oppressive standard form songwriters contract their much in use overturned in this centre shockwaves for the industry that resonates to this day. And I can say to those of you here who might yet go into the music business, you will find a kinder and more equitable industry than the one my generation knew.
As you've heard, I've had many memorable moments in my life, but none more so, that when I was commissioned to write a new work to celebrate her majesty of the Queen's 60th birthday. This was performed by 6,000 children in the Four Court of Buckingham Palace in the largest rehearsed musical event in history. Some hours later, I had tea with her Majesty, and I asked her, 'What was the best part of your big day?' And she, she naturally mentioned the children. She looked a bit weary by this point. So I asked her 'And what was the worst part?' And she said, 'Having one's hair messed around with three times in a day.'
Well, today is my big day and as you can see, that's not a problem actually I'm gonna be having!
Thank you so much, Chancellor. Thank you Sussex University and thank you, too.
(Applause)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
I call upon the Executive Dean of the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities, Professor Cornel Sandvoss.
[The Executive Dean of the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities, Professor Cornel Sandvoss. stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Cornel Sandvoss:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Master of Arts in Media and Cultural Studies...
Jessica Christina Bond, Harry Cox-Day, Paul Hunter, Yewande Oluwakemisola IFARINDE, Sushmita Ritu MALAKER, Zihan TENG, Zhongyin XING Nantao XU.
For Media Practice for Development and Social Change…
Sarah Tarek Nabil AMR, Jeremiah Emmanuel Dwight BAILEY-HOOVER, Kerenza Joy BAKER, Kitty BURROWS, Charlotte Lynn Eagleson, Manami EGUCHI, Grace Elizabeth ENGARD, Jessica FORTUNA, Sophia Laverne HEYMAN, Annabel Rice Johnson, Ella JOICEY, Heather Kerr, Mitali Prashant KULKARNI, Amanda Victoria LAGO, Mc Jazer MALONDA, Also the recipient of the Cate Haste Scholarship in Media and Film; Mohammed Zeeshan Varish Ahmed TIRMIZI, Kei TORIO, Emma TRUMBLE.
For Media Ethics and Social Change...
Freyja BARNARD, Rhiannon Mary Elizabeth BRACE, Max CASTLE-BAKER, Matthew CECCHETTO, Jeremiah FISAYO-BAMBI, Orla FLEMING, Laura GRANTHAM, Euan HENDERSON, Caroline SCASSELLATI, Rhiannon SHADES, Liva VIKMANE.
For Music and Sonic Media…
Daniel Lanre AKINTUNDE, Frederick DEVONPORT, Yiguo FU, Samuel THRUSSELL, Lilia BERNARD, Jideofor Darlington ONUNZE, Saskia Maharanni WILCOX, Gloria WYBURGH.
For Sexual Dissidence…
Max Bone, Niamh CARROLL-TURNER, Sigrid ELVIKEN, Hannah Francis, Daisy Hanscomb, Heidi HUTCHENCE, Aleksander WENTYKIER.
For Social and Political Thought…
Marie Allen, Sarah AUSTIN-WILDE, Aishath Ayn FAZEEL, Jiyoun PARK, Frederick Pullman, Aislinn SHANAHAN DALY, Marcelle XAVIER CORREIA RODRIGUES.
Chancellor, I now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Expanding our understanding of the uses of Modern Standard and Hijazi Colloquial Arabic in education: A study exploring learners' attention, academic performance, and language attitudes in Saudi Arabia.
Sarah Ibrahim M ALHASHMI ALAMIR.
For the thesis;
Methodological holism and casual explanation; lessons from Durkheim and Weber.
Joseph BACKHOUSE-BARBER
For the thesis;
Temporary identities and fixed profiles: International PhD Students' Self-representation on social media.
Louise DE AZAMBUJA ELALI.
For the thesis;
White Evangelical Women, the Changing South, and the Wider World: The Southern Baptist Woman's Missionary Union, 1907 to 1943.
Carol GROSE
For the thesis;
Empowerment, protest and celebration: the representation of 'Black Girl Magic' in speculative fiction and contemporary culture.
Riziki MILLANZI.
For the thesis;
Movement (Still) in Samuel Beckett’s Plays.
Sewon PARK.
For the thesis;
The network A Priori: Mapping New Ideological Constellations Under Conditions of Computational Capitalism.
James Stockman.
For the thesis;
Sound tenses- an investigation into auditory permanencies.
Malcolm TROON.
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the Faculty of Media, Arts and Humanities.
[The Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Kate O’Riordan, goes to the lectern to present any late graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Kate O’Riordan:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Arts in Contemporary History...
Efosa Ammanuel Eboigbe.
For Digital Media...
Reagan Opeoluwa Thomas.
For Filmmaking...
Oluwatoba Folarin Ayantoye, Ajiri Eta.
For International Journalism...
Ellen Brignull.
For Journalism and Media Studies...
Shaurya Shrivastava.
For the degree of Master of Arts in Media, Ethics and Social Change...
Anne Alagbe.
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
If you are able, I'd to ask you to stand, please and colleagues as well, if you wouldn't mind standing as well.
[Graduands and staff stand]
By the powers vested in me by the Senate of the University, I confer formally degrees on all those aforementioned.
Congratulations graduates of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Thanks, please be seated. Thank you.
Well, congratulations again everyone, including, honoris causa, of course, Dr. Macaulay.
Thank you for your inspiring words. And it's kind of like one of the things that always inspires me more, is inspiration through humour. I think it's such a powerful tool. And I might just nick your toilet story, guess that was great. So congratulations to you. And also just the joy of creativity, I mean, to have a life in creativity. I know that Tony said that he wasn't sure what he's been doing for the last 60 years. When it comes to a hobby or job, but I think it is true. I think if you love what you do and you have a passion for it, really doesn't feel like work, you know? And it's a real privilege. I feel it. 99% of the planet don't get a chance to do what they love. And so if you get a chance to do it, hold onto it because it's precious.
Graduates, now may I say at the top, that you all smelled lovely. One or two, not so much, but I mean, you know who you are, and it was, it was probably deliberate.
So, as your time at Sussex comes to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and with each other as alumni and see your relationship with Sussex as one for life. Whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, or even further academic study, or simply some time out. I wish you the very best. In closing the ceremony, the chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring or in part words of wisdom. And I, you know, especially in the winter graduations when there's so many masters and PhDs I feel even more like the least smart person in the room. But here are some thoughts that you are free to ponder, ignore or even better improve upon.
As your Sussex chapter ends, the future as ever begins. And it's imperative that you get to write your story, that you have some say in it, because if you don't, someone else will write it for you. It strikes me. There's one thing that you can and will always be better than anyone else and that's being you. That's what makes you special. And you get the opportunity every day to be a better you. And that is your gift.
Another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a really healthy place to be. We forget this, but you have a wonderful, personalised resource, a handbook made, especially for you, full of pointers and how to be a better you. It's called your past. You can access that to learn to improve on things that perhaps you didn't do as well before, or to repeat things you did as well. And to modify those things. So dip into those whenever you can because it's always there. Regrets are pointless. The past can't be changed but it can be useful as a lesson. And living is now, the present. Then there's the future. And I would urge you to write your future with as much positive language as you can muster every day. Fill your future with words like ambition, and hope and dreams and joy, and compassion and love and possibilities. Resist filling it with fear and guilt and anger. I'm not sure whether you can manifest physical things, but you can absolutely manifest a mindset.
A few days ago, I spoke to a friend of mine who I've known since my university days, and she just lost her home in the California fires. And she's not a wealthy celebrity or anything. She's everyday lawyer and lived in a kind of everyday neighbourhood. And she was told that it would take between three to five years for them to rebuild her home and her neighbourhood. And I asked her how she was feeling right now about all of that. And she said she was upset She couldn't save some photographs and videos, things that were personal. She said, everything else can be replaced. She added, 'I believe my life will get better'. And I said to her, then it will, because you've just decided it will. She could have said, quite acceptably and understandably, 'I'm scared about the future. I'm worried about how you start again at this age' and focused on the things that she lost. And then that would've been her start. That would've been her reality and to get to a positive place from there would've been much more difficult.
When we feel overwhelmed, by anything actually, by grief, by anger, by sadness, by love, by beauty, we lose, momentarily sometimes, perspective. And if we have to make a decision when we've lost perspective, it may not be the decision we would make when we are calm. And so the crucial thing to me is, feel what you feel, because you have a right to every one of your emotions. And then find your way back to perspective. And the easiest way to do that is to talk to somebody. Always. I mean, even saying it out loud yourself can help clarify things. But also where that perspective eventually takes you to, which I think is the healthiest place, is gratitude. And in gratitude, you feel lucky. And that's an incredibly powerful thing to feel. I feel lucky all the time. It's not because of something that happened today or something that didn't happen today. I just feel lucky. And that's because I'm, I constantly feel grateful and I hope it then brings a semblance of calm that then opens those doors to making good decisions. And your own vast reserves of empathy and compassion. When negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just crappy life stuff. It's just stuff that happens. You deal with it and you move on. When it happens to someone who feels unlucky, it feels personal. It feels defining, it feels stressful, and it compounds, it begets all those questions. Like, you know, why does it always happen to me? What did I do wrong? Why am I so unlucky? These are all existential cries to the universe for help. And a lucky person doesn't ask those questions 'cause they're too busy just looking for the solutions and looking at their next decision. And sometimes it is a challenge to find gratitude. It's not always easy, but the more you look for it and the more you practice it, like anything else, it just becomes a habit. It just becomes who you are.
So take hold of your narrative and use it to consistently improving. You, I mean, I've heard this, you must have heard this as well, where people will say I might be nice to them if they're nice to me. I'll respect them. If they respect me. I'm not gonna listen to them. They're not gonna listen to me. All of these are conditional, right? I mean, who's controlling the narrative here? It's not you, it's the other person. You're just responding to it. So be nice. Listen, respect, because that's who you are. You know, if the other person doesn't reciprocate, then that's them being them. They're not your responsibility. You are.
A word on planning. Life planning is great. It's really useful. It allows you obviously to, to see your steps and build towards a goal. But planning is linear, right? I mean, it has to be. It's rungs of a ladder. You go one step, 2, 3, 4, 5, and then you get to the top. That's a plan. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor. It's full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, the WTFs, um, World Tennis Federation-for the old people. And that's normal. So be okay with your plan, but be okay when life does life and comes in and disrupts it. You have no idea. Neither does anyone else what your future holds. So you may as well fill it with positivity. It may not even change the outcome, but your journey to that point in the future will be better and healthier and happier. I've got lived experiences of the plan versus, the disruptor life.
You may be aware that Sussex was my first choice, many years ago when I was applying to university. Didn't wanna go anywhere else, and I didn't get it. Apparently my grades weren't good enough. So I waited 25 years until all those who were responsible for me not getting in, had either just got really old, had retired, were in prison, deported or just died. And I just came back as chancellor. So, hey, hey! Take that, linear planning. -I'm aware that was childish. And the other thing was I wanted to act and be creative, since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle came to our house and said to me, I as a 5-year-old, 'well young man, what do you want to be when you grow up?' And I said, actor. And my dad said, 'it's pronounced doctor'. That's sadly and comically true. So career seemed impossible but the dream was always there, sitting behind a sea of doubt and fear. And at the age of 30, I sued the last company I was working for. I did a degree in business and marketing. And I sued them for breach of contract. And I couldn't get any kind of job for two years while it kind of rattled through the legal process. And at 32, I thought, I don't want to be 70 years old and regretting not having tried. So, it's such a passionate thing for me. Let me have a go. And no one could have foreseen that, two years later, I would be in a successful show on tv and that would be the start of a joyous career. And again, I have to say, take that, linear planning! So far that's linear planning, null, life disruptor two.
So, you know, don't define yourself by a bad day or a bad week or a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once, I came out of it, you know? And don't be afraid of making mistakes. everyone does it. Just make sure that each mistake you make is a new one. Don't make old mistakes. That's the definition of an idiot. Gary Oldman, the actor, brilliant actor, said, 'I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised what people thought of me was none of my business'. And again, it's them being them, you be you. A quote attributed to George Elliot says, 'it's never too late to be what you might have been'. And what I take from that and my own life is, it is never too late. Never too late. So in short, strive every day to be the best you. But who is the best you? I think, and I believe that we always are our next decision. That's who we are and our next choice. And if that decision is kind and compassionate about people, about ourselves, about our environment, then we are being a better us. One of my favourite quotes is Maya Angelou, the great American poet who said, 'People may forget what you did. People may forget what you said. People will never forget the way you made them feel'. And I think that is absolutely true. So I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, whether it be a person, whether it be a place, leave it in a better state than you found it when you came.
So I hope you take your gift of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, humour, and express it to the world and express it to yourself and to others. So you too can live a life of gratitude and humility. And be the lucky you that you have the choice to be. And I reference something I said in the opening. The answer to the life, the universe and everything is 42 if you know, you know. Good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you for this day. I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Ceremony 5 at 1.30pm
Winter 2025: Ceremony 5
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of University senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here.
I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are. For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'.
Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you -I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed.
We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective.
You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time. Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment.
Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future. You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I call upon the Deputy Head of the School of Education and Social Work, Professor Janet Boddy.
(Applause)
[the Deputy Head of the School of Education and Social Work, Professor Janet Boddy, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Janet Boddy:
Chancellor, I present to you for the Certificate in Higher Education...
Molly Hayes.
For the Diploma of Higher Education...
Rohan Rahman.
For the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Social Care...
Clara Bakari.
For Social Work...
Mia Bittles, Katie DE CIANTIS, Madeleine ECCLES, Sophie Fletcher, And also the joint recipient of BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance. Bradley ISABIRYE, Charlotte Miller, Abigail Mitchell, Amber Nixon, Blue PETRAITIS-WILLIAMS, Lauren PORTELA-FELIX, Also the joint Recipient of BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance Riley Reed, Jade SERVAT, Danielle Smith, Millicent WALKER-HYDE, Beth Whitby, Jenna White, And also the joint recipient of the BA Social Work Prize for Outstanding Performance Rhiannon Williams, Charlotte Woodhouse
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education…
Ophélia GISQUET, Agnieszka GLOWKA, Helen Morley, Thomas Murphy, Nikoleta OSTREVA, Gerardo PUCHE JIMENEZ, Nicholas WHITTAKER
For Pedagogy and Practice…
Amal ABDULLE, Minty ACQUAH-MANKOE, Safin AHMED, Sehrish ALEEM, Tanjim ALI, Carlien Leonie BALDY-GRAY, Joanna Bentley, Tausif BHATTY, Luka BIANCARDI, Emma Burgess, Jack Burnage, Libby BUSHILL, Ed COWLARD, Alice Coyle, Kesia DAVIS, Charlotte Farrell, Abigail FLEMONS, Veronica Freeman, Ottilie FUGL, Scarlett FURNESS, Naomi Gibbs, Lucy GRASTY, Hannah Graveney. Rachel HAWS, Harrison HUBBARD, James Hughes, Natasha Hughes, Syeda Tahsin HUSSAIN, Zora HUSSAIN, Niamh HUTNELL, Amelia Kettle, Aliya KHAN, Arooj KHAN, Joshua Kitchener, Dylan Knott, Dillan Lad, Shumaila LODHIA, Yuness LOUNIS, Christy MOON, Jessica Moore, Raissa MOSENGO, Robin NEWBY, William Nicholson, Isabelle Nicola Thompson, Evelyn O'SHEA, Skye OEILLET, Katherine Parkinson, Zayba PATEL, Emily Phipps, Hajera RAHMAN, Rasa ROZAR, Anastasia Smith, Georgia Stanbrook, Felicity STATHER, Lianne STREETER, Sofya TRUKHINA, Clementina Tuck, Hamsa WARSAME, Tabitha Webster, Lorraine Williams, Isobel Willis, Hamna ZAHID,
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Education in Art and Design…
Samiksha SUBRAHMANYA,
For Business Studies…
Sarah Edwards, Philip Martin,
For Computer Science...
Ines CARDOSO SOARES STAMP, Orion Robin VASILESCU,
For Computing and Business Studies…
James Adams.
For Design Technology…
Aimee BEARNE and Company, We have a new recruit to the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ! Elizabeth Cousins, Kate KIRVEN.
For Drama…
Amara DARBYSHIRE, Sofia FALLEA, Sarah LKHAGVASUREN, Sophie LUCRAFT-MEE
For English…
Ellie Baker, Charlotte BYRNE, Alex CATHCART, Veronica Coates, Esme DE BULAT ATKINS, Amy Kelly, Roberta Lee, Amanda MORTENSEN, Finnley PEARCE, Jessica PELLING, Vivienne QUICK, Claire RAYNAL, George Sharp, Alexandra STEPHEN, Jordan WILLIAMS.
For English and drama...
Megan JEFFERIES.
For Geography… Amelia CANAVAN-WHITE, Alexandra CARBALLO BROEN, Jessica Daley, Karen Dock, Eleanor Wright.
For Health and Social Care…
Hannah North
For History…
Sannah DYER, Joshua Knight, Eleanor Massey HOWES, Isaac PYM, Matthew TRINDER, Dylan UREN THOMSON, Emma Wallace, Nathalie WREDE-QUINN
For Latin and Classics…
Edward Chan, Stephen Haynes, Olivia Pillinger, Izzy Shirley
For Mathematics...
Katie BURNISTON, Fletcher BURTON, Jack CROCKATT, Sophie CROSS, Callum Diplock, David GIRGIS, Kenna HOOK, Guillaume LE FLAHEC, Reilly MOULE, Annabel Porter, Ocean RAO DSOUZA, Donna STUART-TURNER, Christopher Ward For Media Studies… Nadine Stride
For Modern Foreign Languages…
Ronan BROWNE, Anna CARDASCIA, Paolo CAVALLARO, Diana CLAVIJO, Blanca DE DIOS GARCÍA, Solene DELICOURT, Caroline DURAND-DELGA, Julia GISPERT PÉREZ, Abigail Hughes, Izadora HUTCHESON-LOVETT, Kira Jardine, Gabriela Johnson, Alberto MAHAUAD CAMPODÓNICO, Layla Moore, Sophie PARISOT, Emmanuelle Pereira, Anaïs PRÉVOST, Josephine WOLFE
For Music...
Rosanna SUMMERS
For Primary...
Esther Tolulope ADELEKE, Emily Austin, Georgia BARKER, Georgina Barry, Sarah Bell, Eilish BONNAR, Rosie Bowman, Sophie-Louise Bullock, Emily Burton, Laura Chatfield, Adaora CHIME, Ossia DIMOGLOU TOHILL, Caroline Drury, Katharine East, Rebecca Folkard, Emily Gibbs, Aemilia Gillespie, Elliot Guest, Rachel Hall, Zaynab HAQ, Jocelyn Harris, Laura Harte, Hope HAWKSWORTH-PRATTEN, Madeline Hay, Martha LACY SCOTT, Tsz Tung LEE, Jasmine Merriman, Daisy Metcalf, Maisie Pollins, Elise Roberts, Sophie SKEATES-TUBB, Kayleigh SPENCER, Matthew STELLING, Louise TIDMARSH, Maeve TULLY, Serine TOUMI, Maeve TULLY, Joshua Warner, Isaac Watson, Phoebe White, Lily Wooldridge, Adam YOUSEMAN
For Psychology…
Lily COUGHLAN, Ella Dodge, Iyah MAHMOUD, Lauren Rice
For Science with Biology…
Shannon AZAVEDO, Ellen BULMER, Bethany Elliot, Chloe Ewen, Henry Turner, Amie WILKINSON
For Science with Chemistry…
Dinos APHAMIS, Thomas Hartley, Jonah Hillman, Chloe HOANG, Hannah Jackson, Holly Latta, Oscar OSPINA RODRIGUEZ, Isabelle Whittle
For Science with Physics…
Denina Addis, Brody CUNLIFFE, Carl HENNINGWAY, Inigo SACRISTAN ORTIZ
For the Postgraduate Diploma in Early Years Education (with Early Years Teacher Status)…
Bridget LE GRANGE
For Social Work…
Seun IBIDAPO, Also awarded the John Simmonds Outstanding Achievement Award Sylvia Atieno KASINA, Hannah LETTS, Anushka LUTHER-SMITH, Benedicta MAWUENYEGA, Oluwatobiloba Deborah OLUYISOLA, Anaina Ann SANTHOSH,
For the Master of Arts for Childhood and Youth Studies…
Akinsanya Adewale AKINOLA, Duygu Ayca DEMIRCI, Naomi Obehi ENORUWA, Jennifer FRAMPTON, Victoria Oluwatosin JOLOMI, Oghenekevwe Queen MMAMA, Adaobi Nneka OKOYE, Theresa Ekemma WILLIAMS-IBEMGBO
For Early Years Education…
Yvonne Ezinwanne DIBIO, Francesca VINCIS For Early Years Education (with Early Years Teacher Status)… Aleena AHMED, Adenike Florence AJAYI, Sophie ANDERSON, Tiffani HEADLEY, Daisy JORGENSEN, Rebecca MCGOUGH
For Education…
Jumoke Ruth ABODUNRIN, Grace Oluwadamilola ADENIJI, Israel Oluwafemi ADENIRAN, Jemima Bentley, Yan CAI, Harriet Freya CASSWELL, Confidence Onyinye CHUKWU, Ashley DAVIDS, Lashawnda Michelle DAVIDS, Ozlem DEMIRHAN TOPALOGLU, Sorry, I'm going to get it right. I'm sorry. Oluwanisola FAGUN, Chauvan HARDING, Leah JEPCHIRCHIR, Elias KIPCHIRCHIR, Hillary KIPKOSGEI, Stella KNIGHT, Ethel Ujunwa ONWUDINJO, Frank OPPONG, Ning RONG, Taofeeqot Teniola SALAUDEEN, George SARBAH, Rebecca SCHNEIDER, Emmanuel Olamiji SHOFUYI, Rachel Smith, Nikita SOUTHALL, Alison TEAGLE, Andrea UPHUS, Emmanuela Nnenna UZOMBA, Ngoc Quynh Anh VU, Jonathan Mark WAITE, Michelle Williams, Qianqian YANG
For International Education and Development…
Busayo Opeyemi ABAYOMI, Eunice Oreoluwa ADEKUNLE, Emma AHMED, Ijeoma Maureen AMAECHI, Isma AMJAD, Siotepoh D BROH, Carlitos Jorge CASSIMO, Rachel CATERER, Chilufya Mulenga CHILUFYA, Emily COLLARD, Dante D'AMICO, Blessing Tunde DADA, Ali Aftab GHIAS, Yuki IOKIBE, Emmanuel Temiloluwa JOSHUA, also awarded the Luke Akaguri Memorial Prize, awarded for the Best Dissertation, title, LGBTQIA+ student experiences in South Korean secondary schools: The exclusion within Sung education Min Soo KIM, Danielle Marshall, Eduarda MODELLI CUALHETE, Kate Rebecca MUNDAY, Victor Chukwubuikem NDUNNA, Kingsley Kelechi OMEIKE, Ibrahim SULEIMAN, Namse Peter UDOSEN, Xinyu WEN For Social Work… Elena CAMPBELL, Catherine McCarthy, Morgan Chukwunyelum OKONKWO, also the recipient of the Joan Cooper Memorial Award Gabriella RENNIE, Georgia VALENTI, Ruby ZATCHIJ
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Navigating gendered terrains: Female social workers’ perspectives on working with boys and young men who display harmful sexual behaviours.
Anna HUTCHINGS
For the thesis;
A study of professional connectedness and isolation in the learning lives of remote and peri-urban primary school teachers in Indonesia.
Imelda Dwi Rosita SARI
For the thesis;
Producing and policing elite bodies: A study of the construction of schoolgirl femininities in a private, independent girls' secondary school in England.
Louise Taylor
Chancellor, This concludes the list of graduands from the very wonderful School of Education and Social Work.
[The Provost, Professor Michael Luck, goes to the lectern to present any late graduands]
Professor Michael Luck:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Art in Education...
Janki Sahil Gadhia
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
May I ask if you can, for the graduands to stand up, and same on the stage, colleagues, if you wouldn't mind standing.
[Graduands and staff stand]
So by the powers invested in me by the Senate of the university, I formally confer degrees on all those aforementioned.
Congratulations, university of Sussex graduates.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Okay, please take a seat. Thank you. Well, that happened. Congratulations, everyone again. You all look terrific and you smelled lovely, which is sometimes even more important. What a fantastic ceremony that was. It was so lovely to set, to have so many kids come up, and this is your day as well. And so many of you were so kind about me and my work, and that's really humbling. And you know, what was even more humbling, was that my position as chancellor was almost taken away by a small child who refused to get up from the chair. So, this could have been a short-lived tenure for me today. But that was all fabulous. And thank you for your kindnesses.
So as your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and each other as alumni and see your relationship with the university as lifelong. And whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even further academic study, or simply some time out, I wish you the very best in closing the ceremony. The chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring or impart some wisdom, but I'm already, you know, by meeting you briefly, I know that you are all way more wise than I am. But I'll give you some thoughts that I've been thinking about. And feel free to ponder them, ignore them, or even better, improve upon them.
It struck me today, actually, with all the ceremonies today, that one of the things about these ceremonies, that I love so much about doing these ceremonies is that it's a room full of achievement. It's a room full of celebration. It's a room full of potential, and it's a room full of hope. And those are really fabulous things to be stepping forward, towards. And you know, right now as the as the vice chancellor alluded to in the opening speech that, you know, it's a very troubled world. There's lots of very challenging things going on at the moment. And so the ability to be hopeful and to see potential and to move forward, I think is more important than ever and to be positive. And there was somebody that had wrote a very good definition of positivity, which is, positivity isn't thinking, everything's going to be turn out great. It's that things may be terrible now, but they can get better. And that is positivity, especially, you know, now at the moment with all things that are going in the world. And, you know, such things as they're eating the dogs, they're eating the dogs. I mean, you, yeah, we've gotta remain positive through all of that. No one was eating the dog anyway. Anyway, we need to say that.
But as your Sussex chapter ends, the, the future begins. And I do feel it's imperative, that unwritten future, that you get to write yours. Because if you don't have your say in your own story, someone else will write it for you. And there's one thing that struck me, that you can and always will be better than anybody else ever. And that is being you. That's what makes you special. And you get the opportunity every day to be a better you. And that is your gift. And another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a really useful and healthy place to be. The past can't be changed. Regrets are pointless. You know, those are just things that you haven't learned from to learn from it and turn it into a positive. And as I said, the future is yet to come. And we all have a fantastic personalised resource made specially for us, a handbook, full of pointers on how to be a better you. And that's called your past. Dip into that you can access it to improve on things that you did before, that didn't turn out great, and to repeat things or improve things that you did before, that were good, to dip into those whenever you can. But as I said, don't live there. Don't live in the past. Living is now. Then the future, as I said, it's unwritten.
And when you write your future, I would urge you to fill it with as much positive language as you can. Muster some I've already mentioned. But fill your future with ambitions and with hope and with dreams and with joy and compassion and kindness, and resist filling it with fear, anger, and guilt. I'm not sure if you can actually manifest real things, but you can manifest a mindset. A few days ago I spoke to a, a really close friend of mine who I've known since my university days. And she had lost her home in the fires in California. And she's not a wealthy celebrity working in films or anything like that. She's just a regular lawyer and worked in a regular neighbourhood. And she told me that, she was told it would take between three to five years for them to rebuild their home and their neighbourhood. And I asked her, I said, how are you feeling right now? And she told me that she was upset she couldn't save some photographs because they were really personal, but she said, other than that, everything else could be replaced. And I said, well but how are you feeling about the future? And she said, I believe my life will get better. Absolutely believe it. And I said, well, then it will, because you've just decided it will. You know, she could have just thought, you know, how do I feel? Oh gosh, I feel upset and depressed and scared, and how do I start again at my age and all the things I've lost? And none of it would've been being judgmental about it. That would've all been perfectly acceptable. But she didn't. She took a very, very positive platform to move forward. If she hadn't, if she'd taken a negative position first, a completely understandable one, getting to somewhere positive would've been a much longer journey.
And it's kind of, it's challenging, to find perspective at times like that. I think when we're overwhelmed, you know, whether it's by be, grief or anger or sadness or love or beauty, you know, when we are overwhelmed, we lose perspective even for a short space of time. And if we have to make a decision in that short space of time, it may not be the decision we would make when we were calm. So it's absolutely important to feel everything. Oh my goodness. You have the right to every single emotion, but then quickly to find your way back to perspective. And the quickest way really is to talk to somebody. I mean, you just get another viewpoint. Even hearing yourself saying out loud can help clarify things. And what, where it takes you to, is a place of gratitude. And that is the healthiest place to live. Live in gratitude because you feel lucky. I feel lucky all the time, and not because of something that happened today or yesterday. Just feel lucky. I feel blessed. I feel grateful. Because feeling that, I think, allows the doors to open to your own vast reserves of empathy and compassion. And when negative stuff, as it does happen to a lucky person, it's just crappy lifestyle. It's just stuff that comes along and you go, yeah, that's wasn't good, but it's gone. And you deal with the next thing. When it happens to an unlucky person, it begs all those other questions like, why me? Why does it always happen to me? You know, I did a fun run last week and raised money and for charity, and now this week this has happened.
You know, everything becomes kind of transactional in a way. It becomes personal and defining and stressful, an existential cry to the universe for help. A lucky person doesn't ask those questions simply 'cause they're too busy looking for solutions and onto their next decision. So take hold of your narrative, use it consistently improving. Be unconditionally You. You must have heard this. Have you had people who kind of say, or are you the sort of person who says, 'Well, if they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them. If they respect me, then I'll respect them. If they don't listen to me, I'm not listening to them'. Which all sounds reasonable until you then think about who's really controlling the narrative here. It's the other person. It's not you. You are reacting the whole time. So be nice, respect, listen Because that's who you are. And if they don't reciprocate, that's them being them. That's their problem. You be you.
A word on planning and life. You know, planning is great. Really important, very useful, you know, obviously, 'cause it allows you to see the steps that build towards your goal. But, planning is linear, right? Straight lines like, ladder, you go one, step two, step three. So you get to the top. That's what a plan is. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor, full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, WTFs, World Tennis Federation for the -for the old people. That's just normal. That is what life does. So be okay with your plan, absolutely, and then be okay when it's disrupted. 'cause that's okay too. It's just life. You just have to think about your next choice at that time. You have no idea what your future holds. You really don't. So you may as well fill the journey to it with positivity. It may not even change the outcome, but your journey to it will be a lot healthier and just a lot more fun. Now, I've got lived experiences of the unwritten future and, you know, life as a disruptor, taking you somewhere.
So you may be aware that Sussex was my first choice for universities when I applied as an undergraduate. And I didn't get it because apparently my grades weren't good enough. So I waited 25 years until all those people who were responsible for, for me not getting in, were either very old, were in prison, had been deported or just dead, and I came back as chancellor. So he, hey! Where was linear planning then? Linear planning - zero, life - one. And also, I wanted to act and write since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle came to the house and said, 'well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up?' And I said, actor. And my dad said, 'it's pronounced doctor' and it's true story. So I wanted to do it since I was five. But you know, career seemed impossible. But the dream was always sitting there behind a sea of doubt and fear. And at the age of 30, I sued the last company I was working for, for breach of contract. And I couldn't get any kind of job for two years while the whole thing rolled through the legal process. And at 32, I thought, I don't want to be 70 years old and regretting not trying. So I'll have a go. And I would not have foreseen, and neither would anyone else, that within just two and a half years I'd be in a successful TV show and would just enjoy an incredibly joyous, fortunate career. So again, I have to say, take that linear planning! Linear planning - zero, life - two.
So don't define yourself by a bad day or a bad week, a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once, but I came out of it. And don't be afraid of making mistakes. Just make sure each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making the same old mistake. That's the definition of an idiot. And you are not that. And the other thing that I realised, which is, which may be useful to you, I realised I can't fail. Ha! how about that? I just can't. So I don't. I haven't failed for years simply because I have not given myself that option. I can either learn or succeed or both. That's it. There is no failure. You know, all those things. People go, you failed, you go, I learned something. Thanks. Goodbye. Gary Oldman, the actor - brilliant actor, said, 'I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised, what people thought of me was none of my business'. That's down them. I go back to that thing, let them be them. You be you. A quote attributed to George Elliot says, 'It's never too late to be what you might have been'. The message of that, it's never too late. Never. Don't ever let anyone tell you it's too late. So in short, strive every day to be the best you. Who is the best you, by the way? I can tell you that we are always our next decision. Always. Our next choice is who we are. And if that decision is kind and compassionate about people, about ourselves, then we are being the better us.
As I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, whatever person you meet, leave that situation, leave that person in a better place than how you found it or them. And, you know, that works for people, yourself or the planet. - It hasn't worked with their bedrooms, by the way. I'm still having to pick up stuff behind them. I'm gonna have to find another way of dealing with that. So finally, I hope you take your gift of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world, to each other and yourselves every day. So you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you. You have the choice to be. And by the way, the answer to the life, the universe and everything is 42. If you know, you know, good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you. For this day, I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Ceremony 6 at 4.30pm
Winter 2025: Ceremony 6
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of University senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here. I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you -I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective.
You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time. Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment.
Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future.
You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I call upon the Head of the Department of Strategy and Marketing in the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School, Professor Vasiliki Bamiatzi.
(Applause)
[The Head of the Department of Strategy and Marketing in the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School, Professor Vasiliki Bamiatzi, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Vasiliki Bamiatzi:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Business and Management Studies...
Abdulrahman ALDEERI, Talha ASHFAQ, Arash FERDOSIAN, Ka Wing TAM.
For Business and Management Studies (with a professional placement year)…
Also awarded the prize for Best Research Project in Management with the highest dissertation mark; Lauren DUGGAN.
For Marketing and Management…
Temisan AWANI, Isabel MARSHALL, Mizan RAHMAN.
For the Postgraduate Diploma in Human Resource Management…
Clarisse BEDRAN.
For the Master of Business Administration…
Rohit BHATNAGAR, Fernanda CERRUTI CARBAJAL, Kyrollos HAZEM TAGHYAN, Fatemeh MOHAMMADIAN, Chukwudumebi Emmanuel OBI, Pravin PERIYASAMY VADHIVELU. Also awarded the prize for the best student in the Master of Business Administration with the Highest Grant Mean; Shweta SHARMA.
For Entrepreneurship and Innovation…
Ahmet AKBIYIK, Anjelou Marie ESTRELLA, Hastings GOLOSI, Augusta Maravilha KAPAIA, also jointly awarded the Prize for Best student in MSc Entrepreneurship Innovation with the Highest Grant Mean; Stefanny LOPES DOS SANTOS DE MORAIS, Mohamed Ali Elshareef MOHAMMED, Oluseun OMOTOSHO-IKURU, Chidubem Daniel OZONGWU, Wanpaka SUTJARITVARANGKUL.
For Global Supply Chain and Logistics Management…
Adedayo Ibrahim ADEJUMO, Lateefat Oluwakemi BALOGUN, Chethan Kumar BASAVARAJ HUGAR, Utkarsh CHAUDHARY, Mandeep FARMER, Xinying GAO, Anvi Kishor INGLE, Olatunji Oluwaseun JAMESON, Roslin Joseph Kattiprayil, Shivam Ramakant KOLHE, Avinash Sanjay KUMBHARE, Yun-Lun LO, Thomas MUTALI, Srilatha NANGINENI, John Chibueze NJIMOGU, Aaryan Sangram PATIL, Riteshkumar Ranjit PATIL, Abhishek Ashok PATTAR, Sanchith Deon Geoffery, also awarded the Prize for Best Student in MSc Global Supply Chain and Logistic Management with highest grant mean and the Prize for Best dissertation/research project in MSc Global Supply Chain and Logistic Management; Sarah SAQIB, Sena Nur SEZER, Shweta, Edwin Kiprop Tuigong SINYEI, Siwaporn TAESIRI, Gowsik THANGARASU, Muhammad Anas WARIS, Nana Kwabena WIAFE.
For Human Resource Management…
Aditya Samir AHIRE, Folake Florence AJAYI, Esra Nur AKYUZ, Amritpal Kaur, Also awarded the Prize for Best Student in MSc Human Resource Management with highest grand mean; Vivek Vilas ATHAWALE, Qazaleh BARATLOU, Malak Abdulaziz M BIN AMER, Rui GUO, Migma GURUNG, Arya Govind HANDE, Bharkha Karan HINDUJA, Sakina Huzefa HUSAIN, Zidong LIU, Daniel NGG CHO, Oluwafunto Peace OKEKE, Temi TOBA, Harsh Arun PANIKEVEETIL, Samruddhi Sunil PARAB, Mohita RAUTHAN, Sampada SINGHAL, Akwetey Joel TAGOE, Yu TANG, Aman TOMAR, Setareh YAGHMAEE.
For International Business and Development…
Muhammad Bilal AHMAD, Aziza Anjum ANANNA Andrea GOMEZ GUERRERO, Muhammad Shehroz GULSHAD, Arezou JAFARI KALAHROUDI, Areeb Inshad KHAN Mysha MALIHA, Robbie MARTYR, also awarded the prize for the Best Dissertation/Consultancy Project in International Business and Development in Practice; Gülçinay MUMCU, Temiloluwa Anuoluwapo ODEBUNMI, Damilola Tosin ODUNTAN, Daisy OTTER, Sai Chaitanya PARISINETI, Priyanka, Helen RACHEL REJI, Radwa Hassan Elbana Hosiny YOUNES.
For International Management…
Ali Jaber M ALMASOUDI, Adunola Yetunde AMODEMAJA, Enoch Adu APPIAH, Amah Grace ATTAH Also jointly awarded the Prize for Best student in MSc International Management with the highest grant mean; Zeynep Irem CANAY, Leon CHAU, Precious EMMANUEL, Gurjeet Singh, Albin JOHN, Rushikesh Shivaji KALE, Ozge KAYAOGLU, Josia MARULI HUTABARAT, Emmanuella MENSAH, Elena MIGUEL GRAY, Sanika Parshuram NIVENDKAR, Prisca Chika NWABIA, Chiamaka Vivian NWIGBO, Mirian Nkiruka OJOGWU, Harshwardhan Vivek PAWAR, Omotayo Temitope QUADRI, Yash Dnyaneshwar RUDRAWAR, Anjali SINGH, Janhavi Mangesh WAYANGANKAR, Siyu WU, Jingjing XUE.
For International Marketing…
Konstantina ANGELIDOU, Oluwaremi APATIRA, Emily BUDD, Carlota DEL AZAR ARANDA, Rachele Siu Kwan FUNG, Megan GIANNASI, Eloise LOWE, Rebecca MARSH, Isabella MURRAY-PLAYFAIR, also awarded the Prize for Best Analysis Consultancy Project; Emily NEWTON-SMITH, Fallon PAUL, Julia SZODFRIDT.
For Management…
Also one of the recipients of the Prize for Best Team-Consultancy Project Award in MSc Management; Aidana ABDYKADYROVA, Oloruntoba Olaolu ADEOYE, Rahman Olatunde AGBAJE, Victoria AMGBARA BERNARD, Matthew Anuoluwapo AYEBO, Jianwei BAO, Mohamed Lemine BEWBA, Suthachinee CHAIKITTI, Xuanyu CHEN, Longqian DONG, Tuan Kiet HO, Assiya ISSAYEVA, Jie JIANG, Qingyin LI, Yuting LI, Shih Shi LU, also awarded the prize for best student in MSc Management with highest grant mean; Aliya MUKHAMEDIYEVA, Kehinde Tomilola OLU'SEUN-ESAN, Ashok PALANIYAPPAN, Yash Nandlal PAREEK, Vishal PATIDAR, also one of the recipients of the prize for Best Team-Consultancy Project. Award in MSc Management; Tsz Fung POON, Naveen Shrean RAMESH, Eleni SARGENT, Chenye SHI, Deniz TASKESER, Siyu WANG, Also one of the recipients of the Prize for Best Team-Consultancy Project. Award in MSc Management; Alessio ZABAI, Enbo ZHANG.
For Marketing and Consumer Psychology…
Shahad Abdulghani A ALSUFYANI, Maria Angela ARAUJO, Also one of the recipients of the Prize for best student in MSc Marketing and Consumer Psychology with the highest grant mean; Manasi Sushil BARMECHA, Samiksha BHAIYA, Krongkhwan BUNARUNRAKSA, Chokchai CHEVAPISUT, Andrea Carolina DIAZ MORILLO, Marina FEDERICI, Jemima HALL, Nadeem Mohamed Hisham Ahmed HAMDI MOHAMED ABDELMOHSEN, Alisa HNYDIUK, Alma Nabila Paramesti KOMARUDIN, Maria de Lluc LLABRES CANAVES, Also one of the recipients of the Prize for Best student in MSc Marketing and Consumer Psychology with the highest grant mean; Sophie Lloyd, Muskaan MARWAHA, Felicia Dawn MCCROSKEY, Ifaq MOHAMMED, Anna NOULI, Paritat PATEEPAMORNRAT, Ishfihana RAKASYIFA, Subho SHA, also one of the recipients of the Prize for Best student in MSc Marketing and Consumer Psychology with the highest grant mean; Sakthivel SHANMUGAM, Ho Cheung WONG, Kone Kitene Eunice Lidwine YAH, Eylul Zeynep YILDIRIM.
For Occupational and Organizational Psychology…
Anita BHARDWAJ, Cisem BOZAN, Pio Francesco BURGIO, also awarded the Prize for the Best Student in MSc Occupational and Organisational Psychology with highest grant mean; John Angus GOOD, Krishna Hamsini GOPARAJU, Shamim IBRAHIM, Lakshmi IYAPPAN, Preyksha KAPUR, also awarded the Prize for Best dissertation in all MSc Management courses; Caroline Frances MACDONALD, Greta MADINI MORETTI, Tanishq MATHUR, Sara MUCEDOLA, Namita, Haleema SAJU, Rawiporn SAPKASETRIN, Kalyani Santosh SAWANT, Kabir Dayal SHARMA, Tanishka SINGH, Annekerthiga SUNDARAM, Umme Kulsum SYEDA, Raul YMERAJ.
For Strategic Marketing…
Rana Sayed Mohamed ABDELLATIF, Ainur ABDRAKHMAN, Shahad Ahmad ABDULHAFEEZ, Shaha A S ABOETHNIN Raed Fahad A ALDOWAIS Yazed Omran S ALOMRAN, Faisal Fouad A ALONAIZI, Tugce AYGOR ASLAN, Selcuk BAHTIYAR, Adrija BANERJEE, Pinaki BANERJEE, Also the recipient of the St Kovachev Scholarship in Marketing; Megan Bond, Azra Hazar CEYHUN, Sara COLOMBO, Aya ESMAIL, Faraaz Fawad Ahmed, Mariam Hammad Mohamed HUSSEIN, Eshika ISLAM, Lucy JACKSON, Raveepat JIWATANASUK, Dias KENESSOV, Abeerah Waseem KHAN, Shahbaz Sohail KHAN, Joe MAW, Louise NALUNKUUMA, Manita NATH, Mohammad Mahmoud S OMRAN, Kerim Yagiz ONAL, Ekin Anil OZCAN, Techinee PATTARAVORATHAM, Suhail RAHIM, Cansu SENTURK, Rahul VERMA, Tsai-Yi WANG, Peijian XIE, Wanling XIE, Hyejin YOO, Yutong ZHANG, Ziyang ZHANG Wenyan ZHENG.
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School.
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
I call upon the Head of Research, Thought Leadership and Academic Delivery in the Roffey Park Institute, Dr Janice Moorhouse.
(Applause)
[the Head of Research, Thought Leadership and Academic Delivery in the Roffey Park Institute, Dr Janice Moorhouse, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Dr Janice Moorhouse:
Chancellor, I present for the degree of of Master of Science in People and Organisational Development…
Ian Baines, Lisa Billard, Christina MATLHAGA, Amy HAND, Irina PERICIN HÄFLIGER, Angela Mary RABONE, Darshini SHARMA, Heather Louise STEWART.
Chancellor, This concludes the list of graduands from Roffey Park Institute.
[The Provost, Professor Michael Luck, stands and approaches the lectern to present any late graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
The Provost, Professor Michael Luck:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Science in Financial Data Analytics from the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences...
Joed Akwetey TAGOE.
For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the School of Life Sciences...
For the thesis;
The exploitation of a wild species globally: exploiting the internet for data.
Sarah Bronwen Hunter.
For the thesis;
Role of microRNAs in a Drosophila melanogaster model of Huntington’s Disease.
Bhavna VERMA.
For the postgraduate Diploma in Strategic Marketing...
Muhammed Hamza Sajid.
For the degree of Master of Business Administration...
Alexander Maltsev.
For the degree of Master of Science in Entrepreneurship and Innovation...
Uneeb Tahir.
For Global Supply Chain and Logistics Management…
Uju Ehiagwina.
For International Management...
Raman Bajwa, Bo Tang,
For Management...
Hongming Chen, Berfin Karadag, Xiaobo Liu.
For Marketing and Consumer Psychology...
Amna Javed.
For Strategic Marketing...
Ziqi FAN, Yuhai Long, Anushree Sarkar, Ming Wang.
For the degree of Master of Science in Management...
Longan Dong.
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
If I could ask, if you can, graduands to stand please, and colleagues on the stage as well, for the formal conferment.
[Graduands and staff stand]
By the power vested in me by the Senate of the university, I formally confer degrees on all the aforementioned. Congratulations Sussex graduates.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Please take a seat.
Well, well, well, well, I have to, I'll be honest with you, coming into this ceremony, I was really tired and I've come out of this ceremony feeling like I've been to a party. It's, I mean, there are two ceremonies I've gotta do tomorrow, but this was the warmest ceremony we've had so far. I mean, it was a party where there was dancing, I got some presents, undeserved, but what the heck? I got present! I played games, mainly rock, paper, scissors. But what the heck? Again, played games. The only thing that slightly worries me is that, uh, I've done certain poses and I'm not sure what some of those mean. And I hope I haven't caused some international incident by tomorrow when you put it on Instagram or something. Thank you everyone. That was one heck of an amazing ceremony. And also, family and friends, you played your part as well. You were amazing too. So congratulations again everyone. And on top of that, you all smelled lovely.
So, as your time at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and each other as alumni and that you see your relationship with Sussex as a lifelong one.
Whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even more academic study, or simply some timeout, I wish you the very best.
In closing the ceremony, the chancellor is supposed to say something inspiring or in part words of wisdom. But you know, I've kind of met you all, albeit briefly, and I already know that you are all way wiser and smarter than I am. So what can I tell you, really? But anyway, I'll give you some thoughts that you are free to ponder. You can ignore them, or even better improve upon them. So your, as your Sussex chapter ends, your future begins. It's imperative that you get to write your future because if you don't, someone else will. And so that, the importance of you being involved in writing that future is really important. There is one thing that you can and always will be better than anyone else. And that's being you. That's what makes you special. And you get the opportunity with that uniqueness of yours that nobody else has. You get the opportunity every day to be a better you. And that is your gift.
Another word for gift, of course, is present. And being in the present is really, really useful. You have a wonderful personalised resource, a handbook made, especially for you. Each one of you. Full of pointers, how to be a better you. And that is your past. You can look at your past and look at things, where choices where which you made, that you would make better now, or good choices that you made, that you would repeat. All of those things are there. So dip into those whenever you can. But don't live there. Regrets are really pointless. You can't change the past, but you absolutely can learn from it because you can't change it if you don't learn from it. And it's a regret. And that's kind of a waste. So don't waste any of those experiences you've had. Then, there's your future. Write it with as much positive language as you can find. Fill your future with words like ambition, hope, dreams, joy, compassion, love and possibilities. The possibilities. One possibility. I always believe this, in your future, you can think about one possibility, which is better than where you are now. And there is one possibility where you are worse than you are now, but there's a thousand possibilities where it's just different. So worse is only one out of hundreds of thousands. So resist filling your future with fear and guilt and anger.
I'm not sure if you can manifest actual things, but you can manifest a mindset. A few days ago, I spoke to a really close friend of mine who I've known since I was at university, and she lost her home in the California fires. And she's not a wealthy actress or celebrity or anything like that. She's a regular lawyer and lived in a regular neighbourhood. And she told me that they had told her that it would take three to five years to build her house and her community. And I asked her how she was feeling now, and she said, well, I'm upset that I didn't save some photographs and some personal things like that. But she said, everything else can be replaced. And then she added, but I believe my life will get better now. And I said, then it will because you've just decided it will. She could have, you know, quite understandably and legitimately had said, I'm scared, I'm depressed. How am I gonna start again at this age? What am I, where am I gonna live for the next three to five years? What's gonna happen to my job? What's gonna happen to my family? She could have said all of those things with great legitimacy and that would've been her starting point. So to go from there to positivity is a much longer journey. But from where she's starting, she will get there. She'll get there sooner.
You know, when we are overwhelmed, we all lose perspective. Even momentarily. And that's whether we're overwhelmed by grief or anger or jealousy or beauty or love. We get overwhelmed and we lose ourselves for a second. If we have to make decisions in that time they may not be the decisions we would make when we were calm. So when those moments happen, absolutely feel the emotion. You have the right to every single emotion there is. But then it becomes about how quickly you can find your way back to perspective. And the easiest way and the quickest way is to talk to somebody. Always. Because you have a discussion, there's a conversation, and even you saying it out loud sometimes, can help. And it's also that for me. I believe that what perspective has brought for me, which is simplified a life like my friend in California, is that it. That perspective brings you to gratitude. And that's the healthiest place you can be, at any one time if you are just grateful. I'm grateful all the time, and because I'm grateful all the time, I hope that makes me humble. But also it makes me feel lucky all the time. I'm feeling lucky right now. I felt lucky earlier today when I was feeling tired. I mean, to be honest, my legs are aching a little bit. My back is aching a little bit, but I still feel lucky. And lucky is not down for me, not down to something that happened today or didn't happen. It's just a feeling I carry. And I believe that when you feel that, that calm, it opens the doors to your own vast reserves of empathy and compassion.
And also, when negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just crappy life stuff. It's just, it comes along, you deal with it and you move on. When it happens to an unlucky person, it feels really personal and defining and stressful, and it compounds. And you know, people ask those questions, why does this happen to me? Why am I so unlucky? I did this really nice thing last week and now this thing has happened to me. What's going on? It's an existential cry to the universe for help. And if you feel lucky, you don't ask those questions simply because you're just looking for solutions and moving on. Um, it is a challenge sometimes to find gratitude, no doubt. But the more you look for it, the easier it becomes to access until it's just a habit. It's just who you are. So take hold of your narrative and use it to consistently improving. Be unconditionally You. I often hear people, you must have heard this. Hear people who say, 'well, if they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them'. 'If they're not gonna respect me, I'm not gonna respect them'. 'Why should I listen to them if they won't listen to me?' And on the one hand, that sounds kind of reasonable and fair. And then I would ask, well, who's controlling the narrative here? It's not you, it's the other person because you are just reacting to them. So, you know, be nice. Listen, respect, because that's who you are. If the other person doesn't reciprocate, then that's them being them. That's not your responsibility. You be truthful to yourself.
Just a word on planning and life. Planning obviously is great. It's very useful. But planning is linear, right? It's steps of a ladder. You go one step two, step three, step four, you get to the top and that's your goal. And that's a plan, right? Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor. It's full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, the WTF's, - World Tennis Federation for the youngsters, and that's normal to be okay with your plan and be okay. When that plan gets disrupted, you really have no no idea what your future holds. So you may as well fill your journey to it with positivity. If it's not gonna change the outcome, at least your journey to that moment will be better, right? It'd be happier. I've got two lived experiences of the plan versus life, the disruptor. Because most people think that disruption is a bad thing, right? If things are going on and something is disrupted And so they think it's a negative. But I've got two examples where it was a huge positive for me. You may be aware that Sussex was my first choice, uh, when I was an undergraduate many years ago. Didn't want to go anywhere else. I didn't get in unlike you lot. I apparently my grades weren't good enough. So I waited 25 years until all those people who'd prevented me getting in, had got really old, had retired, were in prison, had been deported, or just were just dead. And I got back in his chancellor. So, Hey, hey! Linear planning, where were you? Huh? Linear planning -zero, life -one.
And then, I wanted to act and write and, and have a creative job since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five years old, an uncle came to the house. Uncle Gee came to the house and said to me, bearing in mind I was five years old, but he said, -so a young man, what do you want to be when you grow up? And I said, -actor. And my dad said, -it's pronounced doctor. It actually is true. So a career in that, as I went through 6 to 10, to 12 to 8, 15, 80 seemed impossible. And so, but the dream was still there. The passion was still there behind a kind of wall of doubt and fear. And I went to, I went to a business school and I did a degree in business and marketing. And so the last job I had, of that nature, I was 30 years old and I had to sue the company for a breach of contract. And for two years I couldn't get a job because, it rattled through the legal process. They settled out of court. In the end, at 32, I thought, you know, I don't wanna be 70 years old and regretting not trying this passion that I've had now all my life. So I thought I'd have a go. I couldn't have foreseen, and neither could anyone else that just two years later, I would be in a successful show on television. And that would be the start of a really joyous, fortunate career. And again, I have to say, where were you? Oh, linear planning, where were you? So linear planning, zero; life, two. But two good ones.
So it is possible. It is possible. So don't ever define yourself by a bad day. If you have a bad day or a bad week or a bad month or a bad year. I had a bad decade once; I came out of it. And also, don't be afraid of making mistakes. That's the other thing. It's absolutely the human condition. But make sure each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making old mistakes. That's the definition of an idiot. Okay? And also, I must tell you, and you can choose this, I can't fail. I really can't because I haven't given myself that option. I can succeed or I can learn, or both. Failure is not an option. The brilliant actor, Gary Oldman once said, 'I worried for so long about what people thought of me until I realised that what people thought of me was none of my business'. Let them be them. You be you. A quote attributed to George Elliot says, it's never too late to be what you might have been. It's never too late. It's never too late to fix, never too late to repair, never too late to grow. So, be the best you is what I've said. But who are you and who are we? Well, I'll tell you, I think we are always our next decision. Our next choice is who we are. What's just happened to us, maybe because of choices we made, but sometimes it can be circumstances. But our response to it is us.
So you are your next decision. All the time. And if that decision has got at its heart, kindness and compassion about other people, about yourself, then you are becoming the better you. There's one of my favourite quotes is from the American poet Maya Angelou, who said, people may forget what you said. People may forget what you did. People will never forget the way you made them feel. And I think that's true. So, as I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, or person you find yourself with, try to leave it or them in a better place than you found them. And that be, as I said, be it a person or be it the planet. So I hope you take your gifts of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world, to each other and yourselves, so you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you, you have the choice to be. Now, I did reference something, at the opening speech, which I can give you the answer to here. The answer to the life, the universe, and everything is 42. If you know, you know.
Good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you for this day. Go enjoy yourselves. I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Friday 24 January 2025
Ceremony 7 at 10am
Winter 2025: Ceremony 7
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of University senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.)
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here. I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you -I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective.
You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time. Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment. Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future.
You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I call upon the Head of the School of Life Sciences, Professor Michelle West.
(Applause)
[the Head of the School of Life Sciences, Professor Michelle West, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Michelle West:
Chancellor, I present to you for the Diploma of Higher Education...
Amy Carter.
For the degree of Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Science...
Ahmed AL SHAGGA, Chloe LAFFERTY.
For Genetics…
Yigit Efe ALGUNEY,
For Medical Neuroscience…
Cyrus WONG.
For Neuroscience…
Paige BLACK, Alex BURMESTER-WEEDON, Thomas EASTER-MITCHELL, Andra LUICEANU, Jason SCOTT-JONES.
For the Master of Science in Cancer Cell Biology…
Puja CHATTERJEE, Negar HEIDARI HENGAMI, Jhin Siang LIM, Desire Ihechiluru NWACHUKWU, Faith Powell.
For Genetic Manipulation and Molecular Cell Biology…
Nurullah AKGUN, Jihad Abdulhakeem Ali AL-SUBARI, also awarded the School Prize for Best performance on the Genetic Manipulation and Molecular Cell Biology MSc for the highest grand mean; Bethinn ALLISON, Michael ASKEW, Also the recipient of the Harry Lownds Scholarship; Hannah Baker, Anasuya Partha CHAKRABORTY, Faith Nicole DIXSON, Sohini JASH, Aiswarya KRISHNAN, Maisie JUNIPER-NORMAN, Markela LAZRI, Mohammed Sulayman MAJID, Lebohang Florence MOSHANYANA, Boglarka Anna MUCSI, Mona RIYAHI RAD, Kristy SCHOLLER, Alberto Esteban TOAPANTA ARAUZ, Yousef WESAM YOUSEF ABU HARB.
For Global Biodiversity and Conservation…
Adeyeri David ADELEYE, Mohammed J M ALAJEZ, Tilly AMBROSE, Laura Emily BADGER, Sue BLANCH, Rebecca BOWIE, Also awarded the School Prize for Best Performance on the Global Biodiversity Conservation MSc for the highest grand mean; Isobel BRIDGES, Elisabeth Marie DAVIS, Holly EDWARDS-SLOAN, Eleanor FARQUHARSON, Paula GARCIA CUBERO, Sydney KUHLMAN, Caitlin MOOK Roman NOWAK-SMITH, Samuel NURNEY, Eloise SMITH, Klara TAVECCHIO, Nathaniel YON.
For Neuroscience…
Nigel FERNANDES, Victoria LIPSCOMB, Francisca MARSH.
For the degree of Master of Research in Animal Behaviour…
Seve SHAIEB.
For Conservation Biology…
also awarded the School Prize for Best Performance on an Evolution and Environment MRes for the highest grand mean; Sian KIRWAN, Olivia Rose Mason.
For Neuroscience…
Also jointly awarded the School Prize For Best Performance on a Neuroscience Masters course for the highest grand mean; Dylan LAMPTEY, Annabel ROWNEY-SMITH, Also jointly awarded the School Prize for best Performance on a Neuroscience Masters course for the highest grand mean; Lucy Stafford.
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Structure-function studies on Bacillus Thuringiensis Cry toxins active against Aedes Aegypti.
Nelly IGWE.
For the thesis;
Dysregulation of microRNA-gene networks in hSOD1G93A mouse model of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.
Libby Moody.
For the thesis:
Mechanistic study of tau self-assembly and seeding of an Alzheimer's PHF-associated fragment, and the role of MTC as a tau aggregation inhibitor.
Sebastian Oakley.
For the thesis;
The environmental fate of fipronil and imidacloprid used in pet parasiticides.
Rosemary Perkins
For the thesis;
Spatial mapping of the molecular, cellular and physiological processes underlying, somatosensation in Drosophila.
Will ROSEBY
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Life Sciences.
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
I call upon the Head of the School of Psychology, Professor Allison Pike.
(Applause)
[the Head of the School of Psychology, Professor Allison Pike, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As she reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Allison Pike:
Chancellor, I present to you for the Certificate in Higher Education...
Vinusha MATHIVANNAN.
For the degree of Bachelor of Science in Psychology…
Matthew Pridmore, Emily Saunders.
For Psychology (with a study abroad year)…
Naomi SHORETIRE.
For Psychology with Neuroscience…
Holly Cook, Wendy DEMBELE.
For the Graduate Diploma in Children’s Wellbeing Practice…
Natalie Clemens.
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Mental Health Wellbeing Practice...
Mark Goodwin, Laurentia TAN.
For Psychology of Kindness and Wellbeing at Work…
Stella Boe BANKS, Katherine BRADSHAW, Adele CARVIL, Rebecca CROSBY, Emily Davies, Katherine DRINKWATER, Joanna Dunn, James Garrett, Cheryl LAWTON, Lucinda MOULD, Claire Potter, Sarah SAWARD, Shiv-Shakti Sharma, Stephen STOCK, Jody Watts.
For the Postgraduate Diploma in Children’s Wellbeing Practice...
Jennifer Eve BARKER, Georgina Catherine HOBSON, David Rhys PHILLIPS.
For Education Mental Health Practice…
Georgina ARMES, Lily Bennett, Lucy Jessica Bishop. Rebecca Bowman, Kate Brushwood, Ellie BUTTLE, Natalie Clark, Matilda CRUNDWELL, Sophie Edmonds, Emily Samantha HARDING, Deborah Lucy HOLLIDAY, Megan Jane Jones, Francesca Lee, HOA Lim, Ella Marsden, Rebecca PIERSON, Sarah Catherine ZEEN.
For Psychological Therapy…
Meri BROWN, Simran JASSAL, Abdallah MSHATY, Sharon RICHES, Zoe WOOD.
For the degree of Master of Science in Cognitive Neuroscience…
Tiegan BRYANT, Giulia DAL MASO, Siti Nozieda Binti DAMIT, Lois DANN, also awarded the Prize for Best Performance on the MSc Cognitive Neuroscience; Ferdinand EDWARD BITAN, Liam Natividad FITZGERALD, Lucy Green, Antoun KALDAS, David Robert Lambert, Joseph John Harrington Murphy, Elinor Frances OSORIO, Gulsu TECER, Sofia TURCANY DIAZ, Louie UFFENDELL.
For Experimental Psychology (conversion)…
Rowena BEAUMONT.
For Foundations of Clinical Psychology and Mental Health…
Aksa ABRAHAM, Tiarna AKTIPI, Also awarded the Prize for Best Performance on the MSc Foundations of Clinical Psychology and Mental Health; Jabeen Sultan Ali, Julia Azzam Adel AL-QADDOUMI, Alyssa Bea Geile ALARILLA, Majd ALASADI, Melisa ALTINEL, Berk AYKUT, Aleksandra Ivova BOGDANOVA, Jessica Butler, Dilek CHALASHKAN, Ayca Gulfem CIFTCI, Katherine DAVIS, Agnese DE MATTEI, Megha DESAI, Megan Ellis, Reese Forbes, Fatma Betul GUMUSOLUK, Namrata GUPTA, Kerim GURKAN, Suha Haider Iqbal, Rama Esam Yousef HAMARSHEH, Saral HANDA, Robert HART, Batuhan HIZAL, Chloe IRELAND, Chinmayee Sandeep KADAM, Dhroheena Kailash KALA, Gizem KARADENIZ, Avantika KAVASSERI, Beril KETENE, Chi Wing Emmi LU, Maeve MALLON, Jovita MATHEW Liz Ngina MUEMA, Ahmad Walid Rajeh NASSAR, My Co NGUYEN, Israel NWISI, Deniz OKAN, Mihaela OSADCII-ZAIAT, Nantia Loukia PAPAZARKADA, India RICH, Isabella Manal Alkayali RIEDELL, Cyra Darya RIETZ, Saskia RUSHENT, Helena RUSTER, Shreya Paras SANGHVI, Humeyra Sena SERT, Isheta SETIA, Shruti, Oliver SMITH, Srinidhi SRINIVASAN, Janelle Li Theng TAN, Alara TAYLAN, Irene THOMAS, Fatma Ilayda UNAL, Adwait VAISHNAVI, Georgia WALLINGTON, Vasvi YAKSH, Busra YARAR, Ka Nam Nicole YIU, Abigail Felicity YOUNG, Ipek YUKSEL.
For Psychology (conversion)…
Moyinoluwa AJAYI, Danielle Louise BOTTRILL, Georgina BRENNAN, Faye COTTERILL, Madeleine CRAIG, Lucy DEAKIN, Henrietta DURDEN, Helen EADIE, Philippa Kate Elizabeth EASTWOOD, Samuel Olaleke FASHOLA, Jessica Lauren FRANCIS, Kolson Gao Qi, Cassey GAYWOOD, Lara GIFFORD-MAY, Harry Grace, Jack GRAVETT, Sunniva HAYNES, Harry Hiscock, Kensuke KAWAJIRI, Anuja Dilip KODRE, Angelica Lake, Kathryn Rose LUEBBERING, Alistair William MAGILL, Charlie Middleton, Jessica Miller, Sharon Cherotich NGENO, Katie Nicholson, John Wilson PAUTLER, also awarded the Alan Parkin Prize for Best Performance on the MSc in Psychology (Conversion); Laura SOLEILHAC, Megan STUBBS, Dominic Alexander THOMAS, Elizabeth Walker, Adrienne Hope WHITWORTH, Shasha YU.
For the degree of Master of of Research in Psychological Methods…
Caitlyn Crook, also awarded the Prize Best Performance on the MRes Psychological Methods; Amelia Arlette Marianne Dayabanty DASS, Ana NEVES, Tilly Potter, Skylar TAYLOR.
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
"We're not talking about this": A mixed methods exploration into parenting and the intergenerational transmission of eating disorders.
Laura Chapman
For the thesis;
Does breathwork work? An empirical of the hype.
Guy FINCHAM
For the thesis;
Robust statistical methods and the credibility movement of psychological science.
Martina SLADEKOVA
For the thesis;
The fault in our STARS: The statistics anxiety rating scale (STARS) does not measure statistics anxiety.
Jennifer TERRY
For the thesis;
Processing and remembering naturalistic experiences: Inconsistent with Prior Expectations.
Dominika Varga
For the thesis;
Testing brief methods of inducing Self-affirmation.
Nicholas WAUGH
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Psychology.
[The Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor Robin Banerjee, stands and approaches the lectern to present any late graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Robin Banerjee:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the degree of Master of Arts in Media Ethics and Social Change from the School of Media Arts and Humanities...
Lucey Banner.
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia at this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Can I ask, graduands, if you're able to, if you wouldn't mind standing, colleagues on the stage, if you wouldn't mind doing the same.
[Graduands and staff stand]
By the authority of the Senate of the University, I formally confer degrees on all the aforementioned. Congratulations ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ graduates.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Please take a seat.
Well, I'm kind of astounded really by how consistently warm you all are as a group. That was amazing. Not every one of you was just really warm in your greetings and everything. And so family and friends, families, I suppose especially well done 'cause you've brought them up really well. And what a great reflection you are of each other. And also you all smelled nice. That's not always the case, let me tell you. Congratulations again, everyone.
As your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope that you will remain connected to us and to each other as alumni and see your relationship with Sussex as a lifelong one. Whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, even further academic study, or simply some timeout. I wish you the very best. I just wanna point out one thing that came to mind actually. I don't think I've ever experienced this before, but on a graduation day, to have two people in the same ceremony, having birthdays today is kind of special. So happy birthday and happy birthday. It's amazing, isn't it? In closing the ceremony, the chancellor is supposed to impart some words of wisdom or say something inspiring. I mean, the winter graduations even let me know more than usual that I'm the least smart person in the room. But here are some thoughts that I've been having, maybe a little bit disconnected, but you are free to ponder them, ignore them, or even better improve on them.
As your Sussex chapter ends, your future begins. That unwritten future of yours, it's imperative that you get to write it. Because if you don't, someone else will. And there is one thing that you can and will always be better than anybody, anybody else in the world. And that is being you. That's what makes you special. Your uniqueness and the opportunity that you get every day to be a better you is your gift. Another word for gift, of course, is present. And being present is a really, really useful and healthy place to be. You have a wonderful personalised resource, a handbook made, especially just for you, full of pointers, how to be a better you. It's called your past. And you can dip into that at any point to learn, to improve on choices that you made before and repeat choices that were really good. But don't live there. 'Cause regrets really are pointless. I mean, you cannot change the past. The future's unwritten. The present is the only thing that's real. And the thing with the past is not. You can't change it, but it can still be useful as a lesson. And I think it's really useful not to waste those moments in regret. Because they're really not helpful at all.
And as I say, then there's the unwritten future, and I hope that you'll write it with as much positive language, as you can muster. Fill your future with words like ambition and hope and dreams and joy, and compassion and love and possibilities. You know, a lot of people think that the future that they don't know is kind of, it's, somehow bleak not to know. But that just means it's full of possibilities. One possibility is that, you know, it could be worse, you could be worse off, than you are now, but one possibility is that you could be better off than you are now. And a million possibilities that it could be different. And so that bleakness is reduced to one. Resist filling it with fear and guilt and anger. They're not particularly useful. I'm not sure if you can manifest actual physical things, but you can manifest a mindset. I read a really great definition of positivity, which was 'Positivity is not thinking, everything's going to turn out great. It's knowing things are terrible now, but they can change for the better'. Particularly as the vice chancellor alluded to in the speech at the beginning, it's a very conflicted world at the moment with lots of terrible things that are going on. And in addition to that, we have personalities around the world... 'They're eating the dogs, they're eating the dogs' It's really important to remain positive within that.
A few day days ago, I spoke to a really close friend of mine who I've known since university. She lost her home in the California fires. She's not kind of wealthy celeb or anything like that. She's regular lawyer and lived in a fairly regular neighbourhood. She was told that it would take between three and five years to rebuild her house. And I asked her how she was feeling right now, She said, look, I'm sad that I didn't save some photographs and all videos because, she said everything else is replaceable. And then she added, but I believe that my life will get better. And I said, then it will, because you've just decided it will. And she could have quite legitimately have said, I'm really scared, I'm anxious, I'm depressed. I don’t know how I'm going to start again at this age. I don’t know how it's going to affect my family. All of those things would've been absolutely true and legitimate as well. Trying to get to a positive place from there would've been much more difficult from where she started.
So, giving yourself a hopeful platform is an incredibly useful place to move on from. The thing is that when we feel overwhelmed by anything actually, whether it's grief or anger or jealousy or love or beauty, we lose perspective. Even momentarily. And if in that moment we have to make decisions, they may not be the decisions we would make if we are calmer. So I think it's really important to feel the emotions because you have a right to every single emotion that's out there. But it's really useful to get as quickly back to some semblance of perspective as you can. And the easiest way to do it is to talk to someone. Whether it you are worried about something external, about yourself, talking about it, is the quickest way, of getting perspective. 'cause you get someone else's opinion. And even saying it out loud yourself sometimes can clarify things for you. And the thing about perspective for me is that it allows you to access what I think is the healthiest place to live in, which is in gratitude. Gratitude makes you feel lucky and gives you a sense of humility. And feeling lucky is like a force field. I feel lucky all the time. I mean, over the last couple of days, my legs have been aching and my back's been aching from the ceremonies. I've still loved every moment. And I kind of realise all the time how lucky I am. My luck isn't based on something that happened today or didn't happen today. I just feel it. I feel it all the time because I feel grateful all the time. And it's a really useful place and a healthy place to keep yourself. 'cause when negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just crappy life stuff. It's stuff that comes along and you deal with it and you move on. When it happens to an unlucky person, it feels personal and defining and stressful, and it compounds and begs all those other questions. Why does this always happen to me? Why am I so unlucky? It's not fair.
And these are existential cries to the universe for help. And it's a lot for the universe to kind of respond with the positivity that someone needs to get out of that. A lucky person doesn't ask those questions because they're just too busy looking for solutions and looking to their next decisions. And it is a challenge to find gratitude sometimes. But the more you look for it, the easier it becomes to access until it just becomes a habit. It just becomes just who you are. So take hold of your narrative and use it to consistently improving. Be unconditionally You. You must have heard this, I've, I've heard this quite a bit, where people will say, you know, I'll be nice to them if they're nice to me. I'm not gonna respect them, if they don't respect me. Why shall I listen to them if they're not gonna listen to me? And I think... who in that situation is controlling the narrative? It's not you, it's the other person. You're just responding to whatever. So be nice and listen and respect, because that's who you are. If the other person doesn't reciprocate, that's them being them. That's not your worry. You be you. There's that great quote from Gary Oldman, the actor, great actor. And he said, 'I used to worry about what people thought of me until I realised what people think of me is none of my business'. It's them being them. You be you.
A word on planning. Life planning is obviously, it's great, it's really useful. It allows you to see and build steps towards a goal. But it's linear, right? It has to be. It's like rungs of a ladder, you know, 1, 2, 3, 4 step. Then you get to the top. That's a plan. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor. It's full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, the WTF's, um, World Tennis Federation for the kiddies. And that's normal. That's normal. So be okay with your plan and be okay when it's disrupted, because that's just life. People feel that, you know, as I said, a bleak future is kind of filled with kind of imagined horrors. And so disruption is usually seen in negative terms, right? Something's going along, it's disrupted, it's changed that thing. And we go, -oh, that's worse. But actually life, the disruptor can be really positive. It can disrupt you into better paths. And I've got two life experiences of this, which you may be aware of, but I'll tell you anyway. Sussex was my first choice when I was applying to universities many, many years ago. I didn't want to go anywhere else, and I didn't get in. Apparently my grades weren't good enough. And so I waited 25 years until all those people, who were responsible for me not getting in, had either just got really old, were in prison or got deported or were just dead. And I came back as chancellor. So ha ha ha, linear planning. Linear planning -zero, Life disruptor -one. And the other experience was that I wanted to act and write and have a creative job since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five, some uncle came to the house and said, when I think about it, it's really weird now. But I was just five years old. And the uncle said to me, well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up? And I said, actor. And my dad said, it's pronounced doctor. And that is true.
So, you know, a career, as I was growing up and growing older, seemed impossible. But the dream was still sitting there behind a wall of doubts and fears. I did a degree in Business in Marketing, and at the age of 30, I had to sue the company I was working for, for breach of contract. And I couldn't get a job for two years while it kind of went through the legal process. I was 32 and I thought, I don't wanna be 70 years old and regretting not having tried. And so I thought I'll have a go. And neither I or anyone else could have foreseen that two years later I'd be on a TV show that was successful and has led to quite an extraordinarily fortunate career. And again, I have to say, where were you linear planning? Linear planning -zero, life disruptor -two. And those are both really major ones for me. So, you know, the disruptor now may lead to something incredible in the future. So don't discount it and don't define yourself if you have a bad day, by that bad day or a bad week or a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once I came out of it. And don't be afraid of making mistakes. Everyone makes them. Just make sure that each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making old mistakes. That's the definition of an idiot, isn't it? And also I have to tell you, I can't fail. Just can't. Cool, isn't it? So I don't. Because I just haven't given myself that choice. I can succeed or I can learn, or both. Failure is not an option for me.
A quote attributed to George Elliot says, it's never too late to be what you might have been. And really that tells me it's just never too late. It's never too late. So I kind of say, yeah, be the best you every day, but who are you and who are we? I believe that we are always our next choice. The next decision we make is who we are. What just happened to us might have been because of our actions, but it also could be conditions in coincidence. Our response to it is us. And that's what we get to refine every day. And if our next decision, has kindness and compassion within it about other people, about ourselves, then I think we are being a better us. There's that great, I love this. The Maya Angelou Great American poet. A quote from her, which was, 'People may forget what you said, people may forget what you did. People will never forget the way you made them feel'. And that is absolutely true. Good and bad. I remember all the bullies, across the years for me. But I really remember all the kindness as well. And I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself in, leave that situation or if it's a person, leave them in a better place than you found them, if you can. It hasn't worked with their bedrooms yet, I have to say. I'm gonna have to still work on that.
So I hope you take your gift of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world and to each other and to yourselves so you can live a life of gratitude. And be the lucky you that you have the choice to be. I did mention at the beginning in my opening speech how some of your late nights you found the answer to the life, the universe and everything, and then forgot it the next morning. I can tell you the answer. It's 42. If you know, you know. Good luck, we're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you.
For this day, I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
Ceremony 8 at 1.30pm
Winter 2025: Ceremony 8
- Video transcript
[‘Trumpet Fanfare’ music playing] (A procession of university senior academics and staff in ceremonial robes enter the auditorium, walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduands and guests, ascend the stage via staircases on the left and right respectively, and take their seats. At the end of the procession are two academics/staff with ceremonial torches who on stage bow to each other, the rows of academics/staff, and then place the torches on a small, raised table with a cloth at the very front of the stage.]
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Good afternoon, I declare open this congregation of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
I'm delighted as chancellor to welcome you formally to this graduation ceremony. A warm welcome to our honoured guests, our distinguished faculty members, and to those of the professional services here at Sussex. But the warmest welcomes are for you, our graduands, and your family and friends that join you here today. And to those who couldn't make it here, here in person, and maybe watching this via live video stream around the world.
Graduation is one of the highlights of the university year. As such, as you can see up here on the stage, we've made a bit of an effort with our gowns and our bow ties and dressing up. Some have even brought forward their weekly bath and or invested in deodorant. And this is all in honour of you and our pride in your fantastic achievement. The ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ motto is, so you can see up there, 'Be still and know'. And I hope that at some point today, you find a quiet moment to reflect on your accomplishments and the journey that has brought you here. I know that many of you have had to overcome challenges on that journey as well. Struggling to balance your studies with home life, in some cases whilst raising children or supporting loved ones, experiencing loss and health issues, trying to survive on overdrafts loans or family help, perhaps battling loneliness, anxiety, self-doubt, and even sometimes the doubt of others. But you didn't give up. You didn't give in. And here you are.
For many today will mark the end of their academic journey. A journey that started all those years ago in nursery or kindergarten, when you learned that teddy bears could be real friends, that throwing things on the floor was fun, that splashing in puddles was even more fun, and that getting half your food in your mouth and half on your face was a perfectly acceptable ratio. And hated the phrases 'No more ice cream' and 'time for bed'. Through all your school years and exam pressures that led you to ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, where you learned that last night's pizza was a perfectly acceptable breakfast, that you could indeed make it to a 9:00 AM lecture if you woke up at 8:55. Late night chats fuelled by Dr. Caffeine or Miss Chardonnay. Where you found the answer to life, the universe and everything, only to have forgotten it by the next morning. And hated the phrases 'Wifi not available' and 'the assignment deadline is tomorrow'. But you could eat as much ice cream as you want. So there was the plus. Which brings us to today. Your glorious day. And thank you families and friends as well. I know from experience how much you've supported and sacrificed for your graduand and to be here. We are humbled and honoured that you now all have a connection to Sussex.
So graduands, in a short while, a name will be read out, hopefully approximating to yours, and you will take the mere 20 or so steps across this stage, terrified that you're gonna lose your hat or mortarboard, wondering whether the heels was such a good idea after all. Wondering whether your flies are open, and praying that you don't trip over your gown and end up in the lap of someone in the front row. If you do decide to go on that path, what an array of laps we have arranged for you this afternoon. It's like Squid Game meets the Antiques Roadshow. I am beholden to tell you, or to remind you - I know many of you have been up here before, but you haven't actually got your degree yet. And you getting your degree might, just depend on how much love you show me when you come up here. No love for the Chancellor, no degree.
Seriously, feel free to express yourself when you come up here, in whatever way you want, as long as it's within the bounds of decency and legality. I'll go with it. I mean, over the years we've done, handshakes, of course, hugs, high fives, fist bumps, dabs, dancing, press up, people have done press ups up here. I've gone along with those. If you're gonna do press up today, you're doing them on your own. Okay? I can get down. I dunno if I can get back up at my age. And families and friends, this is your day too. So when the time comes, please do have your cameras ready. And feel free to make as much noise as your loved one crosses the stage. And if anybody is on their on their own today, I'll be your family or friend. So no one's alone. Okay?
I call upon the Vice Chancellor, professor Sasha Roseneil, to address the congregation.
[Vice-Chancellor, Professor Sasha Roseneil, stands and approaches the lectern to make an introductory speech.]
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
Madam Deputy Mayor, distinguished guests, members of the university, parents, supporters, friends, and above all our graduands, Sussex class of 2024 as vice Chancellor and President of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, it's my great honour and enormous pleasure to welcome you here today. My thanks to our chancellor Sanjeev Bhaskar for as ever a fabulous opening speech. Sanjeev is an almost impossible act to follow. But as an as Sanjeev has reminded us, today is all about you, our graduands. It's a day of huge celebration for you and of you and of all you've achieved. It's also a moment to acknowledge that many of you have benefited in countless tangible and less tangible ways from the love and support of your family or guardians and carers, from the encouragement of your friends, and of course from the teaching and guidance of staff at the university. You may also have had support from our alumni community and donors who've provided scholarships that might have enabled you to study at Sussex. So I'm now going to ask for some participation from you, our graduands. If you wouldn't mind standing and turning, and facing your supporters, your families behind you, just giving them a big round of applause to say thank you.
(Graduands and guests applaud.)
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
That's great. Please be seated again. As ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, as a university, we are committed to providing an inclusive, respectful, and supportive environment for every member of our diverse and international community. Sussex students represent the most wonderful variety of backgrounds, beliefs, and identities. You come here each year from over 130 countries around the world. And so we have people in the audience today of many different nationalities and faiths and almost everyone gathered here has a different opinion from someone else about something. That diversity of thought and belief is a very special thing. Something that Sussex as a university seeks always to uphold and support. We have a foundational commitment to academic freedom and freedom of speech. It's our job as a university to create an environment in which diversity of belief and opinion can be explored. And so we nurture the conditions under which people can respectfully discuss and debate difficult ideas, where propositions can be tested, analysis undertaken, theories developed, and where minds can be expanded and changed. We are living in deeply troubled times with war and conflict, terror, death, and the destruction of habitats, economic hardship, hunger and inequality, as well as climate crisis and environmental degradation, giving rise to enormous concern amongst Sussex students. Many Sussex students and their families and loved ones, I'm sure hold passionate opinions about the causes, consequences and solutions to these issues. And as we gather here today to celebrate graduation, I'd like to emphasise that the university always supports freedom of expression that is lawful and respectful of others, mindful of the humanity and diversity, that's at the heart of our university community. And is what binds us together across nations and faiths as a global community.
So Sussex graduands, I would like to thank you for all that you have contributed to making our university a place of community inclusion and diversity. An open, warm and welcoming place. In the two and a half years since I became vice chancellor, I've come to see that Sussex students are the very embodiment of energy, hope, and possibility. Alongside your academic work, many of you have taken part in an oppressive array of other activities as members and leaders of student societies and groups as volunteers helping and supporting other people on and off campus. And many of you are today receiving a Spirit of Sussex Award for your positive involvement in our community. Serving as campus ambassadors to fundraising for local causes, creating new ways for our campus to be more environmentally sustainable. I commend that commitment to your extracurricular activities. Well done on all you've achieved alongside your formal studies.
Over the past few years, I've had the great privilege of meeting many Sussex alumni, not just from the UK but from across the world, in Asia, Africa, and the Americas. And I've been overwhelmed by how many of them told me how much they loved their student days at Sussex and how their experience of studying at Sussex had fundamentally shaped their lives and careers. They recall encountering new ideas and ways of thinking that transformed their worldview, as well as making lasting friendships and building networks that have accompanied them ever since. I sincerely hope that you, our graduands today will feel the same in the years to come. Whether you already have a job or are taking time to explore the world or are looking for your next opportunity, you can be confident that you're leaving a university with a global reputation. A university that has equipped you with knowledge and skills to think critically and creatively. To work across the boundaries of established knowledge and to understand the importance of a global perspective.
You've been tutored and supervised by academics who are internationally recognised for the quality of their research and scholarship. Their research has directly informed your education across the disciplines and in the spaces in between. Our research focuses on the urgent concerns of our time. Some of you might have seen our 'Impossible until it's done' campaign on our website, on banners and on the buses. Inspired by the words of Nelson Mandela, the campaign highlights the work we are doing to tackle seemingly intractable problems such as pollution in rivers, dementia, and young people's mental health. We know the great value of our research at ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ, but we also recognise the importance of sharing our successes with wider audiences. And Sussex has much to celebrate. For the eighth consecutive year, we, along with our campus partner, the Institute of Development Studies, have been ranked first in the world for development studies. This is outstanding achievement by our academics. Development studies seek understandings of and progress towards global equity, social justice, and sustainability, and is very much at the heart of what Sussex is about.
One of the key measures of the strength and impact of a university is the extent to which the publications of its academics are cited by other academics. And Sussex really does punch above our weight in many areas in this respect in the world's most prestigious university league table, the QS world rankings. This year we have nine subjects in the top 10 in the UK for citations with two subject areas, history and physics and astronomy. Each ranked first in the UK. We were also recognised as the eighth most sustainable university in the UK and 16th in the UK for employment outcomes. And for the past three years, the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ Business School has been ranked first in the UK for research income in business and management. This funding is being used to tackle crucial global challenges in sustainability, energy demand, trade policy, equality, innovation, and digital technologies. All this means that Sussex research is improving the lives of people around the world, enhancing and advancing developments in technology, influencing the policies of governments, and making a positive difference to the protection of our natural environment.
Now, I know that many of you graduating today have had already extraordinary and sometimes very difficult life journeys. Some of you have struggled with your mental health, some with physical health problems. Some of you have faced loss and family disruption during your studies. Each of you has a unique journey through your time at Sussex. And each of you will have had your ups and downs. But whatever your Sussex story, I hope when you look back at your time with us, you feel your studies were intellectually challenging and rigorous. That you were stretched, stimulated, and supported to achieve your best. That you're leaving with knowledge, skills, and personal resources, that will stand you in good stead, and that you make connections and friendships that will stay with you long into the future. You'll now take many different paths as you join our community of over 200,000 alumni worldwide. Our alumni include Nobel Laureates, grassroots, campaigners, and activists, heads of state and vice presidents, leaders, influencers and creative practitioners in the arts and entertainment, writers, journalists, academics, chief executives of national and multinational organisations. And those with less high profile, but no less significant lives and careers, people whose actions and relationships remake and renew the social fabric in small positive ways. Every day, across the globe, in more than 160 countries and in all walks of life, our alumni are sharing the benefits of their Sussex experience to make the world a better place. I know you will do that too.
So graduands, celebrate who you are today. Celebrate the commitment you made to achieve your degree. The fact that the sacrifices you made have proved worthwhile. That the belief in yourself that has made this possible has come to fruition. And celebrate those who helped you reach this moment. In short, celebrate.
I now call upon the Head of the School of Engineering and Informatics, Professor Ian Wakeman.
(Applause)
[The Head of the School of Engineering and Informatics, Professor Ian Wakeman, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Ian Wakeman:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Art in Product Design...
Mia Rudolph.
For the degree of Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence...
Wang Fu,
Biaggio HOEFGEEST,
Hakan PEHLIVAN,
Syed TIPU
For Electrical and Electronic Engineering…
Eric LUZZE
For Engineering…
Najeeb BHEEKHUN,
Chiamaka IBEJI
For Product Design…
Callum HOWELL
For the degree of Bachelor of Engineering in Electrical and Electronic Engineering…
Mohammed ALSAIHATI,
Saoud Abdulrab ALYAFEI,
Florence Hughes
For Mechanical Engineering…
Gonzalo Marcos GAGLIARDI
For Mechanical Engineering (with an industrial placement year)…
Jordan ROBOTHAM ELLISON
For the degree of Master of Science in Engineering…
Jude Hyatt
For the Postgraduate Diploma in Computing with Digital Media…
Rayvanth ANDERSON
For the degree of Master of Science in 5G Mobile Communications
and Intelligent Embedded Systems…
Hirenkumar Vinaykumar SONI,
Bohao YAN
For 5G Mobile Communications and Intelligent Embedded Systems (with an industrial placement year)…
Jaydeep TOOPRAN LINGOJI
For Advanced Computer Science…
Adedamola Sunday ADEGOKE,
Ege AKMAN,
Anita,
Sultana Mahamad ATTAR,
Thilak BELLAMKONDA,
Vismay Devidas BHATLAWANDE,
Demre BICER,
Layan BOULOS,
Pranav Vamsidhar Reddy BUDILI,
Shubham Sunil DALVI,
Sara HASAN,
Rohan Vivek KADAM,
Sai Sumanth KAMSHETTY,
Mehmet Ali KISACIK,
Taha KIZMAZ,
Mya Thuzar LWIN,
Ali Mohayyuddin MALAK,
Kaosarat Ololade MALIK,
Mohamed Mounir MOULOUDI,
Thomas NACCARATO,
Nidhish Dayanand NADE
Callum PETERS,
Joshua SAWYER,
Jawad Nasar SHAH,
Seun Olanrewaju SODIYA,
Zhiji SUN,
Chandrasekhar Srinivas TALADA,
Veerpal Kaur,
Moldir ZHUMAKHAZHI,
For Advanced Electronic and Electrical Engineering…
Ryota NAKANISHI
For Advanced Mechanical Engineering…
Rafael ALAPONT CALABUIG,
Sonu Kumar,
Luke McGregor
For Artificial Intelligence and Adaptive Systems…
Funda Aysel AYDIN,
Alketa BACKA,
Sahil Rajendra BANDAL,
Kemal BAYIK,
Rimjhim CHAKRABORTY,
Sayan CHATTOPADHYAY,
Thenuka DHARMASEELAN,
Alphan ELMAS,
Aditya Kiran GADKARI,
Jodi Hannah GORDON,
Kian ILANLUO,
Burak KILERCIK,
Abdullah Al Saqib MAJUMDER,
Praveenan MATHEW,
Luis MORALES LAYJA,
Danford Paul NCHEMBI,
Ruth Noble,
Samson Udama ODAN,
Arham RAHIM,
Yogesh SADASIVAM,
Andres Sebastian SALAZAR ALTURO,
Soheil SALEMI,
Shraddha Satyamkumar SHUKLA,
Poppy Catherine SMALLEY,
Mohanna TORKASHVAND
For Artificial Intelligence and Adaptive Systems (with an industrial placement year)…
Hui San Alyssa YEW
For Computer Science (conversion)…
Samuel ADJEI,
Chinonye Clinton ENWERE,
Nuria ESTARAN LUU,
Timothy Hewitt,
Enes KARADUMAN,
Gnana Ravi Teja KASI,
Gavin Tendekai MADANHI,
Yogalakshmi SHANMUGA JOTHI,
Yuvraj SHARMA,
Mo'taz Mohannad Moh'd SIRRIYEH,
Mehmet Alp SONMEZ,
Matthew William STOCKDALE,
Teja Lakshmi VANTIPALLI,
Erick Brandom VERA ALFEREZ,
Yunus ZAFAR,
Nada Mohamed Fathalla Saleh ZAHRAN,
Maksymilian ZIELINSKI
For Computing with Digital Media…
Ayomide Brian ADEWUMI,
Lukas ADOMAITIS,
Christian MURPHY,
Mohammad Mamun Or RASHID,
Mian Gulsher Ahmed SAJID,
Linyu WANG,
Yongtao ZHANG.
For Engineering Business Management…
Aditya ARYAN,
Serra CIFTCI.
Also the recipient of the John Kinghorn MSc Scholarship; Aarthi DURAIBABU SREEDEVI,
Parvinder Kaur,
Sejal Yogesh PATE,
Yousef REZQ,
Taiwo Olaide SALAMI,
Hasan UYGURER
For Management of Information Technology…
María de Fátima AGUIRRE BOLIVAR,
Folasade Omolara AKINYEMI,
Ibtihal AYACHI AMOR,
Seyed Shayan EBRAHIMI,
Manjunath Ashok GANAGI,
Haridharani GANDHIMATHINATHAN,
Michal Mikolaj JANCZARA,
Pratik Vijay KATE,
Baishali MANNA,
Mohammad Mahdi TAHVILIAN,
Nassima YESBERGENOVA
For Robotics and Autonomous Systems…
Mayowa Amoo AFOLABI,
Chibuzor Harrison ESSU,
Eshwar MURUGAIYAN,
Bharath Raj Kumar MUTHARASAN,
Nahala Noureen,
Adnan TAKRITI,
Haritha TENSING,
Parth Jatin THAR
For Robotics and Autonomous Systems
(with an industrial placement year)…
Boyong WANG
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Insect inspires visual navigation for robots. The advantages and risks of using temporal information. Stathis KAGIOULIS
For the thesis;
Compute-optimised deep learning for wearable time series with fast multi-objective architecture search.
Lloyd PELLATT
For the thesis;
Implementing renewable energy technologies in the city of Jeddah.
Montaser SHABAN KABAKIBOU
For the thesis;
Blockchain-driven trust: revolutionising e-commerce reputation and review systems.
Ziqi YAN
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Engineering and Informatics.
Professor Sasha Roseneil:
I call upon Peter Giesl, Professor of Mathematics in the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences.
(Applause)
[Peter Giesl, Professor of Mathematics in the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, stands and approaches the lectern to present the graduands. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Professor Peter Giesl:
Chancellor, I present to you for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Mathematics...
Mariia SINKEVICH
For Physics…
Zachary Martin,
Rowan Packer
For Physics with Astrophysics…
Biaggi CONCEPCION,
Charlotte Patmore
For Theoretical Physics…
Bilal KHARES,
Artur MAJEROWSKI,
Kiryu POKU
For the degree of Postgraduate Diploma in Social Data Science…
Dylan Sharkey
For the degree of Master of Science in Astronomy…
And also the recipient of the William McCrea Prize for outstanding performance on the MSc in Astronomy; Borja PAUTASSO
For Corporate and Financial Risk Management…
Waleed Mohammad Abdullah ABDULLAH,
Hiral Rameshbhai KAKADIYA,
Ana Andrea PABON NARVAEZ,
Sourav Alakkal Sathish,
For Cosmology…
Patrick Baxter,
Varel Edward D SOUZA,
Also the recipient of the Jenny and Peter Kingsland Scholarship; Hannah Dilworth
For Data Science…
Kayode Babatunde ADENIJI
Onyekachi Joy AGWU,
Jyoti Vinay AHLUWALIA,
Alan Sony,
Usman ALI,
Muharrem ALTUNBAG,
also awarded the prize for outstanding performance on the MSc in Data Science; Eisha ARIF
Kiana ASADZADEH,
Deborah ASHONG,
HMuhammad Azeem AWAN,
Sufyan Ali AWAN,
Ademola Tolulope BABALOLA,
Yogeswara Reddy BADEPALLE,
Paulina BAKIEWICZ,
Thomas BERRINGTON,
Jasmin Bhupeshkumar BHAVSAR ,
Maria Florencia Leonor CARRASCO,
Onur Can CIKLA,
Avani Chetanbhai DALSANIYA,
Chidinma Rosemary EZE,
Haleh FAROUGHI,
Samily GANDHI,
Gurubux Singh GILL,
Thomas HEEKIN,
Osama Ahmad Kamal JABR,
Sekinat Omolara JIMOH,
Ritu JOHN,
Samaneh KAMALINEJAD,
Srija KARMAKAR,
Salmon Khan,
Mosammat Asika KHATUN,
Youjin KIM,
Melis Ecem KOCA,
Tyra KORANTENG,
Matthew Arthur Laycock,
Florence Ozioma LEO-PATRICK,
Vibhor MALHOTRA,
Maicy Jebet MARITIM,
Meghana MUDIVARTHI,
Cecilia Opeyemi MUYIDE,
Saiprasad Limbadri MYANA,
Sanjana NEELI NAGARAJ,
Ashmiya Mohan ODIKKUNIYIL,
Babatunde Olapoju OLADIMEJI,
Mert OLCAMAN,
Azumi OSAKA,
Simeen Sajid PAWNE,
Karl-Emil Bruhn POULSEN,
Aamir RAJA,
Ramesha,
Toheeb Akande SALAUDEEN,
Raza Ali Hussain SAYED,
Devanshi Rupesh SHAH,
Ashishkiran SINGH,
Abhishek SRIVASTAV,
Queen Ugochi STANLEY,
Mahima SUKUMARAN NAIR JAYALEKSHMI,
Sarker Md TANZIM,
Faosiyat Bolanle TIAMIYU-TIJANI,
Chinedu Malachi UTI,
Dominic WOJCIECHOWSKI,
For Data Science (with an industrial placement year)…
Adaolisa Margaret OKAFOR,
For Financial Data Analytics…
Handan AKGUL,
Mayukh DAS,
also awarded the prize for the outstanding performance on the MSc in Mathematics; Gracie Gilbert,
Jesibha Rani INBA JOTHI,
For Financial Mathematics…
Ziheng SHAO
For Human and Social Data Science…
Benjamin Oscar Berlin AU-YEUNG,
Maria Izabel FEITOSA BAHIA,
Ayse Aybuke GULER,
Dajin JUNG,
Sami Akhtar KHAN,
Jungyeon LEE,
O Yin LEUNG,
Anuoluwapo Deborah OLUWATUYI,
Emma Jacqueline Chantrelle WYNTER
For Mathematics…
Diala Nabeel Abed Alfattah ABEDALQADER,
Nouf Saad M ALTIMANI,
Also the recipient of the Dr. John Birch Organ Scholarship; Frederic COLLINGE
For Nanomaterials and Energy…
Ali BEHROUZ.
For Particle Physics…
Jaskiran ARORA,
Varun Amit KHER,
Brandon Liam KING
For Quantum Technology…
and also awarded the prize for outstanding performance on MSc Physics; David Joseph SWAINSTON
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Master of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Constructing lightcones from cosmological N-body simulations.
Robin Booth
Chancellor, I will now present to you for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy...
For the thesis;
Approximate and semi-numerical one-loop corrections for precision LHC phenomenology.
Lorenzo Mai
For the thesis;
Ultracold atoms in inertial sensing: Practical issues.
Gwyn WILSON
Chancellor, this concludes the list of graduands from the School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences.
(Applause)
[Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Ruebain stands and approaches the lectern to present those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony. As he reads the names aloud, the graduands walk across the stage to applause and shake hands with the Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar]
Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Ruebain:
Chancellor, I now present to you those graduands who were unable to be presented earlier in the ceremony.
For the Postgraduate Certificate in Psychology of Kindness and Wellbeing at Work...
Ravija Singhal
For the degree of Master of Science in Advanced Computer Science...
Sai Bala Kishan Singh Bondili,
Paras,
Dusita Ritthison
For Artificial Intelligence and Adaptive Systems...
Hamididreza Dadvar,
Md Ashfaq Salehin.
For Artificial Intelligence and Adaptive Systems (with an industrial placement year)...
Oladimeji Shekoni
For Engineering Business Management...
Mohamed Yassir Lekbir
For the degree of Master of Science in Corporate and Financial Risk Management...
Ahmet Gokhan Arslan,
Ahsan Habib Sakib
For Data Science...
Benjamin Ackah,
Venkata Sai Jyothi Challa,
Zargham Salari
For Data Science (with an industrial placement year)…
Ganiyat Aderinola Ogunbambo
For Mathematics...
Ugur Eren Canakci
For the degree of Master of Science in Artificial Intelligence and Adaptive Systems...
David Matt-Ojo
For the degree of Master of Science in Genetic Manipulation and Molecular Cell Biology...
Narmadha Santhanam
Chancellor, you have now met all the graduands at this ceremony, and the moment has come for the formal conferral of degrees of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ. I therefore ask you to confer degrees on those presented to you and to the other graduands who have indicated their wish to graduate in absentia in this ceremony.
[Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar stands in the middle of the stage.]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
If you are able to, could I ask the graduands to stand and colleagues on the stage similarly, thank you.
[Graduands and staff stand]
By the powers vested in me by the Senate of the university, I formally confer degrees on all the aforementioned. Congratulations graduates of the ÅÝܽ¶ÌÊÓƵ.
[Applause]
Chancellor, Sanjeev Bhaskar:
Thank you, everyone. Take a seat.
Okay, so let me make something clear. I'm not doing press-ups. All right? Actually, I'm not doing them ever again. I don't think I'll be able to.
Congratulations again, everybody. You were so warm and so lovely and it was delightful to meet all of you. You also smelled nice as well, which I don't take for granted. Some people don't, but you all did.
As your time here at Sussex draws to a close, we hope you will remain connected—to us, to each other—as alumni. Think of your relationship with the university as one for life. Whether your next step is gainful employment, the search for it, further academic study, or simply some time out, I wish you the very, very best.
In closing the ceremony the chancellor is supposed to say some something inspiring
or impart some words of wisdom. You're already way smarter than I am, and I'm including the little kids on that as well. But here are some thoughts I've had. Feel free to ponder or to ignore or even better to improve upon. It strikes me that as your Sussex chapter ends, your future begins, and your life story becomes really important your narrative. And it's really important that you get to write it,
because if you don't write it, someone will write your story for you. And it struck me. There's one thing that you can, and always will be better than anybody else at, and that is being you. You are unique and that's what makes you special. And the fact that we get the opportunity, and you will get the opportunity every day to be a better you, is your gift. Another word for gift, of course, is present.
And the importance of just remaining present as well. You have a wonderful, personalised resource, a handbook made, especially just for you, full of pointers, how to be a better you, and it's called your past. And you can dip into that at any time to find choices that you made that you could do better,
good choices you made that you could repeat, but don't live there. I mean, regrets are pointless.
They are absolutely useless, because the past can't be changed, right? But the past can be useful as a lesson. And then there's your future. And when you write it, write it with as much positive language as you can muster. Fill your future with words like ambition and hope and dreams and joy and possibilities. One of the interesting things I think about the future, when people think about the future, is if they don't know what it is, they fear it a little bit because they fill it with quite foreboding things.
And the truth is that in any of your situations in the future, there is a possibility that you could be in a worse place than you are now. But then you have to accept there is a possibility where you could be in a better place than you are now. And probably a million possibilities where it's just different. So it's possibilities, I think are much, much more powerful. And it's really important at the moment what Vice Chancellor mentioned in the speech at the beginning, about how fractured, the world is and how many kinds of crises there are, and conflicts and all the rest of it. And it's really important to be positive and to keep positive. We're dealing with not just those things in the world or things in your own life, but people as well. Like, 'They're eating the dogs, they're eating the dogs, they're eating the pets' you know, but you've gotta kind of remain positive around all that sort of stuff. And there was a great definition of positivity that I read, which was being positive is not thinking everything's gonna turn out great. It's knowing things that are bad now, and they can get better.
A few days days ago, I spoke to a friend of mine who lost her home in the fires in California. And she's not a wealthy celebrity or anything, she's regular lawyer. She lived in a regular neighbourhood. And she told me that they said it'll take three to five years before they can rebuild her neighbourhood and her home. And I asked her how she was feeling now, and she said, well I'm a bit upset. There are photographs and videos that I couldn't save. But everything else can be replaced. And then she added, I believe my life will get better. It will just get better. And I said, then it will. Because you've just decided it will. And she could have, very legitimately, have answered, I'm scared, I'm depressed, I'm anxious. How do you start again at this age? How is this gonna affect my family? And that would've been just as true. But from that position to get to positivity is a much longer, much more challenging journey. She has given herself a positive platform about her own future now, and that's always a choice. You know, when we feel overwhelmed by anything, by grief, by anger, by envy or beauty or love, when we're overwhelmed, then lose, even momentarily, we lose perspective. And if we have to make choices in that state, they may not be the decisions we would make if we were calmer. So, I think it's important to feel everything. You have the right to every single emotion that exists, but finding your way quickly back to perspective is really healthy. And the easiest way of doing that is to talk to somebody. You know, whether you are going through something or you're worried about something externally, talk
to someone because you'll get another viewpoint whether you agree or disagree. You'll get another viewpoint, there'll be a discussion. And even sometimes just saying it out loud can help clarify things.
And the other reason that I think perspective is so important, it can lead you to be in the healthiest state. And that's one of gratitude. Just being grateful all the time. It's an emotion and an aspect that just becomes part of you. And feeling grateful makes you feel lucky. And luck, feeling lucky is an incredibly powerful force field. It brings calm, that opens doors to your own vast reserves of empathy and compassion. You know, when negative stuff happens to someone who feels lucky, I mean, I feel lucky all the time. You know, I'm, I'm aching slightly right now, still feel really lucky. My luck isn't based on something that happened today or didn't happen today. I just feel it all the time because I'm really grateful for all the experiences I have. So when negative stuff happens to a lucky person, it's just crappy life stuff. It happens. You deal with it, and you move on to your next choices. When it happens
to someone who's unlucky, it feels personal and defining and stressful and compounding. And very often leads to those other questions. You know, why am I so unlucky? Why did it happen to me?
I did a really good thing last week and now this has happened this week. I don't understand Rule of Three. Is it the first of the three bad things second or the third one? And it's, you know, all of those things are basically saying it's not fair to the universe. An existential cry to the universe for help. And a lucky person doesn't ask those questions simply 'cause they're just too busy working on solutions
and moving on to their next choices. It is a challenge to find gratitude sometimes. But the more you look for it, the easier it becomes to access until it's just habit. It's just who you are. So take hold of your narrative and use it to consistently improving. Be unconditionally you. You must have heard this. I hear this quite a bit. When people say, if they're nice to me, I'll be nice to them. I'm not gonna respect them. If they don't respect me. Why should I listen to them, if they're not listening to me? And on the one hand, that sounds like someone's being very level-headed and fair. But when you think about it, who's controlling the narrative in that situation? It's not you, it's the other person. You are just reacting to them. So, you respect and you listen, and you be nice because that's who you are. If they don't reciprocate or respond in kind, that's them being them. That's not your problem. You be you.
The great actor, I love Gary Oldman. He said once I spent so many years worrying about what people thought of me until I realised that what people think of me is none of my business. And he was right. He was saying, they're being them, I'll be me.
Just a quick word on planning. Life planning is, as you know, many of you have planned, and planned well, but planning is linear, right? It has to be, you know, it's steps of a ladder. 1, 2, 3, 4. You get to the top in the same way. You go step, two steps, three steps, four steps to your goal. Life is the exact opposite. Life is a disruptor full of curve balls, the unexpected weird coincidences, the WTFs, uh, World Tennis Federation -for the kiddies. And that's normal to be okay with your plan and be okay when it's disrupted. That's just life being life, you know? And a lot of people think that disruption is a negative term. The things were in a particular order and then disruption comes and that's bad. Well, actually, disruption is just change. Disruption can take you to somewhere better. And I've got lived experiences of this. One of them was that you may be aware that Sussex was my first choice when I was applying to universities many years ago. Didn't want to go anywhere else. I didn't get in. Apparently, my grades weren't good enough. And so I waited 25 years to all those who prevented me getting in, had either got really old, were in prison or deported or dead. And I came back in as chancellor. So, take that, linear planning! Linear planning -zero, life disruption- One. I wanted to act
and write since I was five years old. And I know this because when I was five years old, we had some uncle who came to the house and who said to me, which strikes me as it's really weird now, actually, I was, I was only five. And he said well, young man, what do you want to be when you grow up? And I said, actor. And my dad said, it's pronounced, doctor. It's true. And so, you know, the idea of having a career in in my field just seemed absolutely impossible. But the dream was still sitting there behind
a wall of fear and doubt. And I did a degree in Business and Marketing. And so years later, when I was 30, I sued the company I was working for breach of contract. And I couldn't get a job for two years as it went through the legal process. And so I was 32 and in debt and living at home, and I thought about the acting thing. I don't wanna be 70 and then regretting not having tried. So let me have a go. And I gave myself two years, I thought, if I don't see progress in two years, I'll stop. And no one could have foreseen that in just over two years later, I'd be in a successful TV show. That would be the start of a really joyous and fortunate career. And again, I have to say, where was it? Where was linear planning in that? So linear planning -zero, life disruptions -two, but two really positive ones.
So don't define yourself by those bad experiences, whether it's a bad day, you've had or a bad week
or a bad month, or even a bad year. I had a bad decade once I came out of it. I don't be afraid of making mistakes. Everyone makes them. Just make sure that each mistake you make is a new one. Don't keep making old mistakes. That's the definition of an idiot. And also I'll share something with you. I can't fail. How about that? It's pretty cool, isn't it? Well, I can't fail, so I don't, and it's only
because I haven't given myself that choice. I can succeed and I can learn, or I can do both. Failure is not an option. You don't have to fail either. Just decide from now onwards that I'm not gonna fail. You never will. Other people, let them be them. You be you. A quote attributed to George Elliot says, it's never too late to be what you might have been. It's never too late. It's never too late. So strive every day to be the best you. And here's a shorthand for what is the best you. I think all of us we are our next decision all the time. That's who we are. What just happened to us could have been our of our own, making our own actions, or it could be circumstances, could be chance, but our response is us.
So, you are your next decision all the time. And if that next decision has kindness and compassion in it about ourselves, about other people, about situations we're in, then I believe we are being a better us.
One of my favourite quotes is Maya Angelou, great American poet who said; People may forget what you said. People may forget what you did. People will never forget the way you made them feel. And I think that's absolutely true. I say to my kids, whatever situation you find yourself, whoever you meet, if you can leave that situation and that person in a better place than you found them, and I hope they do that. It hasn't worked on their bedrooms so far. I'm still picking up stuff around the room. Anyway, I'll find another way of dealing with that.
So I hope you take your gift of uniqueness, your achievements, your kind, compassionate choices, your empathy, your humour, and express it to the world. Express it to each other and express it to yourselves so you can live a life of gratitude and humility and be the lucky you. The lucky you,
you have a choice to be. It suddenly struck me at the beginning, when I spoke earlier, I talked about the answer to life, the universe and everything. And you wake up in the morning and you've forgotten it. I can tell you what that is. It's 42. If you know, you know, good luck. We're super proud of you. I am and will remain always grateful to you for this day. Go and enjoy yourselves. I officially declare this graduation closed.
[Music playing] (Senior academics and staff on stage tip their hats as two academics/staff walk across the stage to pick up the ceremonial torches from the small, raised table. They bow to one another before bowing to the rest of the academics/staff. Both lead lines single files of all the professors in separate directions down the staircases on the left and right. The academics and staff walk down the aisles betwixt the audience of seated graduates and guests and exit at the back of the auditorium.)
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