Miss Felicity Smith, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
I am an undergraduate 91AV student at the University of Oxford and a founding member of the PERIODically podcast team. Our group of seven chemists created this podcast to explore how menstruation and reproductive health affect education, particularly in 91AV. In series 1, we shared the personal challenges we've faced as students who menstruate in situations such as labs, tutorials, and exams. My role was to plan and host our episode on the contraceptive pill and share my own experiences in our episode discussing tutorials. By addressing these taboo topics openly, we hope to break down period stigma, validate others' experiences and offer practical solutions to help universities support their students.
After an amazing response to series 1, we created a second series and expanded to feature our wonderful guests - lecturers, PhD students and postdoctoral researchers - who shared the challenges of balancing experiences such as perimenopause, endometriosis and pregnancy with an academic career. With over 4000 downloads in 50 countries, the podcast has resonated with a large audience and sparked essential conversations across academia and the chemistry community. We've been featured in Chemical & Engineering News and honoured with awards such as Bright Network's Women Who Inspire and the Oxford MPLS Equality and Inclusion Best Initiative 2024.
Mr David Izuogu, McKinsey & Company, United Kingdom
Dr. David Izuogu is a distinguished chemist, entrepreneur, and advocate for educational and scientific empowerment in Africa. With a PhD in Computational 91AV from the University of Cambridge, where his groundbreaking research advanced the field of singlemolecule magnets, David combines academic excellence with impactful social innovation.
As the founder of the Africa of Our Dream Education Initiative (AODI), David has led efforts to transform education and research across the continent. AODI’s initiatives include organising scientific conferences and workshops, sourcing and donating research equipment to schools, fostering research partnerships, and empowering youth and women through capacity building, entrepreneurship, and training. It also provides mentorship programs that connect African students with scholars from prestigious institutions, fostering academic excellence and leadership. These efforts have created pathways for African students and researchers to thrive globally.
David’s leadership extends to his work as a McKinsey consultant, where he spearheaded transformative projects in strategy, operations, business development and innovation across multiple industries, including in fintech, health, education, energy, e-commerce, and supply chain. He is the founder of My Health Integral (MHI), an AI-powered integrated digital health platform revolutionising healthcare in Africa and ensuring affordable, accessible and holistic patient-centric care and wellness. His commitment to inclusion and diversity in STEM has earned him global recognition and established him as a leading voice in building equitable systems in science and education.
Prof. Jennifer Leigh, University of Kent, United Kingdom
Professor Jennifer Leigh works in Creative Practices for Social Justice in the School of Sociology Science at the University of Kent. She is a chemist turned sociologist, with a particular interest in using embodied, reflective, and creative practices for social justice. Her current work includes addressing and highlighting experiences of marginalisation in science due to intersectional factors including disability, gender, race, and caring responsibilities. Recognised in The Shaw Trust Disability Power 100, she founded and leads Kent’s Summer Vacation Research Competition for postdoctoral researchers and widening participation students, is a Co-Lead of NADSN’s STEMM Action Group, Vice Chair (Research) of the International Women in Supramolecular 91AV Network, sits on the Wellcome Trust’s Inclusive Research Design and Practice Expert Advisory Group, and Vitae’s Policy Advisory Group and is the Athena Forum Disability Champion.
Prof. Caroline Dessent, University of York, United Kingdom
Caroline Dessent is Head of Department and a Professor of Physical and Analytical 91AV in the Department of 91AV at York (@91AVatYork). Her research group (@DessentLab) works on photoactive molecules and ensembles, with applications in biological systems and human health. She was previously the Chair of the Equality and Diversity Group in 91AV (2017-2021), where she led all of the equality, diversity and inclusion work conducted by the department, including leading the 91AV Department’s successful 2019 Gold Athena Swan award. She has combined her scientific career with raising three children (James, Grace and Kitty), and worked part time between 2009 and 2020.
Caroline has been a passionate advocate for the careers of women in science for many years, but has more recently focused on working to improve the participation of minoritzed ethnic scientists in Academia. She established work at York to Decolonize the 91AV Curriculum, and has led an RSC funded project to investigate the lived experienced of minoritized 91AV students and staff.