This is your place to find out about the movers and shakers among your alumni community. Share your personal and professional updates with us and we'll post them to this page throughout the year.

It could be a personal milestone like a birth, marriage or reflection on your life, a reunion with classmates or a professional achievement, such as award recognition or a book publication.

Whatever you would like to share with your peers, let us know!

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May

International Alumni Ambassador Julio Frías Peña (Manufacturing and Operations Management, 2005) has received the Medal of Merit for Environmental Protection from the Mexico City Parliament for his work in the field of climate change and progress towards the UN's 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.

Brian Moore (Law, 1984), one of our most iconic sporting graduates, with 64 Rugby Union caps for England, announced he would be putting down his microphone after 26 years in the commentary box.

Stewart Newlove (Mathematics, 1981) has been awarded a King's Award for Enterprise in International Trade for 2026 - the UK's most prestigious business honour. The award is in recognition of the exceptional international growth his business Antibodies.com has achieved since it was founded in 2015.

Co-founded with his son Sebastian, the company has grown into a globally trusted supplier of research reagents, supporting biomedical research, drug discovery, and IVD development across more than 100 countries and 5,000 research institutions and biopharma companies worldwide.

Peter Moody (Pharmacy, 1969) contacted us: "After graduating and completing my pre-registration year, I worked at two hospitals in Greater Manchester before being recruited for the post of Government Pharmacist for The Gambia, West Africa. Thus it was in November 1973 my wife Dorothy Harvey (Pharmacy, 1971) and I moved to Banjul, the capital, where i was based in the Royal Victoria Hospital.

"During my time there I would travel the entire country two or three times a year to visit the one other hospital, health centres and dispensaries. Overall, it was an amazing experience!

"We returned to the UK in June 1977 and I was appointed Chief Pharmacist in North Shields, before moving to Cumbria as District Pharmaceutical Officer for South Cumbria Health Authority based in Barrow-in-Furness where I stayed for 30 years. Over that time, the configuration changed twice, and I was eventually Chief Pharmacist for Morecambe Bay Hospitals, comprising Barrow, Kendal and Lancaster.

"After retiring in 2011, I returned part-time for another year, then spent a final two years as a part-time clinical pharmacist. It was varied and interesting career, which I thoroughly enjoyed!"

Caitie Mann (Veterinary Medicine and Surgery, 2024) has been crowned Young Vet of the Year in Northern Ireland at the Association of Veterinary Surgeons Practising in Northern Ireland (AVSPNI) Awards.

In our most literal 'Where are they now?' to date, we have been contacted by Piers Applegarth (Mathematics, 1979) who is looking to make contact with Peter Airey (Mechanical Engineering, 1979), Jacqueline Beal (History, 1979) and Sue Corbridge (Double Maths and Economics, 1979). If you know any of the three and could put him in touch, please drop our team an email.

April

Julian Fletcher (Electronic Engineering with French, 1995) has published an updated version of his book "Doing Business Architecture: The Definitive Rough Guide" - a practical guide on how to establish and mature business architecture to provide real business value for any organisation in the private or public sector.

Alan Wilson (Electricial Engineering, 1964) also got in touch: "The one thing I knew when I graduated was that I didn’t have a future in engineering. I had become increasingly unhappy as the course progressed, had barely scraped through with a degree, and I did not want to return to my firm to complete my student apprenticeship. But I did have a great time as a member of the University Cross Country Club (see photos below), which I captained in my last year, and the University Athletics Club, about which more later.

"So, what was I to do when I left this wonderful institution? It so happened that my girlfriend at the time was a librarian and she told me that people familiar with the world of science and its concepts were wanted in that profession. I took a job with Luton Public Library, learning the ropes for a year, then went to Loughborough College of Further Education to study Librarianship. Once completed I returned to Luton Public Library and in 1967 I became Engineering Librarian at Portsmouth College of Technology.

"Not long after I qualified as a librarian I saw an advertisement for librarians to join the National Library of Australia - I applied and by July 1968 I was travelling first class on the Arcadia to start my career in Australia. I later became Science Librarian in the Parliamentary Library, the start of 22 years employment in that institution, during which I worked in 11 different positions. I retired in 2002, only to take up a position for five years as Executive Officer to the Anglican Bishop of Canberra & Goulburn – quite a different job and arguably the one which gave me most satisfaction and enjoyment. All a long way from electrical engineering!

"I have been a distance runner since the age of 11 and I look back on hundreds of races, many days of hard training, and, more importantly, a wealth of relationships with my fellow runners. At 72 I was still running half-marathons in under two hours. Alas, now aged 83, I think I’m finished racing.

"So, my time at university? I gained a lot through my interactions with my fellow students from all over the country, through my running, and I believe I grew immensely. I would love to be in contact with anyone in the small group of fellow runners from my time with the NUCCC, and anyone else from my time at Nottingham."

March

Tony Cockbain (Geology, 1955) wrote: "After finishing my PhD at the end of 1957 I joined the Cyprus Geological Survey (then part of the Colonial Geological Survey) as a micropalaeontologist. There I met my future wife, we then moved to Vancouver, where I worked as a marine geologist at the Institute of Oceanography in the University of British Columbia. After three years, sea-sickness made me realise that I preferred to work on dry land, so we went to New Zealand where I lectured at the University of Canterbury, in Christchurch. After three years I decided to return to the geological survey environment and went to Perth as palaeontologist with the Geological Survey of Western Australia (GSWA). During my time with the GSWA we had three or four Nottingham geology graduates working for the organisation.

"I had been a member of the Geological Society of Australia (GSSA) and the Royal Society of Western Australia for many years, and was Editor and President of the latter society, and both societies made me an Honorary Member. After retiring I took on the job of Hon Editor of the GSA’s journal the Australian Journal of Earth Science for 17 years for which I was given the W. R. Browne Award (for distinguished contributions to Australian geology).

"Geology gave me an interesting life, and the opportunity to travel. My wife and our four children (2 Canadians, 1 New Zealander, 1 Australian) have been very supportive, despite the changes of countries in the early days!  It is a great pity that Nottingham had to close the geology department, but it is rewarding to. see that the University has grown into one of the finest universities in the UK. Thank you for providing me with the tools to have had an enjoyable and interesting career."

Below, Tony and fellow students on a Forest of Dean field trip in 1953; (left to right) Tony Cockbain, Don Graham, ?, ?, Alec Honeyman, Neville Hill, Danny Gill, Bob Roach, Malcolm Shouls, John Shepherd, David Corbett, ?, (front) Bill Morgan, John Ife, Gill Sutcliffe.  

Janice Denoncourt (PhD Law, 2015) wrote: "I was honoured to learn recently that a Chinese translation of my research monograph 'Intellectual Property Finance and Corporate Governance' (2023) Routledge Taylor-Francis ISBN-10 751308064X, ISBN-13 978-7513080644, largely based on my PhD thesis, has published in hardcopy.

"It is a special honour to be selected by Beijing-based Intellectual Property Publishing House (IPPH), the official provider for Chinese patent literature for translation, which was founded in August 1980 and only selects circa 80 foreign publications per annum for official translation.

"It is a pivotal publisher in the realm of intellectual property in China, facilitating the dissemination of domestic and international patent literature. According to WorldCat.org my book is now held in the collections of over 165 leading university libraries in more than 30 countries across five continents around the world."

Catherine Hughes (Chemistry 1990, PhD 1993) wrote: "After studying Chemistry at Nottingham, I worked in quality control at Boots Contract Manufacturing before spending nearly 10 years in IT at the Boots HQ.

"Following a career pivot into physical activity, I focused on Nordic Walking, progressing into instructor training and sector development. In 2017 I became CEO of British Nordic Walking, leading the organisation’s growth and promoting Nordic Walking as an evidence-informed approach to health, wellbeing, and community connection."

Emeritus Professor David Richardson (Botany, 1963; Master's Mycology, 1964) continues to lead an active life well into his ninth decade, co-authoring no less than nine research papers in the last two years. He also presented a guest lecture to the Bristol 1904 Arts group in January.

February

Amy Child (English and Creative Writing, 2024) has entered her debut novel 'The Vow of Elias Cassius' into the Libraro Prize 2026, where the winner receives a publishing deal with Hachette! You can get involved on Instagram.

Calvin Woodroffe (Industrial Economics, 2011) has launched an innovative new tool to help UK taxpayers better understand their finances, called PocketTax.

Val Wilkinson (Biology, 1982; Cert. Ed, 1983) contacted us with an update: "After 30 varied years as an accountant, most latterly 10 years as Director of Finance & Administration at Plumpton College, I left my successful career 13 years prematurely on health grounds.

"I moved to the Highlands, near my late husband’s village, and have spent several peaceful years there including learning Gàidhlig. I am still passionate about ecology, that was a great place to be. Still in touch with friends from Rutland Hall and from the excellent Botany field trip to Bavaria."

Rosalie Zobel (Physics, 1964) shared an update: "I will forever be grateful to the late Professor Bates for accepting me onto the Physics honours course. I had no school recommendation, because I had been living abroad in Aden for the years before A-Levels. The PhD turned out to be very valuable too, mainly because it was respected by all at a time when women in the professions often were not.

"I had a very interesting career in the emerging field of Information Technology from its very start. I got into IT by luck, because when I got married I lived in an area without many opportunities for physicists. I worked first for ICL in Stevenage, then CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics in Munich, Germany, AERE Harwell, and the telecommunications giant AT&T in both New Jersey USA and in Tokyo Japan. Along the way I learned to speak German and French fluently, and also some Italian, Japanese and Spanish.

"My final job was twenty years with the European Commission in Brussels, where I became a Director of a large part of the Information Society Technologies Programme, part of the Horizons Programme for science and technology. I was the first woman director of a technical programme, and was responsible over the years for EU funded projects in microelectronics, health IT, electronic commerce and business, multimedia, transport IT, e-government, IT security, and environmental sustainability IT. I was responsible for EU funding amounting to over €1 billion a year, and had a very stimulating and interesting job. I also managed to bring up my two children in parallel.

"I write this little autobiography to encourage young women, and also young men, to think of science and technology as a career. My career experience of working in six countries shows how flexible and interesting a science based career can be. IT jobs can be found everywhere, and combined with world travel were interesting and fun."

We had a fantastic trip down memory lane, thanks to Geoffrey Sharp (Pharmacy, 1949): "The latest edition of Connect reminded me to think back to the first year of the university’s existence in 1948/49. At that time, I was studying for an external B. Pharmacy degree from London University. I played sports for the university (rugby, track and cross-country racing teams). My time at Nottingham was happy."

January

Claire Shepherd (Law, 2010) is one of 42 lawyers newly elected to Partner at international law firm Gibson Dunn, consistently ranked among the world's best.

Renjith Bhadran (MBA, 2013) has had a theoretical research article accepted for publication in Scientific Reports, a journal within the Nature portfolio.

The article, titled “Bhadran’s Point-of-Generation Segregation Theory for Behavioral Precision in Biomedical Waste Management,” introduces a novel behavioural–systems theory and framework addressing the persistent global challenge of biomedical waste mis-segregation.

The study proposes a structured behavioral model to systematically measure and enhance segregation precision at the point of waste generation, offering institutional grading mechanisms and actionable insights for training design, compliance improvement, and evidence-based policy development.

Frequently asked questions

Dr Alexandra Hay (Social and Cultural Studies, 2004), has been awarded the prestigious National Teaching Fellowship by Advance HE in recognition of her work transforming student outcomes on the degree programme she leads at Manchester Metropolitan University. It is highly unusual for someone to win this award not only on their first attempt, but also having had a relatively short career in higher education.

If you're a big cricket fan, then keep an eye out for our very own Alison Mitchell (Geography, 2001) on the TV and radio commentary during the course of The Ashes, which got underway this month.

Dr Gregor Hank (American & Canadian Studies, 2000) recently completed his doctorate in American History at the University of Erfurt in Germany.

Koichi Hasegawa (Art History, 2010, MA 2011), one of just 220 alumni in Japan, contacted us about his article on the exhibition “Van Gogh: The Family Who Shaped the Artist’s Dream”, which was published in one of Japan’s largest-circulation national newspapers. The piece explores the pivotal roles of Jo van Gogh-Bonger and Theo van Gogh in sustaining Vincent’s artistic legacy - a theme of continuing importance in art historical studies.

Since graduating from Nottingham Koichi has built his art history portfolio in Tokyo; delivering introductory Western art history courses at a cultural community centre in Edogawa City and running an independently organised “Art History Salon,” designed to foster community engagement with European art - all alongside his day job!

Below (l-r): a screenshot of Koichi's newspaper article, his lecture on Renoir on November 29 as part of “The Gateway to Western Art History", the third photo, showing Van Gogh projected on the screen, is from his lecture on Van Gogh, also part of “The Gateway to Western Art History” offered at Edogawa Culture Plaza. The last photo was taken during the Q&A session of Koichi's independently organised Western Art History Salon in November.