Speaker
Melinda Simmons DCMG
A rare diplomat to move into the civil service in 1998, after a career in advertising, and a conflict resolution NGO, Dame Melinda has been one of the most robust ambassadors supporting Ukraine before and during the full-scale invasion, for which she was appointed to the Order of St Michael and St George in 2023. After working in the Department for International Development, with focus on conflict prevention and resolution, including land restitution, and humanitarian response, her work at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office had a similar emphasis in the National Security Secretariat.
Appointed British Ambassador to Kyiv in 2019, quickly taking up Chair of the G7 Ambassadors’ Support Group for Ukraine in 2020, Dame Melinda led close work with the Ukrainian government to promote reforms to strengthen the state, improve transparency, combat corruption and buttress the rule of law. Constantly a friend to civil society, she has called attention to the struggles of anti-corruption activists, joined British Embassy staff in Kyiv Pride, and was involved in running the UK/Ukraine Season of Culture with over 1,000 artists and cultural professionals. Since the full-scale invasion, Dame Melinda has helped tirelessly to invigorate Ukrainian society’s rebuilding, and to carry out the British government’s military, economic, and humanitarian assistance of Ukraine’s fight against Russian invasion.
Speaker
Uilleam Blacker
Dr Uilleam Blacker is Associate Professor in Ukrainian and East European Culture at UCL SSEES. His areas of research interest are the literatures and cultures of Ukraine and Poland and cultural memory in eastern Europe. His monograph Memory, the City and the Legacy of World War II in East-Central Europe was published by Routledge in 2019. He is co-author of Remembering Katyn (Polity, 2012) and co-editor of Memory and Theory in Eastern Europe (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2013). He has published widely on Ukrainian, Polish and Russian literature and culture. He has translated the work of several contemporary Ukrainian writers, including, most recently, Oleg Sentsov’s short story collection Life Went On Anyway (Deep Vellum, 2019). He is a member of the jury for the International Booker Prize 2023.