Oxford SU President Wantoe Teah Wantoe speaks with Registrar Gill Aitken on how Oxford’s systems shape student life, digital change, and the role of student voice in governance.
In this episode of Oxford Student Voice, Wantoe Teah Wantoe sits down with Gill Aitken, Registrar of the University of Oxford, for a conversation about how the University works beneath the surface, and how decisions made at the centre shape the everyday experiences of students. It is a conversation rooted not just in systems, but in people, in judgment, and in the often unseen processes that define how institutions function.
Gill reflects on her journey from over two decades in Whitehall to one of the most senior roles at Oxford, and what that experience has taught her about leadership, accountability, and navigating complexity at scale. Together, they explore the role of the Registrar, not simply as an administrative function, but as a point where governance, policy, and delivery come together to shape how the University is experienced in practice.
The discussion moves beyond structures to a deeper question of experience. How do systems feel from a student perspective, and who are they really designed for? What happens when they do not work, and how does change actually occur? It is a conversation about clarity, responsiveness, and whether Oxford’s systems are keeping pace with the expectations of a new generation of students.
They also reflect on the University’s ongoing digital transformation, the role of artificial intelligence in administration, and the balance between efficiency and human judgment in decision making. Through it all, the episode points toward a central idea: that the strength of any institution lies not just in how it is designed, but in how it listens, adapts, and responds to the people it serves.