26 Jun 2025
09:30 -17:00
Times are shown in local time.
Open to: Specialists and business managers, including threat specialists, academics, policy-makers, practitioners and advisors
Cambridge Judge Business School
Trumpington St
Cambridge
CB2 1AG
United Kingdom
The Cambridge Risk Research Symposium is a one-day event run by the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies, Systemic Risks Hub, that brings together a multidisciplinary panel of business and academic experts on systemic risk and give them the opportunity to present their work around three major topics:
The Cambridge Risk Research Symposium is organised to include interdisciplinary sessions, poster presentations and networking events to promote knowledge exchange across sectors.
The 3 topics highlight the research pillars of the Cambridge Systemic Risks Hub and will follow on in further detail from the 16th Cambridge Risk Summit.
Please contact enquiries.risk@jbs.cam.ac.uk for further information.
Topics: Systemic risks, climate transition, geopolitics and digital technologies
09:30 – 10:00
10:00 – 10:10
Trevor Maynard, Vice Chair & Director of Systemic Risk , Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies
10:10 – 11:00
Chair: Fernanda Lammoglia, Research Associate, CCRS
11:00 – 11:30
11:45 – 12:45
Chair: Timothy Less, Geopolitical Analyst, Geopolitical Risk Study Group at the University of Cambridge
12:45 – 13:00
13:00 – 13:30
13:30 – 14:30
14:30 – 15:50
Chair: Kevin Tang, Researcher, Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies
15:50 – 16:00
16:00 – 17:00
Risk Research Symposium Chairs
Fernanda is a Research Associate in systemic risks at the Centre for Risk Studies. She is a Mexican engineer focused on the application of technology for development and social innovation. Previously, Fernanda worked on gene and cellular therapies for several years and then transitioned to consulting in technology innovation, disaster risk management (DRM) and emergency preparedness and response (EP&R). Fernanda is also a passionate traditional fencer and martial artist, looking forward to this new opportunity to work on systemic risks at the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies.
Dr Timothy Less runs the study group in geopolitical risk analysis at the Centre for Geopolitics. He also works as a consultant for the private sector with a specialisation in the politics of central and eastern Europe about which he writes and comments for the media.
Previously, he worked as an analyst, diplomat, and policymaker at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office where he led the Countries at Risk of Instability project and ran the British Embassy Office in Banja Luka and the EU Institutions department. He also taught Eastern European Politics at the University of Kent.
Tim holds an MA in Eastern European Studies from the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, an MSt in International Relations, and a PhD in modern history from the University of Cambridge. His recent publications include the ‘City Risk Index 2022’ (co-author, Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies, January 2023); ‘The New Warsaw Pact’ (Engelsberg Ideas, May 2023); and ‘What If? Ten Geopolitical Risks to Keep You Awake at Night’ (GIRO conference paper, November 2023).
Dr Trevor Maynard is the Director of Systemic Risk at the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies located at the Judge Business School.
He qualified as an actuary and holds a PhD in Statistics from the LSE and a Masters in Pure Mathematics from the University of Warwick.
His work has involved risk modelling in various guises from Pensions and Life Assurance to general insurance, working for firms such as Lloyd’s of London and Mercer. Whilst at Lloyd’s his team produced risk reports on subjects including Pandemics, Climate Change, Deep tail Marine disasters, Nano Technology, Geopolitics, AI, Robotics and IoT working with many think tanks, universities and specialist risk modelling firms.
Additionally he advises insurtech firms on risk and data science.
Kevin is a researcher at the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies. His research looks at climate disaster risk and recovery, systemic economic and climate risk, and global trends, networks, and linkages in the design and analysis of risk taxonomies and scenarios. He has worked in research related to climate financial risk, including input/output analysis of climate-economy modelling, climate scenario modelling and stress testing, carbon accounting, energy systems, and transition and fiscal policy. He has been a researcher at Oxford University’s School of Geography, Department of Economics, and the Said Business School, where he has worked on topics related to international trade, competition, infrastructure, international development, inequality, and long-run growth. He has been a lecturer at Oxford University and the University of Buckingham. He holds a PhD and MSc from Oxford University, and a BA from Northwestern University.
Speakers