Core team
At the core of the Cambridge Interfaith Programme is a dedicated team, led by the Academic Director Professor Esra Özyürek.
This page provides an introduction to the core team, and current members of the CIP Management Committee. Links to extended team profiles are given at the end of the page.
Professor Esra Özyürek | Academic Director
Esra Özyürek joined the University of Cambridge after having taught at the London School of Economics and University of California, San Diego. She holds the Sultan Qaboos Chair in Abrahamic Faiths and Shared Values. Esra’s research explores the tension between the universalism and particularism of globally appealing religious and post-religious belief and value systems.
Esra has published widely, including Subcontractors of Guilt: Holocaust memory and Muslim belonging in postwar Germany (Stanford 2023), now available also in a German language edition Stellvertreter der Schuld (Klett-Cotta 2025), Being German, becoming Muslim: Race, religion, and conversion in the New Europe (2015), and Nostalgia for the modern: State secularism and everyday politics in Turkey (2006).
Professor Daniel Weiss | Deputy Director
Daniel H Weiss joined the Faculty of Divinity in 2010 as Polonsky–Coexist Lecturer in Jewish Studies, having previously taught at the University of Virginia and at Oberlin College. He earned his PhD at the University of Virginia, after having received his Bachelor’s degree from Princeton University and a Masters of Theological Studies degree from Harvard Divinity School.
Daniel’s research interests include the study of Judaism, theories and practices of interreligious communication, and philosophy of religion.
Dr Giles Waller | Research Associate
Giles Waller joined the team in 2014. Formerly assisting CIP’s former Director Professor David Ford, he remains Sultan Qaboos Research Associate, with a percentage of his time dedicated to CIP. From 2019 to 2021, he was seconded as Teaching Associate in Christian Theology in the Faculty of Divinity. Giles read Theology and Religious Studies at Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he also completed an MPhil. His doctoral research focused on the borderlands of Christian doctrine, literature, and philosophy, looking at the theological reception of Greek tragedy, with a particular comparative interest in Martin Luther’s theology of the cross.
As of 2025, Giles leads Outreach activity at the Faculty of Divinity and is also charged with developing postgraduate teaching in the domain of theology and literature.
Dr Iona Hine | Programme Manager (Partnerships and Engagement)
Iona Hine returned to the Divinity Faculty in 2021, having completed an undergraduate Theology degree two decades earlier. In mid-2023, Iona assumed a new role with specific responsibility for developing CIP’s partnerships and external engagements.
Outside academia, Iona has worked for the Church of England and in secondary education. Iona's PhD, a study of early modern bible translation focused on the book of Ruth, was undertaken at the University of Sheffield, UK in 2014. Iona has worked as a research associate in Digital Humanities, including producing a free open access digital edition of H.W. Cassirer's collected works (cassirer.org, 2021). Iona has a track record of supporting impactful research and a specialism in public engagement. Contributions to teaching in History and English at Sheffield led to Iona's recognition as a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Iona also has an MA in Jewish-Christian Relations (CJCR/APU, 2003) and PGCE (Roehampton, Secondary: Religious Studies).
Dr Anastasia Badder | Research Associate
Anastasia Badder joined the Faculty of Divinity in July 2022, as a Research Associate affiliated with Cambridge Interfaith Programme. She provides grantwriting support to Professor Özyürek and colleagues, as well as leading work in the domain of religious education, and developing new research and networks on topics including religious language and materialities. In 2023, she took on responsibility for the research element of the project Water efficiency in faith and diverse communities, leading to enhanced engagement with the environmental humanities.
Prior to Cambridge, Anastasia was based at the University of Luxembourg and she maintains active connections with researchers there. Her core research ethnographically explores contemporary Jewish lives and languages in Europe. She holds a BA in Anthropology from Barnard College, an MA in Anthropology from the University of Auckland, and a PhD in Educational Sciences from the University of Luxembourg.
Mrs Anna Williams | CIP Administrator
Anna Williams joined the team in February 2025, working as part-time administrator for the Programme and adjacent projects. Anna has previously worked in administration at the University and for the NHS.
Mr Imad Ahmed | Coordinator, MoonBack
Imad Ahmed is a PhD student in the Faculty of Divinity, investigating how British Muslims engage with the lunar calendar and moonsighting practices. He is now serving as a specialist for the STFC-funded Moonsighters Academy in partnership with the Institute of Astronomy and the University of Leeds and has a part-time role as project coordinator in relation to that work, which is overseen by CIP.
Management Committee
In addition to ex officio members (including the Chair of the Faculty Board from the Faculty of Divinity and the Head of the School of Arts and Humanities), the following persons are presently serving on our Management Committee:
Dr Timothy Winter | Chair of Management Committee
Timothy Winter is Shaykh Zayed Lecturer in Islamic Studies at the Faculty of Divinity. His research expertise includes Sufism and the development of the Ottoman learned institution and Muslim–Christian relations. In 2024, he coedited a volume on Green Theology: emerging 21st-Century Muslim and Christian discourses on ecology (with Lejla Demiri and Mujadad Zaman) in the Sapientia Islamica series. In October 2025, he returned to Chair the CIP Management Committee following a year of research leave.
Professor Jörg Haustein | Member of Management Committee
Jörg Haustein joined the Faculty in 2019 after teaching Religions in Africa at at the School of Oriental and African Studies (2013–2019), and Religious Studies and Intercultural Theology at the University of Heidelberg (2003–2013). He earned his PhD at Heidelberg with a study of Ethiopian Pentecostalism (2009), and completed his habilitation at the University of Heidelberg with a study of German colonialism and Islam in East Africa (2020).
Professor Katharine Dell | Member of Management Committee
Katharine Dell is Professor of Old Testament Literature and Theology in the Faculty of Divinity, and a Fellow and Director of Studies in Theology, Religion and Philosophy of Religion, St Catharine's College. Her term on CIP’s Management Committee commenced in 2023. Professor Dell is on research leave during 2025–2026.
[Page last updated: December 2025.]
In-depth profiles
Detailed academic profiles and biographies on the Faculty of Divinity website.