Governance
Executive Group
Project Team

Mr. Kevin Farmer
Executive Secretary, Codrington Trust
Mr. Kevin Farmer was appointed Executive Secretary of the Codrington Trust in 2023, having formerly worked for the Codrington Development Trust. Since 2011, he has also served as Deputy Director of Barbados Museum and Historical Society, overseeing museum exhibition programming and capital campaign fundraising. He has lectured in Archaeology in the Department of History at the University of the West Indies(UWI), St. Augustine, Trinidad, and in the MA Heritage Studies program at the UWI Cave Hill, Barbados. His own research interests include the creation of cultural identity in post-colonial states, the role of museums in national development, the management and curation of archaeological resources and the role of heritage in national development.

Rev’d Dr Duncan Dormor, General Secretary, USPG
Executive Secretary, Codrington Trust
Duncan became General Secretary of USPG in January 2018. Duncan is an Anglican priest, a published author, teacher and public speaker. Before joining USPG, Duncan spent nearly twenty years at St John’s College, Cambridge, where he served as Dean of Chapel and President (Head of the Fellowship) and taught anthropology and sociology of religion. He has degrees in Human Sciences, Theology and Demography. Duncan is currently a member of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland’s Mission and Theological Advisory Group.
To access a selection of Duncan’s blogs and sermons, click here.

Ms. Natalie Johnson
Project Manager, Codrington Trust
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Mr. Chris Hill
Project Manager, USPG
Chris joined USPG in early 2024, having previously worked in operations, market research and project management for the legal and higher education sectors. Holding an MA in Postcolonial Studies from the University of Kent, he remains a member of Kent’s Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies. His own research focuses on the social and cultural impact of global capitalism, modern state militarism and climate change on postcolonial island states, with a chapter on the Chagos Archipelago due to be published in 2024.