Labowsky moved to Oxford in 1934, and was supported initially by the Society for the Protection of Science and Learning (SPSL, later the
Council for At-Risk Academics). She managed to bring her parents, and their furniture, out of Germany before the outbreak of war. By January 1939 the SPSL's support had reduced, and Somerville College offered to support Labowsky through free meals in the Senior Common Room and then through a research grant. The principal of the college,
Helen Darbishire, wrote letters to protect Labowsky from internment as an enemy alien, and to ask for her father Norbert to be released after he was interned in June 1940. and advised the translation of
On Certainty (1969) and
Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics (1956). She died in Oxford on 28 July 1991, aged 86. Her obituary in
The Times said that she "...embodied the humanist tradition of a bygone age in Europe". ==Selected publications==