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Policy@Manchester Articles: Featured
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Ethnically diverse neighbourhoods are safest

Ian Warren By Ian Warren Filed Under: Featured Posted: April 22, 2014

Examination of public health data shines a welcome light on which communities suffer the least – and most – violence, explains Ian Warren. People living in ethnically diverse neighbourhoods are less likely to suffer an assault than are residents of areas with little or no racial diversity. This is one of the striking results of […]

Tagged With: alcohol, crime, crime recording, crime reporting, hospital admissions, neighbourhoods, public health data, violence

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Justice – and compensation – denied by new legislation

Hannah Quirk By Hannah Quirk Filed Under: Featured Posted: April 17, 2014

Victims of miscarriages of justice are having their injustice made worse by a new change of law, argues Dr Hannah Quirk. For all the talk of the much derided ‘compensation culture’ that has supposedly developed in this country, the reality is that most victims of miscarriages of justice are not entitled to any redress from […]

Tagged With: Barry George, compensation, law reform, legal compensation, legal reform, miscarriages of justice, Nicholas Mullen, quashed convictions, Sally Clarke, Stefan Kiszko

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Back to the future; the recurring patterns of flooding in the UK

Anna Carlsson-Hyslop By Anna Carlsson-Hyslop Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: April 16, 2014

Flooding is not new in Britain, with major floods recorded throughout history. But with predictions of climate change suggesting such deluge conditions may become more common, Dr Anna Carlsson-Hyslop argues that policymakers must heed some important lessons from the history of flooding. History tells us that central government involvement in flood defence has swung first […]

Tagged With: drainage, dredging, EA, environment agency, flooding, flooding policy, floods, winter floods

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What is the impact of the ‘bedroom tax’ on children and schools?

Ruth Lupton By Ruth Lupton Filed Under: Featured Posted: April 15, 2014

A year on from the introduction of the ‘bedroom tax’, Prof Ruth Lupton argues that reducing the incomes of poor families and creating instability for poor children is a nonsensical policy for a government committed to closing the socio-economic attainment gap. One of the Coalition government’s most controversial welfare reform policies, the so-called ‘bedroom tax’, […]

Tagged With: bedroom tax, children, education, housing benefit, inequality, MIE, schools, socio-economic attainment gap

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The time has come – but not for votes at 16

Andrew Russell By Andrew Russell Filed Under: Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: April 14, 2014

In many ways, Andrew Adonis has eloquently argued the case for the voting age to be lowered to 16. But his assertion that the ‘time has come’ simply doesn’t stand up to scrutiny, argues Prof Andrew Russell. Lord Andrew Adonis’ “Lent Talk” on BBC Radio 4 contained some impressive thinking about young people’s political engagement […]

Tagged With: 16, Andrew Adonis, election, electorate, voters, voting age

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Is the picture of Pakistani self-employment really so rosy?

Ken Clark By Ken Clark Filed Under: Ethnicity, Featured Posted: April 9, 2014

There is economic vibrancy in Asian-dominated areas of the UK, driven by the entrepreneurial spirit of the self-employed, according to some reports. But, says Ken Clark, analysis of official statistics reveals a rather less rosy picture.  Asian-dominated areas of the UK are booming, according to The Economist – in stark contrast to “struggling white towns”. The credit for this boom […]

Tagged With: employment, ethnicity, labour market, pakistani, self-employment

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Does the UK have a future in manufacturing?

Kieron Flanagan By Kieron Flanagan Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: April 9, 2014

Thanks to its world­-class science base the UK is very good at developing ideas. But we still don’t invest enough public money into developing early stage technologies, says Dr Kieron Flanagan. Does the UK have a future in manufacturing? Does the North West or the Greater Manchester city region have a future in manufacturing for that matter? These were the questions debated at a panel discussion I took part […]

Tagged With: manufacturing, Peter Marsh, technology

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UKIP on the verge of a breakthrough

Rob FordMatthew Goodwin By Rob Ford and Matthew Goodwin Filed Under: Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: April 2, 2014

After tonight’s second Nick Clegg v Nigel Farage debate, 38% of viewers more likely to vote for UKIP according to a Guardian ICM poll. And there is a real prospect that the party could break through to become one of Britain’s two or three largest parties explain Dr Rob Ford and Dr Matthew Goodwin. UKIP is […]

Tagged With: elections, europe, Eurosceptic, immigration, Nigel Farage, Revolt on the Right, UKIP

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Hebden Bridge – Britain’s second city?

Iain DeasStephen Hincks By Iain Deas, Graham Haughton and Stephen Hincks Filed Under: Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: April 1, 2014

The BBC’s Evan Davis says Britain needs a second ‘super city’ – and this could be Hebden Bridge. Dr Iain Deas, Prof Graham Haughton and Dr Stephen Hincks are sceptical. In his BBC series Mind the Gap: London v the Rest, Evan Davis argued that the UK’s economy is held back because London is our […]

Tagged With: Evan Davis, Hebden Bridge, Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, M62, Manchester, Mind the Gap, Newcastle, North European Trade Axis, Northern Way, Pennines, regional policy

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Same sex marriage: Celebrating recognition and equality?

Brian Heaphy By Brian Heaphy Filed Under: Featured Posted: April 1, 2014

While many lesbians and gay men welcome the option of a same sex marriage, Prof Brian Heaphy warns this should not mean marginalising other non-traditional relationships. Same sex marriage has been introduced while many are still celebrating the tenth anniversary of Civil Partnership. There had been surprise that a Conservative-led government oversaw the legalisation of […]

Tagged With: civil partnership, couples, gay, gay marriage, lesbian, marriage, non-traditional relationships, partners, relationships, same sex marriage

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