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Policy@Manchester Articles: Featured
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What if Labour Can’t Win?

Colin Talbot By Colin Talbot Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: August 4, 2015

The entire Labour Party leadership debate is being framed by the question “how can Labour win again?” But what if it can’t, asks Colin Talbot? There are several reasons for believing it might be impossible for Labour to win an outright majority in the House of Commons again, at least for any foreseeable future. (Let […]

Tagged With: coalition, Conservative, Greens, Labour, Liberal Democrats

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Greece and the future of the European Project

Mustafa Cirakli By Mustafa Cirakli Filed Under: All posts, Europe, Featured Posted: July 30, 2015

Agreement has been reached over a deal to keep Greece in the Euro, for the time being at least. But, Mustafa Cirakli says, the problems in the country and the whole Eurozone are far from over. Damned if you do, damned if you don’t! Such was the predicament in which the SYRIZA-led Greek government stood in […]

Tagged With: Euro, Eurozone, Eurozone crisis, Greece, Syriza, Tspiras

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The limits to equal pay audits

Jill Rubery By Jill Rubery Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: July 29, 2015

Earlier this month David Cameron set out plans to force large firms to reveal data on the gender pay among their staff. Here Jill Rubery explores the possibilities and pitfalls of the policy. The rather surprising conversion of the Cameron government to the need for large organisations to conduct and publish equal pay audits has […]

Tagged With: David Cameron, equality, gender pay gap, pay, WEI

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Securing the Internet

By Daniel Dresner Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: July 28, 2015

The scale and vast cost of cyber crime has been made clear in the last few weeks. Daniel Dresner suggests that stronger industrial standards may be the best response. Cyber crime is reportedly costing the UK up to £34bn each year. Within that total, personal identity fraud is rising fast and is now responsible for […]

Tagged With: Andrew Tanenbaum, BSI, Cyber Essentials, cybercrime, cybernetics, IASME, internet, ISO/IEC 27001, National Cyber Security Strategy, security, Trustworthy Software Framework

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The Drug Resistance Crisis

By Dame Sally Davies Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: July 27, 2015

Drug resistance and the lack of new antibiotics are creating a potential medical crisis, the government’s Chief Medical Officer Professor Dame Sally Davies warned in this year’s University of Manchester Cockcroft Rutherford Lecture. We are in danger of losing modern medicine. Growing drug resistance among bacteria, viruses and other microbes poses a catastrophic threat to […]

Tagged With: antibiotics, Chief Medical Officer, health, MRSA, NHS

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Social climbing makes the English happy, but not Americans

By Bram Vanhoutte Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: July 24, 2015

In a paper published this week, and covered in the national media, Bram Vanhoutte explores social mobility in England and US. What are the policy implications of these findings? Social mobility, or the difference between the social position of your upbringing and the one you yourself are in, can yield powerful insight into mechanisms that […]

Tagged With: American dream, England, professional, social mobility, US, working class

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Benefits and costs of party diversity

Maria Sobolewska By Maria Sobolewska Filed Under: Ethnicity, Featured Posted: July 22, 2015

Why do Conservatives try so hard to increase their ethnic diversity while Labour takes minorities for granted? It all depends on who their target voter is. Labour’s target voters thought less of the party when they knew about its ethnic diversity, Conservative’s target voters were the opposite, explains Maria Sobolewska. For political parties the question […]

Tagged With: conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP

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Teaching at the heart of the system – A Teaching Excellence framework

By Carl Emery Filed Under: Featured Posted: July 21, 2015

Earlier this month the Universities Minister, Jo Johnson, mapped out his vision for the HE sector over the next 5 years. Here Carl Emery looks at the implications. Addressing the Universities UK (UUK) group the Minister set out 3 key manifesto pledges: lifting the cap on student numbers and widening participation “to remove barriers to […]

Tagged With: education, Higher Education Agency, MIE, Teaching Excellence Framework, UUK

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British Muslims do feel British, Prime Minister

By Saffron Karlsen Filed Under: Ethnicity, Featured Posted: July 20, 2015

While David Cameron has urged British Muslims to assert their British identity, the evidence is that they already do, explains Saffron Karlsen. There is a widely held perception in society that Muslim people living in Britain do not feel British. Comments by David Cameron and others, for example, describe a need to address the lack […]

Tagged With: British, British Muslims, Caribbean Christians, David Cameron, Hindus, Home Office Citizenship Survey, Islam, muslims, radicalisation, Sikhs

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Under new management? Devolution and regional economies

By Karel Williams Filed Under: Devo, Featured Posted: July 17, 2015

The gap in economic performance between London and the regions is large and will not be closed by devolving limited powers to  city regions and Celtic nations that will adopt conventional economic policies, argues Professor Karel Williams.                                        “It is time for you to take control of your own affairs….we will hand power from the […]

Tagged With: Angel Salento, David Cameron, devolution, DevoManc, George Osborne, Italy, John Swinney, London, Manchester, North East England, Northern Powerhouse, Scotland, wales

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