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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues

Planning ahead: A multi-sector approach to net zero

Mathaios Panteli By Mathaios Panteli, Eduardo Alejandro Martínez Ceseña and Julien Harou Filed Under: All posts, Digital Futures, Energy and Environment, Environment, Inclusive Growth, Renewables, Research and development, Science and Engineering, Science and Technology Posted: December 13, 2023

With climate change increasing some resources’ uncertainty – and global development making others scarcer and more interdependent – society requires improved planning and policy frameworks to deliver a secure, equitable and resilient transformation to net zero. In this article from our publication On Resilience, Professor Julien Harou, Dr Eduardo A. Martínez Ceseña and Professor Mathaios Panteli explore how […]

Tagged With: Business Energy & Industry, energy, inclusive growth, innovation, productivity, technology

Article image - young people

Mapping pathways to learning

Claire Forbes author image By Claire Forbes Filed Under: All posts, British Politics, Cities and Environment, Education, Levelling up Posted: December 7, 2023

How to raise educational outcomes and solve the entrenched attainment gaps between more and less affluent young people has long been a policy concern of successive governments. As the current government moves away from place-based approaches and towards curricular reform to address these gaps, Dr Claire Forbes will suggest that more needs to be done […]

Tagged With: Children & Young People, communities, education, inequalities, schools

Freedom energy: minimising geopolitical risks to reach net zero

Prof Matthew Paterson By Matthew Paterson Filed Under: Energy and Environment, Environment, Renewables, Science and Technology Posted: November 30, 2023

Geopolitical dynamics are crucial to our thinking about the future of energy and the pursuit of net zero. In this article from our publication On Resilience, Professor Matthew Paterson explores the complexity of alternatives to fossil fuels, the impact of renewables on our energy security, and how policymakers can reduce exposure to the geopolitical risks of the […]

Tagged With: Business Energy & Industry, energy, environment, net zero

Article image fertility law reform

Reforming UK fertility legislation: the effects of online DNA testing

Caroline Redhead headshotLucy Frith headshot By Caroline Redhead and Lucy Frith Filed Under: All posts, Health and Care, Science and Technology Posted: November 27, 2023

Direct-to-consumer genetic testing (DTCGT) from companies such as Ancestry and 23andMe has significantly impacted the dialogue around gamete (sperm and egg) donor conception. In the UK where the anonymity of donors is theoretically protected until a donor-conceived person turns 18, the growing use of DTCGT has prompted the regulator of reproductive technologies, the Human Fertilisation […]

Tagged With: government, health, public health, technology

Article cover image

What’s your language? Variation, dialect, interpreters and public services

Leonie Gaieser author imageRebecca Tipton By Leonie Gaiser and Rebecca Tipton Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity, Health and Care, Health and Social Care, primary care services Posted: November 14, 2023

As our public services face increasing linguistic diversity, booking a spoken language interpreter is often more complex than service providers realise or are trained to handle. In this article, Dr Leonie Gaiser and Dr Rebecca Tipton draw on their cross-disciplinary expertise in Linguistics and Interpreting Studies, to explore challenges in arranging language provision and discuss […]

Tagged With: health, Health & Social Care, Health inequalities, NHS

Strengthening the UK’s energy resilience and security

Maria Sharmina By Maria Sharmina and Timothy Capper Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Renewables, Science and Engineering Posted: November 13, 2023

Energy is a key resource enabling the functioning of modern societies. Arguably, the fast-paced technological advances in the past 200 years have been based on plentiful supply of cheap energy. But cheap and plentiful are no more. In this article, from our publication On Resilience, Professor Maria Sharmina and Timothy Capper explore how to strengthen the […]

Tagged With: energy, environment, science & engineering

article image vulnerable children

Supporting vulnerable children over primary-secondary school transitions

Author image - Dr Charlotte Bagnall By Charlotte Bagnall Filed Under: All posts, Education Posted: November 9, 2023

The number of young children experiencing poor emotional wellbeing is increasing rapidly, most acutely for vulnerable children, such as those with special educational needs (SEND), experienced Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), in receipt of Pupil Premium Funding (PPF) and have been or are at risk of being excluded and/or suspended. In this article, Dr Charlotte Bagnall […]

Tagged With: Children & Young People, education, local government, mental health, MIE, schools, SEED

Running on empty: How charities are running on empty in the cost-of-living crisis – and what we can do about it.

By Alison Briggs and Sarah Marie Hall Filed Under: All posts, British Politics, UK economy Posted: November 9, 2023

The voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) sector works alongside local and national governments to provide support for residents. But alongside facing their own struggles as a result of the cost-of-living crisis, charities and community organisations are also being relied on more and more by people and local organisations. In this article, from our Power […]

Tagged With: british politics, communities, fuel poverty, Greater Manchester, Power in Place, voluntary & social enterprise

Older asian lady image for article on ethnic minority facing inequalities in cost of living crisis

The unequal impact of the cost-of-living crisis

Camilla Lewis By Camilla Lewis, Sophie Yarker and Christopher Phillipson Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity, Levelling up, Urban Posted: November 7, 2023

More than two million pensioners in the UK live below the poverty line, with many more living just above it. Many groups within the older population are at a budgetary crisis point, reflecting a combination of the long-term impacts of COVID-19, cuts affecting health and social care, and the cost-of-living crisis. In this article, Camilla […]

Tagged With: communities, inequalities, Levelling Up, local government

Driving change in UK housing construction

By Suzanne Peters, Jonatan Pinkse and Graham Winch Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment Posted: November 3, 2023

In this article, Dr Suzanne Peters, Professor Jonatan Pinkse, and Professor Graham Winch reveal the issues that are hindering new housing construction in the UK, and explore how targeted efforts to better support Modern Methods of Construction – particularly “volumetric” modular homes – can help the nation reach both its housing targets and net zero […]

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