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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
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Ethnic inequalities in health – policy paralysis and the need to be ambitious

James Nazroo By James Nazroo Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity, Featured Posted: February 5, 2015

How and why does policy continue to fail to address inequalities in health? asks Professor James Nazroo. A recent report on inequalities in health, commissioned by the British Academy, brought together responses to the question, “What one policy could make a difference if implemented at a local level?” The context was, of course, local government, […]

Tagged With: Black Report, British Academy Report, employment rights, inequalities, inequality, Laia Bécares, local government, Runnymede Trust, This Generation

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Nigeria’s Elections – 2015

Bala Yusuf Yunusa By Bala Yusuf Yunusa Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: February 4, 2015

With Nigeria due to go to the polls later this month Bala Yusuf Yunusa, of the Brooks World Poverty Institute at The University of Manchester, explores the impact the result may have on Nigeria’s international relations and particularly relations with the UK. Trade between the two nations is worth £8b a year. Bala has previously […]

Tagged With: Brooks World Poverty Institute, department for international development, election, nigeria, trade

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Should We Welcome “Three-Parent Babies”?

Iain Brassington By Iain Brassington Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Science and Technology, Westminster Watch Posted: February 3, 2015

The House of Commons voted for a small but significant change in the law when it expressed its approval for the legalisation of mitochondrial transfer. Iain Brassington, Senior Lecturer, in the School of Law at The University of Manchester explores the issues the debate hinged on and whether the right decision was made. Mitochondrial illnesses arise […]

Tagged With: HFEA, mitochondria, MPs, parliament

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New approach needed to tackle ‘lifestyle diseases’

Stanley Blue By Stanley Blue Filed Under: Featured Posted: February 2, 2015

The Change4Life campaign just launched by NHS England is the latest attempt to persuade people to adopt healthier lifestyles.  But, says Dr Stanley Blue, this type of public health campaign is not enough to tackle fast rising rates of ‘lifestyle diseases’. Current public health policy is focussed on getting people to change their eating, drinking […]

Tagged With: cancer, cardiovascular disease, Change4Life, drinking, exercise, lifestyle diseases, NHS, NHS England, non-communicable diseases, obesity, public health, smoking, type 2 diabetes

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Socio-economic inequalities widening again in English schools: The story behind the 2014 GCSE results.

Ruth Lupton By Ruth Lupton Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: January 30, 2015

Publication of the 2014 GCSE results has highlighted  a worrying decline in academic performance by poorer children, say Ruth Lupton and Stephanie Thomson from The University of Manchester. Yesterday’s release of the 2014 GCSE results, showing a fall in overall achievement and a doubling of the number of schools not meeting the government’s floor target, […]

Tagged With: department for education, exam results, exams, GCSE's, MIE, students

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Surviving Ebola

Mukesh Kapila By Mukesh Kapila Filed Under: Featured Posted: January 29, 2015

There are positive signs that West Africa is recovering from the Ebola epidemic. But more must be done to create a healthcare system that can withstand the next attack from deadly disease, says Professor Mukesh Kapila. Sierra Leone is at war again, as are Liberia and Guinea. This latest war is against Ebola, a nasty […]

Tagged With: ebola, guinea, international development, liberia, public health england, sierra leone

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Greece- The shape of things to come

Dimitris Papadimitriou By Dimitris Papadimitriou Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: January 27, 2015

In the aftermath of the Greek general election, which put SYRIZA, an anti-austerity left wing party, into power in coalition with far-right Independent Greeks, Dimitris Papadimitriou Professor of European politics at The University of Manchester, explores the situation and assess the possible impact. So, there you have it! Greek bailout politics have come full circle. […]

Tagged With: austerity, bailout, debt, EU, Greece, Greek elections, national debt, Syriza

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‘Neither Unified, Nor Uniform – So What Civil Service for the Twenty-First Century?

Francesca GainsDave Richards By Francesca Gains and Dave Richards Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Whitehall Watch Posted: January 26, 2015

In the final part of our special series on the Civil Service, Francesca Gains and Dave Richards sum up the debate and assess the future of the service during a period of great change. The most striking theme to emerge from the Policy@Manchester series of Civil Service ‘stocking-taking’ blogs by Martin Stanley and Colin Talbot […]

Tagged With: Civil Service, Northcote-Trevelyan Report, parliament, Scottish civil service, westminster, Whitehall

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Civil Service Accountability to the Public Part III

Martin Stanley By Martin Stanley Filed Under: All posts, Whitehall Watch Posted: January 23, 2015

In the latest blog in our series on the Civil Service , Martin Stanley continues his examination of whether senior officials should be more accountable – especially to MPs – for the advice that they give to Ministers.  Whatever the strength of the arguments for and against greater civil service accountability, there does seem to […]

Tagged With: Civil Service, Ministers, Osmotherly Rules, parliament, permanent secretaries, SROs

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Tolstoy’s River – Why pro-Europeans need to be braver

Michael Welsh By Michael Welsh Filed Under: All posts, Europe Posted: January 22, 2015

As the anti -EU movement grows, ex Conservative MEP for Lancashire Central Michael Welsh, argues those in the pro-EU camp need to be braver when arguing their case, if Britain is to continue to play its part in the world. In the concluding chapters of War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy compares the course of history […]

Tagged With: EU, europe, European Union, globalisation, Jean Monnet, MEPs, single market

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