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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
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Why has Britain’s civil rights movement been forgotten?

Laurence Brown By Laurence Brown Filed Under: Ethnicity, Featured Posted: October 23, 2014

As the 800th anniversary of the signing of the Magna Carta approaches, Dr Laurence Brown argues that the significant struggles faced by ethnic minorities to achieve modern-day freedoms are being overlooked. Next year will mark eight hundred years from the signing of Magna Carta. The extensive public history projects underway to commemorate what is seen […]

Tagged With: civil rights, discrimination, ethnicity, magna carta, prejudice, race, racism

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Today’s global poverty is down to the way we run the world

David Hulme By David Hulme Filed Under: Featured Posted: October 16, 2014

Today is International Day for the Eradication of Poverty and also Blog Action Day 2014, with the theme of inequality. Professor David Hulme laments the fact that global poverty still continues to plague our world – despite previous headline-grabbing pledges by the richest nations. Today, as on all the previous days of the 21st century, […]

Tagged With: blog action day 2014, Brooks World Poverty Institute, famine, global poor, health, inequality, MDGs, Millennium Declaration, nutrition, poverty, third world, water

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The Polling Observatory Forecast 5: Conservatives fading away?

Rob FordMark PickupWill JenningsChristopher Wlezien By Rob Ford, Mark Pickup, Will Jennings and Christopher Wlezien Filed Under: Featured, Polling Observatory Posted: October 15, 2014

As explained in the inaugural election forecast, up until May next year the Polling Observatory team will be producing a long term forecast for the 2015 General Election, using methods first applied ahead of the 2010 election (and which are also well-established in the United States). The authors’ method involves trying to make the best use of […]

Tagged With: electorate, GE2015, general election, opinion polls, politics, polling, UK, voters, voting

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Polling Observatory 41: Opinion stable for now, but election battle lines are being drawn

Rob FordWill JenningsMark PickupChristopher Wlezien By Rob Ford, Will Jennings, Mark Pickup and Christopher Wlezien Filed Under: Featured, Polling Observatory Posted: October 8, 2014

This is the forty-first in a series of posts by Dr Robert Ford, Dr Will Jennings, Dr Mark Pickup and Prof Christopher Wlezien that report on the state of the parties in the UK as measured by opinion polls. By pooling together all the available polling evidence, the impact of the random variation that each individual survey inevitably produces can be […]

Tagged With: cameron, Conservative, election, GE2015, Labour, Lib Dems, party conference, polling, polls, UKIP, voters, voting

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Where’s the evidence for IDS’s new ‘smartcard’ scheme for poor?

David Hulme By David Hulme Filed Under: Featured Posted: September 30, 2014

Iain Duncan Smith has announced the launch of pre-paid cards, loaded with benefit payments to ensure that money will go to feed families and not “self-destructive habits”. It was an initiative that attracted applause from his Conservative party colleagues. But, asks Professor David Hulme, is it really necessary? Hear Prof David Hulme speak at a […]

Tagged With: benefits, conservatives, Iain Duncan Smith, IDS, state aid, universal credit, welfare

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Where next for Labour’s schools policy?

Ruth Lupton By Ruth Lupton Filed Under: Featured Posted: September 29, 2014

With the Labour Party conference in town, Manchester Institute of Education (MIE) invited four leading figures in education to join teachers, academics, teacher educators, parents and others in a public debate on what a future Labour government should do on schools. Prof Ruth Lupton considers some of their key ideas. Panel members were Rt. Hon David […]

Tagged With: academies, children, education, Labour, MIE, policy, pupils, schools, teachers, teaching

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Why do ethnic inequalities continue to matter?

James Nazroo By James Nazroo Filed Under: Ethnicity, Featured Posted: September 25, 2014

Have we moved into a ‘post-race’ policy environment, in which politicians claim ethnic inequalities no longer matter? They remain important and significant, counters Prof James Nazroo. When was the last time you heard an MP, let alone a minister, talk about ethnicity in terms of inequality? In mainstream policy discussion we appear to have moved […]

Tagged With: census, CoDE, discrimination, diversity, employment, ethnic minority employment, ethnicity, national identity, race, racism

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After the ‘No’: Constitutional Reform must not be by the Elites for the Elites

Martin SmithSandra LeónDave Richards By Martin Smith, Sandra León and Dave Richards Filed Under: All posts Posted: September 24, 2014

The constitutional debate unleashed by the Scottish Independence Referendum has revealed many of the contradictions and problems of the British political system. The result effectively undermines the notion of the Westminster model and the underlying principle of Parliamentary (in realty Executive) Sovereignty. The Westminster model is based on an idea of indivisible sovereignty, accompanied by […]

Tagged With: constitutional reform, elites, Scotland, westminster

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After the ‘No’: Dynamics of Scottish Nationalism?

Colin Talbot By Colin Talbot Filed Under: All posts Posted: September 19, 2014

This is the first of what will hopefully be a series of short posts examining various constitutional, policy and political consequences of the ‘No’ vote in the Scottish referendum. Where will the SNP go now? They can hardly go for “business as usual” approach, now independence is off the agenda for an unspecified period. There are […]

Tagged With: referendum, Scotland, SNP, UK

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Why (Smart) Aid Matters

David Hulme By David Hulme Filed Under: All posts Posted: September 16, 2014

It looks, thankfully, like DFID has survived the brunt of austerity savings made since the financial crash of 2008. While backroom costs have been cut, the government has stuck to its commitment to earmark 0.7% of Gross National Income for Official Development Assistance.  Though critics instinctively point to the development budget in suggesting where we […]

Tagged With: aid, Britain, poverty

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