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

Can British universities be sites for reparative justice?

By Karis Campion Filed Under: All posts, Education, Ethnicity, Growth and Inclusion Posted: October 15, 2018

This October is Black History Month, and despite some local councils’ attempts to dilute and replace it with ‘diversity’ agendas, the ongoing Windrush scandal has served as a stark reminder of some of the continued misunderstandings about Black history in Britain. Dr Karis Campion discusses the responsibility universities have in creating honest conversations on their […]

Tagged With: #bhm, abolition, Atlantic slave trade, Black history, Black History Month, BME, British history, colonial history, curriculum, education, ethnic, inequalities, justice, Racial Inequalities, racism, Slavery, students, university

Women in environmental sciences

By Cecilia Medupin Filed Under: All posts, Digital Futures, Education, Ethnicity, Science and Engineering Posted: October 9, 2018

Dr Cecilia Medupin is a Lecturer in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, at The University of Manchester and convener of Women in Environmental Sciences group. On Ada Lovelace day, Cecilia gives her eight-point plan for how to tackle inequality for women in environmental science. Including: It is essential to create a platform, or […]

Tagged With: Ada Lovelace, Digital Futures, environment, gender equality, gender inequalities, inequalities, science & engineering, women

Response to the IPCC 1.5°C Special Report

Kevin Anderson By Kevin Anderson Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Science and Engineering Posted: October 8, 2018

The University of Manchester’s Professor Kevin Anderson responds to today’s report from the Inter-Governmental Panel on Climate Change. The IPCC report meticulously lays out how the serious climate impacts of 1.5°C of warming are still far less destructive than those for 2°C. Sadly, the IPCC then fails, again, to address the profound implications of reducing […]

Tagged With: carbon emissions, carbon reduction, climate change, consumption, environment, global warming, IPCC, sustainability

Lost in translation? Rap music and racial bias in the courtroom

Eithne Quinn By Eithne Quinn Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity Posted: October 4, 2018

This year has seen heightened controversy over the relationship between rap music and youth violence in urban areas, especially London. ‘Drill’ – a type of gangsta rap known for striking a pose of menace and alienation, set to sparse yet catchy minor-keyed beats – has replaced ‘grime’ as the main focus for concern and condemnation.  […]

Tagged With: #bhm, Black History Month, crime, criminal justice, drill, inequalities, justice, Racial Inequalities, racial inequality, racism, rap

Improving Sexual Health Awareness in Education

By Dr Deborah FallonRGN RSCN RNT BSc MA PhD Filed Under: All posts, Health and Social Care Posted: September 28, 2018

As Sexual Health Awareness Week 2018 draws to a close, Dr Debbie Fallon blogs for us on the current state of sexual health issues, education, and services in the UK.  Sexual health awareness and education campaigns are of great importance, especially for young people who are navigating their independence for the first time. Rates of […]

Tagged With: Children & Young People, education, Health & Social Care, inequalities, LGBTQ+, public health, schools, students

The Long-Term Policy Failures in Education – The Northern Powerhouse and a Fairer Start

Kingsley Purdam By Kingsley Purdam and Maria Pampaka Filed Under: Education Posted: September 28, 2018

The start of the new school year, debates about the value of homework and concerns about how the Northern Powerhouse education fund is being spent are a further reminder of the inequalities in the UK education system. It is a priority that policy makers focus on addressing the long-term inequalities in the education system. As […]

Tagged With: Children & Young People, education, inclusive growth, inequalities, Northern Powerhouse, productivity, schools, Social Statistics, students

Bugchasing: The importance of desire and fantasy in HIV-prevention policies

A photo of Jaime By Jaime Garcia-Iglesias Filed Under: All posts, Digital Futures, Health and Care, Health and Social Care Posted: September 27, 2018

Today in the UK, due to early diagnosis and early, effective treatments, life has greatly improved for people living with the HIV virus.  But HIV has not gone away and there are new concerns in a world of increasing sexual experimentation and online communication.  In Sexual Health Week 2018, Jaime García-Iglesias explains why policies to […]

Tagged With: Digital Futures, Health & Safety, Health & Social Care, Health and Care, Health inequalities, health workers, HIV, LGBTQ+, sexual health

Research that saves lives: suicide prevention in action

By Dr Pauline Turnbull Filed Under: Health and Social Care Posted: September 10, 2018

Every death by suicide is a shocking event, with wide-reaching consequences for loved ones, communities, and front-line professionals. Suicide prevention is a recognised health priority in England, and in early 2018, the Department for Health and Social Care, Public health England (PHE), and NHS England announced a three-year investment worth £25 million to support a […]

Tagged With: care quality, Health & Safety, Health & Social Care, mental health, National Suicide Prevention Strategy, NHS, suicide, Suicide prevention

Nurse dressing a hand with bandage

Opportunities to improve the management of wound care in the NHS

Paul Wilson headshot By Paul Wilson Filed Under: Health and Social Care Posted: August 16, 2018

The management and care of wounds is a complex aspect of our healthcare system, with implications for primary, secondary, and community care, as well as having a significant impact on both expenditures and outcomes. Here, Paul Wilson of the  NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Greater Manchester (CLARHRC GM) introduces the issue […]

Tagged With: care quality, community care, dressing, Health & Social Care, NHS, wound care

Public square in Soho with public

Beyond the parish pump… what next for public health?

Alex Hall portrait By Alex Hall Filed Under: All posts, Health and Social Care Posted: August 14, 2018

Alex Hall, Research Associate at the University of Manchester, draws on a three-year study by the Health Policy, Politics and Organisations (HiPPO) Group into the impacts of the Health and Social Care Act 2012 upon commissioning of health services, to explore the significance of the Act for public health’s professional identity.   The Health and […]

Tagged With: care quality, Health & Social Care, NHS, public health

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