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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
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Does urban growth help the poorest?

By Richard Crisp Filed Under: Inclusive Growth, Urban Posted: May 19, 2016

Will urban growth policy benefit all or will it leave some parts of the community no better off?  Richard Crisp explains how a new measurement tool – the inclusive growth monitor – can shed light on this issue. Like any occasional visitor to Manchester I am always struck by the sense of a city on […]

Tagged With: inclusive growth, Inclusive Growth Analysis Unit, inequality

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Success as a Knowledge Economy? It’s Complicated

By Andy Westwood Filed Under: All posts, Whitehall Watch Posted: May 18, 2016

The Government announced its higher education reform plans this week, publishing a white paper ‘Success as a Knowledge Economy’.  But will it really deliver a better deal for students and is it making an already complex system even more so, asks Andy Westwood? Let’s begin with the title. Every part of it is contested in […]

Tagged With: education, education policy, higher education, Universities

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Brave New Manchester? The dark side of devolution deals

By Graham Haughton Filed Under: All posts Posted: May 17, 2016

Devolving power to our cities and regions has been heralded as a ‘new era’ and an exciting opportunity for positive change.  Manchester has led the way in England, becoming the first region to take control of its health and social care budget on April 1st.  But, asks Graham Haughton, is there a ‘dark side’ to […]

Tagged With: austerity, cities, Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill, Devo, public sector reform

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National policies are fuelling segregation in primary schools

By Mel Ainscow Filed Under: All posts Posted: May 13, 2016

Responding to pupil diversity is a key policy challenge for schools, nationally and locally.  But is our education system working in a way that supports this aim?  No, say professors Mel Ainscow CBE and Alan Dyson, who have found that national polices are actually preventing primary schools from responding effectively to increased diversity in the […]

Tagged With: diversity, education policy, ethnic diversity, MIE

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Could smart cities be smarter about inequality?

By Joe Blakey Filed Under: All posts, Urban Posted: May 9, 2016

Our cities are unequal – in wealth, quality of life and our carbon footprints, amongst other factors.  In the race to use technology to build so-called ‘smart cities’, Joe Blakey says we run the risk of locking-in, rather than tackling, those inequalities. Definitions and data When it comes to smart cities , Manchester is setting […]

Tagged With: cities, data, inequalities, Smart Cities, technology, technology policy

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The NHS has rushed to fix a weekend problem that doesn’t exist

By Matt Sutton and Rachel Meacock Filed Under: All posts Posted: May 6, 2016

Extended weekend working is being introduced by the National Health Service in a bid to save lives. But, as Matt Sutton and Rachel Meacock explain, new research casts serious doubt on the premise that more hospital staff on Saturday and Sunday will mean fewer patient deaths. As the raft of recent media coverage has highlighted, […]

Tagged With: care, death rate, health, hospitals, mortality, NHS, patients, reform

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Regional crime tsars face their first real test – but where are the women?

Francesca Gains By Francesca Gains Filed Under: All posts Posted: May 4, 2016

Thursday 5 May is a ‘Super Thursday’ for all kinds of non-Westminster elections, with candidates running for office for London Assembly and Mayor, many local authorities, the Scottish Parliament, Welsh and Northern Ireland Assemblies. Polling also takes place for 40 of the 41 Police and Crime Commissioners (PCCs) in England and Wales – but as […]

Tagged With: crime, elections, gender, law and order, PCCs, police and crime commissioners, policing

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Hillsbrough verdict should be trigger to push outdated laws to the history books

By Geoff Pearson Filed Under: All posts Posted: May 3, 2016

The Hillsborough Inquest concluded that 96 football fans were unlawfully killed as a result of a series of catastrophic failures by the police and ambulance services. Geoff Pearson says now it’s time for a shake-up of the laws and regulations governing football matches to prevent dangerous crowd management strategies. The finding from last week’s inquest was […]

Tagged With: alcohol, crowd management, Football, Hillsborough, sports safety, Taylor Report

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TTIP trade deal: will new measures weaken Governments’ power to act in the public interest?

Picture of Dr Nicolette Butler By Nicolette Butler Filed Under: All posts, Europe Posted: April 28, 2016

One of the biggest bones of contention in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership talks centres on the proposed Investment Court System. Critics are concerned that the ‘investor-state dispute settlement’ mechanism could weaken the power of governments to act in the best interests of their people. Whilst the EU Commission has sought to allay critics […]

Tagged With: EU-US trade, European Commission, TTIP

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How the danger from the EU-US trade agreement TTIP still lurks in the fine print

Gabriel Siles-Brügge By Gabriel Siles-Brügge Filed Under: All posts, Europe Posted: April 26, 2016

Controversy surrounding the UK’s trading relationship with the US continues, following President Barack Obama’s visit here. Whilst investment protection remains the key issue in the EU-US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) talks, Gabriel Siles-Brügge argues that a key danger is being ignored: the agreement’s cross-cutting regulatory provisions. This week sees the 13th round of […]

Tagged With: EU-US trade, European Commission, TTIP

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