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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
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Could DevoManc create an economy for the common good?

By Mark Burton Filed Under: Devo, Featured Posted: July 6, 2015

Mark Burton tries to imagine how city-region devolution might help to produce a fairer and more sustainable society. The Greater Manchester devolution deal is firmly rooted in a highly orthodox economic and social model. Other deals, with regions hand-picked by the Treasury, are at various stages of gestation. There is every reason to think they […]

Tagged With: devolution, DevoManc, economy, GDP, globalisation, Greater Manchester, localisation, Manchester, Steady State Manchester, sustainability

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Making devolution work for all: Grabbing and grappling with the opportunity

By Neil McInroy Filed Under: Devo, Featured Posted: July 3, 2015

The University of Manchester and Centre for Local Economic Strategies (CLES) play host to the Making Devolution Work conference next week. To mark the event CLES’s Chief Executive Neil McInroy writes the first of a series of blogs around the conference, examining what devolution could mean for the region and country. The UK is massively […]

Tagged With: devolution, DevoManc, HM Treasury, local government, parliament

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A Lesson from History: The Dangerous Power of Idealism

Kate Cooper By Kate Cooper Filed Under: Featured Posted: July 2, 2015

Extremist attacks have escalated in recent weeks – not just in Tunisia. Youths from Dewsbury and High Wycombe have reportedly died as a suicide bomber in Iraq and as a member of Al Shabaab in Kenya. Professor Kate Cooper offers a historian’s perspective on the attraction of violent extremism to idealistic youth. When young people […]

Tagged With: Abdul Hakim, Al Shabaab, Asmal, Christianity, Iraq, Islam, Mediating Religion Network, Roman Empire, Talha

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To merge or not to merge…

By John Pal Filed Under: Featured Posted: July 1, 2015

Competition is the basis of a healthy capitalist economy. The proposed Ladbrokes/Coral merger highlights the question of when regulators should permit reduced competition, explains John Pal. The mooted Ladbrokes acquisition of Coral is likely to bring the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) calling with an inquiry. A successful acquisition would lead to Ladbrokes controlling at […]

Tagged With: Aldi, Asda, betting, Co-operative Group, Competition and Markets Authority, Coral, Gala Coral, gambling, grocery, Ladbrokes, Lidl, Mary Portas, Morrisons, Netto, Office of Fair Trading, retail, Sainsbury, Somerfields, Tesco

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The quest for solidarity in a fractured Europe

By Tanja Müller Filed Under: Europe, Featured Posted: June 30, 2015

With conflict raging in Calais between lorry drivers and would-be migrants to the UK, Tanja Müller asks what happened to European solidarity. World Refugee Day 2015, on 20 June, coincided with a huge anti-austerity demonstration in London. This was narrowly concerned with the specific politics on the British Isles – politics that seems to become […]

Tagged With: Angus Robertson, Calais, Channel Tunnel, David Cameron, Denmark, European Convention on Human Rights, European Union, Harriet Harman, Ireland, Jeremy Corbyn, Labour Party, migrants, migration, refugees, World Refugee Day

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Inequality: What is to be done?

David Hulme By David Hulme Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: June 30, 2015

Professor David Hulme tackles the problem of rising global inequality. Over the past few years there has been a wealth of research demonstrating the perils of inequality – both in the rich world and in developing countries. Studies have shown that increasing levels of inequality bring greater social problems and can act as a brake […]

Tagged With: Barak Obama, Davos, india, inequality, Latin America, millennium development goals, The Pope, TTIP

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Booming Manchester

Diane Coyle By Diane Coyle Filed Under: Devo, Featured Posted: June 29, 2015

Manchester’s economy, and its population, is growing, But the decision to ‘pause’ the electrification of the Manchester-Leeds rail line underlines the reality that important decisions are still controlled nationally, explains Professor Diane Coyle. One of the most telling signs of a successful economy is when people vote with their feet and move there. As the […]

Tagged With: DevoManc, Greater Manchester, Leeds, Manchester, Manchester Independent Economic Review, OECD, Sir Richard Leese, Tony Lloyd, TransPennine Express

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Out of Time: Fracking in UK Energy Policy

John Broderick By John Broderick Filed Under: All posts, Featured, Science and Technology Posted: June 26, 2015

As the decision on fracking at Little Plumpton in Lancashire is delayed, Dr John Broderick of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, part of Manchester Energy, considers whether a UK shale gas industry may turn out to be an anachronism. Whether the go-ahead for fracking in Lancashire is given or not, there is little […]

Tagged With: carbon capture and storage, climate change, energy, energy demand, fracking, shale gas, The Pope, Tyndall Centre

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Inequality in the criminal justice system

By Stephanie Wallace Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity Posted: June 25, 2015

Ethnic minorities are heavily over-represented at all stages of the criminal justice system. We have to look at the wider structure of inequality to understand why, argues Stephanie Wallace. Two dominant explanations generally account for the over representation of ethnic minority groups in the criminal justice system; ethnic minorities commit more crime and institutionalised racism. […]

Tagged With: criminal justice, Crown Court, ethnic minorities, Offenders, prison, racism, Sunday Times, Trevor Philllips

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The future of metro mayors – all eyes on Greater Manchester

Francesca Gains By Francesca Gains Filed Under: All posts, Devo Posted: June 25, 2015

Greater Manchester this week becomes the first combined metro area to have its own mayor. Professor Francesca Gains looks ahead at what awaits Tony Lloyd. Arrangements to deliver an elected metro mayor for Greater Manchester take several significant steps forward this week. In the House of Lords, the Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill moves […]

Tagged With: Bob Jones, Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill, DevoManc, George Osborne, Greater Manchester, Institute for Fiscal Studies, Mayor, police and crime commissioners, Tony Lloyd

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