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A male nurse wipes the arm of a young man who is about to receive a vaccination

Area-based vaccination would better protect against COVID-19

By Ruth Watkinson and Matt Sutton Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity, Health and Care, Health and Social Care Posted: February 26, 2021

The early stages of the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in the UK have been a remarkable success from many perspectives: we have one of the highest rates of vaccination per capita, high uptake, and the government has met its first vaccination target. However, this rollout has taken place amidst a devastating surge of COVID-19 deaths, and […]

Tagged With: #IHPO, AMBS, communities, COVID-19, Health & Social Care, health and social care, HOPE, inequality, Pandemic, public health

The hydrogen economy: why is the sub-surface essential?

By Kevin Taylor Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Science and Engineering, Science and Technology Posted: February 18, 2021

The UK Government has made a commitment to deliver a hydrogen economy as a means to decarbonise heating and heavy transport. This was most recently highlighted in the Government’s “Ten-point plan for a green industrial revolution” and the recent Energy White Paper “Powering our net zero future”. In this blog, Professor Kevin Taylor, from the […]

Tagged With: Business Energy & Industry, climate change, consumption, Dalton, energy, environment, Hydrogen, innovation, MERI, net zero, sustainability

Student with tutor in one to one tutorial

Filling a youth-shaped gap in the FE White Paper: Reducing inequalities in post-16 progression

Ruth Lupton By Ruth Lupton, Stephanie Thomson, Lorna Unwin and Sanne Velthuis Filed Under: All posts, Education, Growth and Inclusion, Inclusive Growth Posted: February 8, 2021

The new Further Education (FE) White Paper claims its proposals will transform post-16 education and training in England. It acknowledges that not enough people develop technical skills at Level 3 and above. Yet it has nothing to say about the thousands of young people who do not progress smoothly from GCSEs to Level 3 programmes. […]

Tagged With: Children & Young People, education, employment, inequalities, inequality, MIE, schools, WEI

How can we drive businesses to deliver on Net Zero?

By Jonatan Pinkse Filed Under: All posts, Cities and Environment, Energy and Environment, Renewables, Urban Posted: February 3, 2021

Nearly a fifth of the UK’s carbon emissions are generated by businesses. With global emissions expected to be just 4% lower than in 2019, urgent action is required across all sectors to achieve net zero goals. But how can we push businesses to sustainability when their bottom line is at stake? Here, Professor Jonatan Pinkse, […]

Tagged With: AMBS, Business Energy & Industry, carbon reduction, climate change, employment, energy, innovation, MIOIR, net zero, sustainability

Inequalities in ageing: health disadvantages amongst ethnic minority groups

By Ruth Watkinson and Alex Turner Filed Under: All posts, Ethnicity, Health and Care, Health and Social Care Posted: February 1, 2021

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a disproportionate impact on most ethnic minority groups in England. But this inequality is a crisis within a crisis – the pandemic has laid bare and exacerbated existing deep-rooted health inequalities. Here, Dr Ruth Watkinson and Dr Alex Turner, from the Health Organisation, Policy and Economics group (HOPE) and the […]

Tagged With: #IHPO, care quality, communities, COVID-19, disability, Health & Social Care, health and social care, Health inequalities, HOPE, inequalities, inequality, NHS, NHS improvement, Pandemic, Racial Inequalities

A woman works on a computer at a desk with a child sat in her lap

Why parents need the right to stay home without risk to their income or jobs when schools are closed

Jill Rubery By Isabel Tavora and Jill Rubery Filed Under: All posts, Education, Growth and Inclusion Posted: January 21, 2021

Under the UK government’s furlough scheme, parents can be placed on furlough if they have caring responsibilities for a child who is at home as a result of school closures. However, a parent’s request for furlough depends upon the agreement of their employer, which is not always forthcoming. In this blog, Dr Isabel Tavora and […]

Tagged With: caring responsibilities & children, COVID-19, education, employment, gender equality, gender inequalities, inequalities, labour market, Pandemic, schools, WEI

Job value and job status during the COVID-19 pandemic: Recognising migrants as ‘critical’ but neglected workers

Stefania MarinoMiguel Martínez Lucio By Stefania Marino, Miguel Martínez Lucio and Anthony Rafferty Filed Under: All posts, Brexit, Ethnicity, Health and Social Care Posted: January 6, 2021

During the current pandemic, governments have devoted much debate and effort to the maintenance of critical sectors of the economy – namely those that need to remain active to guarantee basic economic and social functioning, at least in the short to medium term. Many of these sectors are heavily dependent on workers typically seen as […]

Tagged With: AMBS, COVID-19, employment, immigration, labour market, Pandemic, productivity, social work, WEI

nuclear reactor

The 2020 Energy White Paper- Is nuclear power back?

Francis Livens By Francis Livens Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Science and Engineering, Science and Technology Posted: December 15, 2020

The long-awaited Energy White Paper, Powering Our Net Zero Future, sets out an ambitious pathway to decarbonisation of the UK. It maps out many possible scenarios, with nuclear energy ranging from an irrelevance to a major contributor. Here, Professor Francis Livens from the Dalton Nuclear Institute, looks at what needs to happen in order for […]

Tagged With: Business Energy & Industry, climate change, Dalton, energy, infrastructure, net zero, nuclear

windmill and factory

Turning climate change ambitions to reality

Sarah Mander By Sarah Mander Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Science and Engineering, Science and Technology Posted: December 7, 2020

The UK Government has announced both its aim to cut emissions by 68% by the end of 2030 and its Ten Point Plan for a Green Industrial Revolution, seeking to provide a blueprint to allow the UK “to forge ahead with eradicating its contribution to climate change by 2050”. Here, Dr Sarah Mander from the […]

Tagged With: Business Energy & Industry, carbon reduction, climate change, energy, environment, innovation, Levelling Up, sustainability, Tyndall

paper with overlaid text "coronavirus recovery"

Tackling the twin crises of COVID-19 and climate change

Alice Larkin By Alice Larkin Filed Under: All posts, Energy and Environment, Renewables, Science and Engineering, Science and Technology Posted: November 24, 2020

The global pandemic of 2020 has meant massive changes to millions of people around the world. But as we look to adjust to life in the ‘new normal’, are there lessons to learn in how we can ‘build back better’? With less than a year to go until the postponed COP26, Professor Alice Larkin from the Tyndall Centre […]

Tagged With: climate change, consumption, COVID-19, energy, environment, Levelling Up, Pandemic, sustainability, Tyndall

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