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Snakes and Ladders: the challenge of regularising immigration status

Claire Fox By Claire Fox Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: July 16, 2014

Anti-immigration parties gained support in the European elections, but politicians’ real challenge is to reform a system that treats undocumented migrants unfairly, argues Dr Claire Fox. Despite the election rhetoric and growing support for anti-immigration politicians, the number of undocumented, ‘irregular’, migrants in the UK probably fell in recent years. Increasingly tough immigration policies and […]

Tagged With: asylum, criminal justice, European elections, immigration, legal reform, Manchester, regular status, right of residency, undocumented migrants

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Liverpool could sue Suarez

Hannah QuirkElaine Dewhurst By Hannah Quirk and Elaine Dewhurst Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: July 4, 2014

Following the four month ban issued to Luis Suarez by FIFA, Dr Hannah Quirk and Dr Elaine Dewhurst from The University of Manchester’s  School of Law look at some of the legal consequences. FIFA, football’s world governing body, has banned the Uruguayan footballer Luis Suarez for four months and nine internationals for biting Italy defender […]

Tagged With: ban, Brasil 2014, consequences, employment law, legal, Liverpool FC, suarez, world cup

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Nomination of Mr Juncker – A tentative step forward for European democracy?

Georgios Papanagnou By Georgios Papanagnou Filed Under: All posts, Europe, Featured Posted: July 1, 2014

David Cameron failed to block Jean Claude Juncker from being nominated by the European Council for the post of European Commission President. Dr. Georgios Papanagnou takes a look at some of the weaknesses in the campaigns by Cameron and the British media. In the end “this time was not so much different” – Jean Claude […]

Tagged With: conservatives, election, elections, EU, europe, government, parliament, party politics, politics

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Trust Teachers – The first Manchester Education Debate

Andrew Howes By Andrew Howes Filed Under: All posts Posted: June 30, 2014

Educationalists, teachers and academics have taken part in the first of a series of debates about the future of our schools in the run up to the 2015 election. Dr Andrew Howes pulls together some key strands from the discussion. If one in four good, trained teachers is saying ‘I’m leaving teaching, I need a […]

Tagged With: education, manchester teaching, MIE, public debates, schools, teacher satisfaction, teaching, teaching conditions, Universities

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Reform of world trade long overdue

Rorden Wilkinson By Rorden Wilkinson Filed Under: All posts Posted: June 26, 2014

Reports that Russia is threatening to take the United States to the World Trade Organization (WTO) over sanctions imposed because of the Ukraine crisis throws the global trade body into a more geopolitical light than we have grown accustomed to in recent times. More commonly, the WTO is associated with what are rather wearisome disagreements […]

Tagged With: Bali, Doha, world trade

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The problem with alcohol advertising

David French By David French Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: June 3, 2014

The public believes that television alcohol adverts breach their regulatory controls. There is a clear need to strengthen the rules, argues Professor David French. Television advertising of alcohol is subject to what should be strong content controls. Regulations ban advertisements from implying that alcohol can contribute to popularity or confidence, or that it is capable […]

Tagged With: advertising, alcohol, ASA, BCAP, Health Select Committee, Loi evin, Ofcom, television, television advertising

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Consultants still playing a big role in government

Helen Gunter By Helen Gunter Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: June 2, 2014

Four years on from the bonfire of the quangos, non-elected consultants are still playing a significant role within government, says Prof Helen Gunter. The focus on leadership as the solution for improving public services continues to dominate reform. And aligned to this is the whole concept of ‘consultocracy’, a term first coined by Hood and Jackson to underline the […]

Tagged With: consultocracy, education, Hood and Jackson, michael barber, pat collarbone, tony mackay

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Open up on costs to improve NHS care

Sue Llewellyn By Sue Llewellyn Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: June 2, 2014

Sharing information on the cost of treatment could help achieve better patient outcomes at a lower cost, says Professor Sue Llewellyn. But, given the current tensions between collaboration and competition in the NHS, some trusts seem unwilling to provide the ‘commercially sensitive’ information to commissioners that would help make this happen. A recent Parliamentary health select committee report urged […]

Tagged With: Clinical Commissioning Groups, Health Select Committee, Monitor, NHS, NHS competition policy, Patient Level Information and Costing System, PLICS

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Doing wrong in order to do right in Northern Ireland

Stephen De Wijze By Stephen De Wijze Filed Under: All posts, Featured Posted: May 6, 2014

As recent events in Northern Ireland have shown, sometimes it is necessary to do wrong in order to do right and we need to understand better this moral paradox when judging politicians, says Dr Stephen de Wijze. The debate about how Northern Ireland deals with its dreadful past has been building for many months. Indeed […]

Tagged With: Gerry Adams, jean mcconville, northern ireland, peace process

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Who owns London’s revenues?

Adam Leaver By Adam Leaver Filed Under: All posts Posted: April 10, 2014

The debate is raging on whether London disproportionately creates or consumes the UK’s revenues. Dr Adam Leaver chips in. Ever since Evan Davis presented Mind the Gap, a debate has raged about whether London’s dominance of the UK economy is a positive or a negative. While my colleagues Iain Deas, Graham Haughton and Stephen Hincks have put forward the […]

Tagged With: Evan Davis, London, Mind the Gap, PFI, regional growth, regional policy, transport expenditure

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