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2. Read all about it: Why Shotton is no run of the mill.
- Author
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Mellows, Phil
- Subjects
NEWSPRINT mills ,RECYCLED newspapers ,PAPER recycling - Abstract
The article details the operation of UPM Shotton recyling plant in Wales, the largest recycled newsprint mill in Great Britain. John Sanderson of UPM cites that contamination remains to be their main concern. Recycled paper sourcing manager Mike Burgess notes that the usefulness of paper may be reduced because it is a soft medium. Strict specifications enforce by Shotton on the waste paper it uses comprise less than 10% white office paper, 4% grey or white board, 1% brown board and 0% non-pulpable materials. INSETS: From steel to print;Putting down sustainable roots.
- Published
- 2009
3. Pandemic policymaking affecting older adult volunteers during and after the COVID-19 public health crisis in the four nations of the UK.
- Author
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Grotz, Jurgen, Armstrong, Lindsay, Edwards, Heather, Jones, Aileen, Locke, Michael, Smith, Laurel, Speed, Ewen, and Birt, Linda
- Subjects
DISEASE risk factors ,PREVENTION of infectious disease transmission ,MORTALITY risk factors ,POLICY sciences ,NATIONAL health services ,EXECUTIVES ,RESEARCH funding ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL care ,SOCIAL services ,STATISTICAL sampling ,INTERVIEWING ,DECISION making ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,COVID-19 vaccines ,SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL attitudes ,STAY-at-home orders ,DISCOURSE analysis ,TELEMEDICINE ,VOLUNTEERS ,AGING ,ORGANIZATIONAL change ,PUBLIC health ,COMPARATIVE studies ,PRACTICAL politics ,HEALTH promotion ,SOCIAL support ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,OLD age - Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to critically examine the effects of COVID-19 social discourses and policy decisions specifically on older adult volunteers in the UK, comparing the responses and their effects in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, providing perspectives on effects of policy changes designed to reduce risk of infection as a result of COVID-19, specifically on volunteer involvement of and for older adults, and understand, from the perspectives of volunteer managers, how COVID-19 restrictions had impacted older people's volunteering and situating this within statutory public health policies. Design/methodology/approach: The study uses a critical discourse approach to explore, compare and contrast accounts of volunteering of and for older people in policy, and then compare the discourses within policy documents with the discourses in personal accounts of volunteering in health and social care settings in the four nations of the UK. This paper is co-produced in collaboration with co-authors who have direct experience with volunteer involvement responses and their impact on older people. Findings: The prevailing overall policy approach during the pandemic was that risk of morbidity and mortality to older people was too high to permit them to participate in volunteering activities. Disenfranchising of older people, as exemplified in volunteer involvement, was remarkably uniform across the four nations of the UK. However, the authors find that despite, rather than because of policy changes, older volunteers, as part of, or with the help of, volunteer involving organisations, are taking time to think and to reconsider their involvement and are renewing their volunteer involvement with associated health benefits. Research limitations/implications: Working with participants as co-authors helps to ensure the credibility of results in that there was agreement in the themes identified and the conclusions. A limitation of this study lies in the sampling method, as a convenience sample was used and there is only representation from one organisation in each of the four nations. Originality/value: The paper combines existing knowledge about volunteer involvement of and for older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Occupational distribution and mobility of migrants born in South Asia: evidence from England/Wales Census, 1901–1911.
- Author
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Tiagi, Raaj
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,SOUTH Asians ,CENSUS ,SEVENTEENTH century ,MINORITIES - Abstract
South Asians constitute Britain's largest ethnic minorities, yet very little is known about their migration history in the prewar era. Recent literature has begun to challenge the widely held view that South Asian migration to Britain was a post-war phenomenon in response to Britain's need for labour as it emerged from two costly wars. The literature has demonstrated that the South Asian presence in Britain can be traced back to the seventeenth century. This paper adds to that literature by analysing the occupation distribution and mobility of South Asian-born migrants during the early twentieth century. Regression results from the 1901 and 1911 Censuses of England and Wales suggest that relative to other foreign-born and British-born, South Asian-born immigrants were primarily employed in white-collar jobs, a position they largely retained until at least 1911. These results suggest that the South Asian diaspora was economically well assimilated into the British economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. End of 2022/23 Season Influenza Vaccine Effectiveness in Primary Care in Great Britain.
- Author
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Whitaker, Heather J., Willam, Naoma, Cottrell, Simon, Goudie, Rosalind, Andrews, Nick, Evans, Josie, Moore, Catherine, Agrawal, Utkarsh, Hassell, Katie, Gunson, Rory, Zitha, Jana, Anand, Sneha, Sebastian‐Pillai, Praveen, Kalapotharakou, Panoraia, Okusi, Cecilia, Hoschler, Katja, Jamie, Gavin, Kele, Beatrix, Hamilton, Mark, and Couzens, Anastasia
- Subjects
FLU vaccine efficacy ,PRIMARY care ,VACCINE effectiveness ,INFLUENZA vaccines ,INFLUENZA - Abstract
Background: The 2022/23 influenza season in the United Kingdom saw the return of influenza to prepandemic levels following two seasons with low influenza activity. The early season was dominated by A(H3N2), with cocirculation of A(H1N1), reaching a peak late December 2022, while influenza B circulated at low levels during the latter part of the season. From September to March 2022/23, influenza vaccines were offered, free of charge, to all aged 2–13 (and 14–15 in Scotland and Wales), adults up to 49 years of age with clinical risk conditions and adults aged 50 and above across the mainland United Kingdom. Methods: End‐of‐season adjusted vaccine effectiveness (VE) estimates against sentinel primary‐care attendance for influenza‐like illness, where influenza infection was laboratory confirmed, were calculated using the test negative design, adjusting for potential confounders. Methods: Results In the mainland United Kingdom, end‐of‐season VE against all laboratory‐confirmed influenza for all those > 65 years of age, most of whom received adjuvanted quadrivalent vaccines, was 30% (95% CI: −6% to 54%). VE for those aged 18–64, who largely received cell‐based vaccines, was 47% (95% CI: 37%–56%). Overall VE for 2–17 year olds, predominantly receiving live attenuated vaccines, was 66% (95% CI: 53%–76%). Conclusion: The paper provides evidence of moderate influenza VE in 2022/23. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A policy-level perspective to tackle rural digital inclusion.
- Author
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Wagg, Sharon and Simeonova, Boyka
- Subjects
DIGITAL inclusion ,DIVISION of labor ,COMMUNITIES ,TRUST ,SEMI-structured interviews ,RURAL women - Abstract
Purpose: This paper explores how policy-level stakeholders tackle digital inclusion in the context of UK rural communities. Design/methodology/approach: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with stakeholders that operate nationally in government departments, government funded organisations and third sector organisations that provided a policy-level perspective on digital inclusion initiative provision across England, Scotland and Wales. Activity theory (AT) was utilised as a theoretical framework, where a variety of factors–tools, rules, community, division of labour and contradictions–were found to have an influence on digital inclusion initiative provision. Findings: Digital inclusion initiative provision in UK rural communities is organised through the multi-stakeholder involvement of national organisations, and collaboration with intermediary organisations to provide digital skills training and support. The process is fraught with difficulties and contradictions, limited knowledge sharing; reduced or poor-quality connectivity; lack of funding; lack of local resources; assumptions that organisations will indeed collaborate and assumptions that intermediary organisations have staff with the necessary skills and confidence to provide digital skills training and support within the rural context. Research limitations/implications: This study highlights the benefit of using AT as a lens to develop a nuanced understanding of how policy-level stakeholders tackle digital inclusion. Practical implications: This study can inform policy decisions on digital inclusion initiative provision suitable for rural communities. Originality/value: The contribution of this paper provides new insights into the understanding of how policy-level stakeholders tackle digital inclusion and the provision of digital inclusion initiatives; it builds on the use of AT to help unpick the complexity of digital inclusion initiative provision as a phenomenon; it reveals contradictions in relation to trust, and the need for knowledge sharing mechanisms to span and align different interpretations of digital inclusion across the policy-level; and reveals an extension of AT demonstrated through the "granularity of the subject" which enables the multi-actor involvement of the stakeholders involved in digital inclusion at policy-level to emerge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. The 2011 Census White Paper.
- Author
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White, Ian
- Subjects
- *
CENSUS , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *RELIGIONS , *LANGUAGE & languages , *HEALTH ,GREAT Britain. Statistics Authority - Abstract
The article reports on the proposal of Great Britain's Statistics Authority for the Census in Wales and England in March 2011. The proposal will be presented to the Parliament and the National Assembly for Wales in a Government White Paper on December 11, 2009. The content of the Census 2011 has been driven primarily by the requirements and demands of the wide range Census users and the evaluation of the 2001 Census. It cites several proposed questions for the 2011 Census including religion, language and general health.
- Published
- 2009
8. Organised Crime and the ecosystems of sexual exploitation in the United Kingdom: How supply and demand generate sexual exploitation and protection from prosecution.
- Author
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Hopkins, Matt, Keighley, Rachel, and Sanders, Teela
- Subjects
ORGANIZED crime ,SEX crimes ,HUMAN trafficking ,SUPPLY & demand ,LAW enforcement ,PROSECUTION ,GRAVE goods - Abstract
Thinking about organised crime as an ecosystem is not only novel but also offers much potential to add to the theoretical and policy-based literature in this area. While organised crime is often analysed as relationships between criminal groups and consumers of illicit goods/services, little work has analysed specific forms of organised crime activities as ecosystems where different constituent parts are dependent upon each other for the crime activity to occur. This paper analyses the organisation of sexual exploitation by entrepreneurial organised crime groups selling sex in the United Kingdom. Based upon 30 interviews with 23 law enforcement forces in England and Wales and five interviews with Adult Service Website Operators; it identifies how an ecosystem is built that ensures (a) profit generation and (b) avoidance of legal prosecution. Our analysis not only illustrates how a market 'supply' and 'demand' ecosystem is generated through mutually convenient 'organiser', 'marketer' and 'buyer' relationships, but also how the roles of these actors ensure sexual exploitation continues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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9. The Journey to Making 'Digital Technology' Education a Community Learning Venture.
- Author
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Carroll, Fiona, Faruque, Rumana, Hewage, Chaminda, Bentotahewa, Vibhushinie, and Meace, Sophie
- Subjects
COMMUNITY education ,GENERAL Certificate of Secondary Education ,LEARNING communities ,DIGITAL technology ,COMMUNITY involvement ,SECONDARY school students - Abstract
Technology has become an integral part of our educational systems, and its importance in our schools cannot be overstated. However, digital skills, unlike other literacy skills, such as reading, writing, and numeracy, still have many discontinuities between how children use them at home versus in school. Therefore, in Wales (UK), digital skills are being promoted as part of the Digital Competence Framework (DCF) and feature highly in the new Curriculum for Wales (2022). Moreover, the new Digital Technology General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) in Wales has been introduced to provide learners with the opportunity to gain a qualification that builds digital skills, knowledge, and understanding. However, this also brings many challenges for teachers, such as a lack of confidence, knowledge, and training, as well as a lack of resources and fear of change, to name a few. These challenges, in turn, have an impact on pupils' motivation and performance, as well as parents' ability to support their children. This paper presents a qualitative case study on the development of a new digital technology learning community for primary and secondary school pupils, their teachers, and parents in Blaenau Gwent, Wales (UK). Firstly, the paper will provide insight into what was required to establish an effective learning community, including ensuring engagement and buy-in from all stakeholders. Secondly, through the description, analysis, and interpretation of findings from two studies, the paper will highlight the impact of the DTLSN learning community on teachers and pupils in Blaenau Gwent, especially in terms of their learning and teaching. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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10. "I was able to take part in the chamber as if I was there" – women local councillors, remote meeting attendance, and Covid-19: a positive from the pandemic?
- Author
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Hibbs, Leah
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation ,COVID-19 ,PANDEMICS ,ATTENDANCE ,FEMINIST theory ,REPRESENTATIVE government - Abstract
This article explores research findings regarding the possibilities offered by remote attendance at council meetings as implemented during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, and reflects upon how this may improve women local councillors' experiences, as well as women's political participation and the accessibility of Welsh local government going forward. Influenced by feminist institutionalist theory, this paper examines how councils' formal organisational norms and practices pre-pandemic privileged presenteeism, and explores participants' perceptions and experiences of the accessibility of local councils, especially for younger women with families and/or in other forms of employment. Presenting data from 19 semi-structured interviews with women local councillors in Wales (UK), both in-person and subsequently online during the pandemic, the paper discusses how remote attendance in local council meetings was considered an enabling shift in formal organisational practices, especially for rural councils. Despite some dissenting opinions and voiced dubiousness (mostly concerning future hybrid implementation), through easing the time costs of being a local councillor, particularly for women balancing a gendered 'triple duty' of the political, personal, and professional, remote meeting attendance is an organisational solution, albeit somewhat forced in implementation, which presents clear means of improving women's political participation and representation in local government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. '[It] isn't designed to be assessed how we assess': rethinking assessment for qualification in the context of the implementation of the Curriculum for Wales.
- Author
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Titley, Elizabeth, Davies, Andrew James, and Atherton, Stephen
- Subjects
CURRICULUM -- Government policy ,ASSESSMENT for learning (Teaching model) ,CURRICULUM change ,TEACHING methods ,TEACHERS ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
This paper reports teacher and learner perspectives on how assessment and reform influences pedagogical practices and behaviours. The research was conducted in a context of policy reform, at a time when Wales' revised General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) specifications had been implemented, and learners were preparing for their assessments; but, also during the period of debate on the development of Wales' new curriculum, which has taken a distinct and contrasting position on assessment to the assumptions underlying the reform of Welsh GCSEs implemented from 2015. These data, therefore, offer unique insights into the affordances and limitations of two sharply contrasting systems at a time of considerable change, offering reflections on the current curriculum and its attendant assessment practices, and also a prospective analysis of how the principles embedded in the new curriculum could challenge these existing assumptions and conventions. Findings suggest that teachers and learners currently inhabit an assessment‐driven system, which encourages performative practices in pedagogy and is governed by external accountability; and that these practices are at odds with the principles of assessment articulated in Successful Futures. Consequently, teachers in this study expressed uncertainty about how assessment for certification purposes at GCSE could be compatible with the principles of the Curriculum for Wales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY IN ENGLAND AND WALES: THE LOST OPPORTUNITY OF THE COLLEGES OF ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY.
- Author
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Simmons, Robin
- Subjects
SCIENCE education (Higher) ,TECHNOLOGY education ,UNIVERSITY autonomy ,TECHNICAL institutes ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Colleges of Advanced Technology (CATs), specialist providers of advance science and technology which existed in England and Wales for ten years after the 1956 White Paper Technical Education. Its central argument is that recasting the CATs as broader-based universities following the 1963 Robbins Report was a significant error which attenuated the progress of science and technology, and prevented the Colleges' development as viable providers of higher education (HE) outside the university sector. This decision, it is argued, was shaped by typically English views about the relative value of different forms of learning, the nature and purpose of HE, and particular beliefs about the primacy of the university. It also conflated the general desire to increase participation in higher education with the wish to promote science and technology in particular. A bolder option, it is proposed, would have been to build the CATs up as prestigious institutes of technology, along the lines of those found in the USA and continental Europe – although this, it is recognised, would have entailed a substantial shift in the role of the state and reduced the individual and collective autonomy of HE institutions in England and Wales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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13. Competition analysis of the UK intercity coach market: a structural econometric model.
- Author
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Duberga, Jules
- Subjects
STRUCTURAL models ,ECONOMETRIC models ,CORPORATE profits ,REGRESSION analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper investigates the effectiveness of liberalization policy on the intercity coach market in England and Wales and evaluates its impact in promoting competition and enhancing welfare. The paper adds to the current literature by assessing this policy focusing on natural monopolies, deriving a structural model of the industry and using web-scraped key market-level data in the study. Regression analysis and descriptive statistics suggest peripheral routes with a small market size are natural monopolies, where passengers pay higher prices. We estimate a structural model, currently absent from the literature, which shows that these routes are characterized by lower welfare levels. The model allows us to simulate a policy promoting competition on such routes showing that a regulator could generate net welfare gains by implementing a more competitive equilibrium on these routes. This paper confirms the dominant conclusion that unregulated coach industries detrimentally consolidate, as demonstrated in other European markets. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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14. Beyond the Unitary State: Multi-Level Governance, Politics, and Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Animal Welfare.
- Author
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Chaney, Paul, Jones, Ian Rees, and Narayan, Nivedita
- Subjects
ANIMAL welfare ,ANIMAL welfare laws ,POLITICAL culture ,SOCIAL theory ,CORPORATE culture ,FEDERAL government - Abstract
Simple Summary: Existing cross-cultural research on animal welfare often overlooks the way that policy and law are not the exclusive domain of central government. This can result in an over-simplification or misrepresentation of the true situation. The political culture and institutional arrangements for governing the modern state are more complex than a "one-size-fits-all" approach. It is argued that cross-cultural research needs to give greater attention to differences within as well as between unitary states. Specifically, it needs to examine developments in constituent nations and territories. Here we illustrate this by drawing on new research in the United Kingdom, and examine how 'devolution'—or decentralized government for Wales and Scotland—is providing contrasting opportunities for NGOs, campaigners, and the public to lobby to improve animal welfare policy based on local practices, beliefs, and demands (collectively known as the "political culture"). Our findings show how this is important because it results in contrasting animal welfare policies and laws in the constituent nations of the UK. It is argued that extant cross-cultural research on animal welfare often overlooks or gives insufficient attention to new governance theory, civil society, politics, and the realities of devolved or (quasi-)federal, multi-level governance in the modern state. This paper synthesizes relevant social theory and draws on new empirical findings of civil society accounts of campaigning on animal welfare policies and law in the United Kingdom. It is presented as a corrective to arguably reductive, earlier unitary state-based analyses. Our core, evidence-based argument is that cognizance of civil society activism and the contrasting institutional governance structures and political cultures of constituent nations in unitary states—such as the UK—are providing opportunities for the territorialization of legally grounded animal welfare regimes, and culturally distinctive practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Quantifying the Association Between Family Homelessness and School Absence in Wales, UK.
- Author
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Thomas, Ian
- Subjects
HOMELESSNESS ,HOMELESS families ,SCHOOL attendance ,SCHOOL absenteeism ,STUDENT records ,POISSON regression ,SCHOOL day - Abstract
Using administrative data linkage, this paper sought to quantify the impacts of family homelessness on pupil absence from school. It addresses a gap in United Kingdom (UK) homelessness research, which draws predominantly on qualitative methods and where there is a greater focus on people who fall outside of the statutory system, i.e., single people living on the streets, rather than families. Education records for the academic years 2012/13 to 2015/16 relating to pupils aged 5 to 15 years old living in a coastal city in Wales, UK, were linked to data on households assessed by the statutory housing service operating across the same region. Analysis of mean half-day sessions absent from school, and Poisson panel regression were used to explore associations between absenteeism (authorised, unauthorised, and total), and whether pupils were living in a household making a statutory homelessness application, i.e., experiencing family homelessness. On average, in any given academic year, pupils experiencing family homelessness (PEFH) missed 5 days more of school than pupils not experiencing family homelessness (PnEFH). Adjusted regression analysis found that the rate of total absence was 7% higher amongst PEFH compared to PnEFH, whilst for unauthorised absence it was 13% higher. When a student experienced family homelessness, this led to an increase in their rate of total absences by 5%--adjusting for other factors--compared to when they were not homeless. Findings have implications for statutory education and housing provision, specifically the need for greater cross-disciplinary working to prevent and alleviate the harms caused when families experience homelessness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Seasonal mortality amongst UK occupational pension scheme members 2000-2016.
- Author
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Hall, Mary and Naqvi, Rabia
- Subjects
PENSIONS ,AGE groups ,SEASONS ,MORTALITY ,POPULATION aging - Abstract
Mortality at older ages varies by season, increasing the uncertainty associated with modelling and projecting mortality at older ages and ultimately contributing to pension providers' overall risk. As the population ages, it becomes more important to understand variations in seasonal mortality between pensioners and to identify those most vulnerable to seasonal mortality differences. Using data from the Self-Administered Pension Schemes mortality investigation of the Continuous Mortality Investigation of the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries, UK, this paper investigates variations in seasonal mortality amongst members of UK occupational pension schemes over the period 2000--2016. Results are also compared with the corresponding population of England and Wales. For the oldest age groups (80+), which are most affected by seasonality, females are more vulnerable to seasonal differences in mortality for each pensioner group relative to males. Following a long-term decline in the winter-summer mortality gap the gap increased over the period, particularly for female pensioners and dependants. Seasonality remains a feature of UK mortality at older ages and risk management for pension schemes should consider seasonality when analysing overall mortality experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The assignment and distribution of the dyslexia label: Using the UK Millennium Cohort Study to investigate the socio-demographic predictors of the dyslexia label in England and Wales.
- Author
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Knight, Cathryn and Crick, Tom
- Subjects
DYSLEXIA ,COHORT analysis ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CHILDREN with dyslexia ,PEOPLE with dyslexia ,COGNITION - Abstract
The prevalence of dyslexia identification has increased significantly over the last two decades. Yet there is debate over whether there are distinct biological and cognitive differences between those with literacy difficulties and the subgroup of people identified as dyslexic. This is the first paper that provides evidence for this ongoing debate by investigating the socio-demographic factors, outside biology and cognition, that predict whether a child is identified as dyslexic in the UK. Using secondary data from the UK's Millennium Cohort Study, this paper examines the socio-demographic factors that predict whether a child's teacher identifies them as dyslexic at age 11. Gender, season of birth, socio-economic class and parental income are found to be significant predictors of the dyslexia label. Therefore, factors seemingly unrelated to the clinical aspects of dyslexia influence whether a child is identified as dyslexic in England and Wales. This suggests that label may not be evenly distributed across a population; furthermore, it may also indicate that resources for support may not be fairly allocated. The findings further support the argument that a 'dyslexic sub-group' within poor readers is created due to the impact of environmental factors. The results from this national-scale study thus questions the reliability, validity and moral integrity of the allocation of the dyslexia label across current education systems in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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18. Immature relationships in the new multi-level United Kingdom: perspectives from Wales.
- Author
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McAllister, Laura
- Subjects
MULTI-level governance (Theory) ,GOVERNMENT purchasing ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INTERPERSONAL relations - Abstract
This paper explores the new multi-level relationships that exist in the UK postdevolution. In focusing on Wales, it uses two case studies to test some key propositions around system weaknesses; namely, poor intelligence and inadequate collaboration and communication between the ‘centre’ and the devolved nations. The paper suggests that this has resulted in unbalanced relationships and underdeveloped policy learning between the nations of the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. School exclusion disparities in the UK: a view from Northern Ireland.
- Author
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Duffy, Gavin, Robinson, Gareth, Gallagher, Tony, and Templeton, Michelle
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SCHOOL discipline -- Law & legislation ,CHILDREN'S rights ,SOCIAL support ,STUDENT assistance programs ,SCHOOL administrators ,INTERVIEWING ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SCHOOL administration - Abstract
Across the four UK jurisdictions, there are distinct disparities in exclusion rates of school students. Northern Ireland, alongside Scotland and Wales, has demonstrated over time, lower rates of permanent exclusions and temporary exclusions compared with England. This paper examines these disparities from the perspectives of representatives from various system-level educational bodies and third sector organisations representing children and families who experienced the exclusion process. The paper will also present policy and legal frameworks associated with exclusion in Northern Ireland. We interviewed 9 stakeholders, associated with practices of school exclusion in Northern Ireland, from a range of system-level education bodies and advocacy groups. Findings include positive strategies perceived to keep exclusion levels low, types of obstacles or resistance to anti-exclusion policy, participants' perspectives on unofficial exclusion practice, and perspectives on official exclusion data. What emerges from interviews is a series of tensions between implementing a child-centred approach and diminishing support services and resources. We conclude that those working within the Northern Ireland education system, are committed to an inclusive approach. However, the development and implementation of effective supporting frameworks take time and consultation, and there is evidence of tension between the perceptions of those working at a system-level and those working in schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The paradoxical role of social class background in the educational and labour market outcomes of the children of immigrants in the UK.
- Author
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Zuccotti, Carolina V. and Platt, Lucinda
- Subjects
SOCIAL classes ,LABOR market ,IMMIGRANT children ,CHILD consumers ,SOCIAL background ,CHILDREN of immigrants - Abstract
Despite predominantly lower social class origins, the second generation of established immigrant groups in the UK are now attaining high levels of education. However, they continue to experience poorer labour market outcomes than the majority population. These worse outcomes are often attributed in part to their disadvantaged origins, which do not, by contrast, appear to constrain their educational success. This paper engages with this paradox. We discuss potential mechanisms for second‐generation educational success and how far we might expect these to be replicated in labour market outcomes. We substantiate our discussion with new empirical analysis. Drawing on a unique longitudinal study of England and Wales spanning 40 years and encompassing one per cent of the population, we present evidence on the educational and labour market outcomes of the second generation of four groups of immigrants and the white British majority, controlling for multiple measures of social origins. We demonstrate that second‐generation men and women's educational advantage is only partially reflected in the labour market. We reflect on the implications of our findings for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Re‐educating the nation? The development of a new curriculum for Wales.
- Author
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Taylor, Chris and Power, Sally
- Subjects
CURRICULUM change ,CURRICULUM - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editors discuss issues arising from the implementation of curriculum reform, based on a review of the education system, in Wales.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Learning progression in the humanities: identifying tensions in articulating progression in humanities in Wales.
- Author
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Hughes, Sioned, Makara, Kara, and Stacey, Dave
- Subjects
HUMANITIES education ,CURRICULUM ,SOCIAL sciences education ,PRESCHOOL education ,PRIMARY education - Abstract
The paper explores tensions in the articulation of progression in learning across the Humanities disciplines. Informed by our review of research in the Humanities disciplines, international curricula on progression in these areas and reflections from professional activity within the newly defined Humanities 'Area of Learning and Experience' in the new Welsh curriculum, this paper describes how learning progression in Humanities has been conceptualised within the new curriculum and then delineates and critically reviews four challenges that emerged when identifying and describing the progression in learning in the new Humanities curriculum. Tensions include the relationship between disciplines; the balance between knowledge, skills and values; the differences between underlying models of progression in Humanities; and balancing the complexity of learning with practical considerations for a national curriculum. Underpinned by the Integrity Model of Change, this paper makes a contribution, through providing new insights on broad aspects of learning progression in Humanities and highlighting the potential benefits and challenges of taking particular decisions within each of these four tensions. Implications for curriculum planning and future research are offered, including the fundamental role of professional learning in curriculum development and enactment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Dental therapists in general dental practice. A literature review and case‐study analysis to determine what works, why, how and in what circumstances.
- Author
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Barnes, Emma, Bullock, Alison, Chestnutt, Ivor G., Cowpe, Jonathan, Moons, Kirstie, and Warren, Wendy
- Subjects
DENTAL care ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDICAL personnel ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Introduction: In the United Kingdom, policy and guidance changes regarding the role of dental therapists (DTs) were implemented in recent years with a view to changing dental care to a more preventive‐focussed, teamwork approach. However, success in the adoption of this model of working has been varied. Aims: Adopting a realist approach, our aim was, to examine the use of DTs in general dental practices in Wales, exploring what works, why, how and in what circumstances. Materials and Methods: The research comprised two stages. (a) A structured literature search, dual‐coding papers for high‐level factors describing the conditions or context(s) under which the mechanisms operated to produce outcomes. From this, we derived theories about how skill‐mix operates in the general dental service. (b) Six case studies of general dental practices (three with a dental therapist/three without a dental therapist) employing a range of skill‐mix models incorporating semi‐structured interviews with all team members. We used the case studies/interviews to explore and refine the theories derived from the literature. Results: Eighty‐four papers were coded. From this coding, we identified seven theories which reflected factors influencing general dental practices within three broad contexts: the dental practice as a business, as a healthcare provider and as a workplace. We tested these theories in interviews with 38 dental team members across the six care studies. As a result, we amended five of the theories. Conclusion: Our analysis provides theory about outcomes that DTs may facilitate and the mechanisms that may assist the work of DTs within different contexts of general dental practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A mixed methods approach to the social assessment of transport infrastructure projects.
- Author
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Lucas, Karen, Philips, Ian, and Verlinghieri, Ersilia
- Subjects
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,SOCIAL impact assessment ,SOCIAL impact ,DECISION making ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
In this paper, we propose a mixed methods quantitative and qualitative approach to capture fully the measurable and less tangible social impacts of transport projects on local people and communities. The approach was used to assess the potential social impacts of a strategic road by-pass project case study in a deprived region of Wales in the UK. The project specifically aimed to stimulate local economic growth and regeneration in the local areas it serves. In a 'before and after' case study, we combined fine-grained, GIS-based spatial analysis of secondary datasets with qualitative participative exercises with the local residents of the five communities living adjacent to the road, and interviews with professional local stakeholders. This mixed methods approach significantly enhanced understanding of both the social benefits and disbenefits of the road project. It helped to reveal local concerns that would not otherwise have been apparent from secondary dataset analysis alone. The qualitative studies were also successful in bringing to the table new 'hard to reach' voices that had not been heard through the formal consultation and public engagement process. The study revealed that the social benefits accruing to local people from the project could have been significantly enhanced, whilst a number of its locally occurring negative social impacts could have been avoided had social assessment been employed earlier in the decision processes concerning its routing and design. Recommendations to improve the practice and uptake of social assessments at the option appraisal, project design mitigation and post evaluation stages of transport projects are included in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. COVID-19 contact tracing apps: UK public perceptions.
- Author
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Samuel, G., Roberts, S. L., Fiske, A., Lucivero, F., McLennan, S., Phillips, A., Hayes, S., and Johnson, S. B.
- Subjects
PRIVACY ,COVID-19 ,MOBILE apps ,RESEARCH methodology ,PUBLIC health ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,MEDICAL ethics ,EMPLOYMENT ,CONTACT tracing ,PUBLIC opinion ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
In order to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, policymakers around the globe have increasingly invested in digital health technologies to support the 'test, track and trace' approach of containing the spread of the novel coronavirus. These technologies include mobile 'contact tracing' applications (apps), which can trace individuals likely to have come into contact with those who have reported symptoms or tested positive for the virus and request that they self-isolate. This paper takes a critical public health perspective that advocates for 'genuine participation' in public health interventions and emphasises the need to take citizen's knowledge into account during public health decision-making. In doing so, it presents and discusses the findings of a UK interview study that explored public views on the possibility of using a COVID-19 contact-tracing app public health intervention at the time the United Kingdom (UK) Government announced their decision to develop such a technology. Findings illustrated interviewees' range and degree of understandings, misconceptions, and concerns about the possibility of using an app. In particular, concerns about privacy and surveillance predominated. Interviewees associated these concerns much more broadly than health by identifying with pre-existent British national narratives associated with individual liberty and autonomy. In extending and contributing to ongoing sociological research with public health, we argue that understanding and responding to these matters is vital, and that our findings demonstrate the need for a forward-looking, anticipatory strategy for public engagement as part of the responsible innovation of the COVID-19 contact-tracing app in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Family Group Conference Provision in UK Local Authorities and Associations with Children Looked after Rates.
- Author
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Wood, Sophie, Scourfield, Jonathan, Meindl, Melissa, Au, Kar Man, Evans, Rhiannon, Jones-Willams, Delyth, Lugg-Widger, Fiona, Pallmann, Philip, Robling, Michael, Schroeder, Elizabeth-Ann, Petrou, Stavros, and Wilkins, David
- Subjects
CHILD welfare ,SELF-evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,EXECUTIVES ,GOVERNMENT agencies ,PATIENT-family relations ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SOCIAL services ,DECISION making ,FOSTER home care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FAMILIES ,ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,FAMILY reunification ,COMPARATIVE studies ,FOSTER children ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PATIENT care conferences ,SOCIAL isolation ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Family group conferences (FGCs) in child welfare share decision-making with family members by bringing the immediate and wider family together to make a plan to meet a child's needs. This paper reports survey findings on FGC provision in the UK in 2022 and explores whether in England the presence of an FGC service and the rate of FGC provision is associated with the rate of children in care, entering care, in kinship foster care and leaving care. Seventy-nine per cent (n = 167) of local authorities in the UK provided FGCs to families, and 14 per cent (n = 29) did not. Services that were more established offered a more diverse range of FGCs. The introduction of FGCs in English local authorities was associated with a higher rate of children in care, but also higher rates of kinship foster care, a key goal of FGCs where it is not possible for children to stay with their parents. Higher rates of FGCs were associated with more children leaving care, possibly due to reunification with birth families. To understand in more detail, the circumstances of children in and leaving care in local authorities with FGCs, individual data linkage studies are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Positive action paradox in UK police recruitment: A critical perspective.
- Author
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Hesketh, Ian and Stubbs, Gareth
- Subjects
CRITICAL analysis ,POLICE ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,GROUP identity ,SOCIAL pressure - Abstract
Police recruitment across the UK is under intense political and social pressure to increase representation and legitimacy. This layered in to a quest to raise the number of police officers in England and Wales by 20,000. However, despite decades of reform initiatives, police recruitment continues to be a challenging and potentially exclusionary process for candidates from ethnic minority backgrounds. Research in this area mainly comprises macro-level process evaluation and subsequent extrapolation of the results into positive action initiatives. There is a paucity of research at the micro-interaction level among social actors. In this paper, we present a case study of police recruitment in a large English Police Constabulary over four recruitment cohorts in 2018. We conducted 26 long-form, in-depth interviews with new police recruits. Utilising the embeddedness theoretical framework based on sociological studies of the labour market, we attempt to understand police recruitment at the micro-social interaction level. We demonstrate that police recruitment has a high level of social embeddedness within the Constabulary. Candidates utilise social connections throughout the recruitment process to develop competence in the recruitment stages, while also building their respective police social identities. Although positive action recipients also receive significant organisational and instrumental support, they build a relationship with the abstract organisation and not existing police officers. This creates an imbalance in social identity development and may have implications for how positive action initiative recipients may struggle within the policing environment. Further implications exist for positive action design and implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Pubs and pints, crims and crimes: exploring the relationship between public houses and crime.
- Author
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Cabras, Ignazio, Shakina, Ekaterina, and Bhattacharjee, Arpita
- Subjects
- *
BARS (Drinking establishments) , *CRIME statistics , *CRIME , *CITIES & towns , *SOCIAL capital , *RURAL health clinics , *NIGHTCLUBS - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between public houses or pubs, and crime rates in England and Wales. The impact of pubs on local communities is generally studied and investigated within the context of third places, thus physical places that facilitate the accumulation of social capital within communities. We estimate Poisson Fixed-Effects (PFE) and a frontier Spatial Autoregressive (SAR) model on a unique panel dataset for 375 local authorities in England and Wales between 2003 and 2018. Results from the analysis indicate that the presence of pubs progressively relates to a higher incidence of major crimes when transitioning from rural to urban areas, mainly due to weaker level of community cohesion and a lack of resources to support formal policing in more urbanized centres. These findings highlight the importance of place-based strategies in tackling rising incidences of crimes, indicating that recent pub closures may have contributed to severing community ties that act as a deterrent to crime in certain areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. The Impact of COVID-19 on Farmers' Mental Health: A Case Study of the UK.
- Author
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Rose, David Christian, Shortland, Faye, Hall, Jilly, Hurley, Paul, Little, Ruth, Nye, Caroline, and Lobley, Matt
- Subjects
WELL-being ,PSYCHOLOGY of agricultural laborers ,AGRICULTURE ,MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,SUICIDAL ideation ,RESEARCH funding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MENTAL depression ,LONELINESS ,ANXIETY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
In this paper, we use a UK case study to explore how the COVID-19 pandemic affected the mental health (emotional, psychological, social wellbeing) of farmers. We outline the drivers of poor farming mental health, the manifold impacts of the pandemic at a time of policy and environmental change, and identify lessons that can be learned to develop resilience in farming communities against future shocks. We undertook a survey answered by 207 farmers across the UK, focusing on drivers of poor mental health and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic. We also conducted 22 in-depth interviews with individuals in England, Scotland and Wales who provide mental health support to farmers. These explored how and why the COVID-19 pandemic affected the mental health of farmers. These interviews were supplemented by 93 survey responses from a similar group of support providers (UK-wide). We found that the pandemic exacerbated underlying drivers of poor mental health and wellbeing in farming communities. 67% of farmers surveyed reported feeling more stressed, 63% felt more anxious, 38% felt more depressed, and 12% felt more suicidal. The primary drivers of poor mental health identified by farmers during the pandemic included decreased social contact and loneliness, issues with the general public on private land, and moving online for social events. Support providers also highlighted relationship and financial issues, illness, and government inspections as drivers of poor mental health. Some farmers, conversely, outlined positive impacts of the pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic is just one of many potential stressors associated with poor farming mental health and its impacts are likely to be long-lasting and delayed. Multiple stressors affecting farmers at the same time can create a tipping point. Therefore, there is a need for long-term support and ongoing evaluation of the drivers of poor mental health in farming families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Visual impacts and acceptability of wind farms to councillors and senior council staff in Britain.
- Author
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Lothian, Andrew
- Subjects
WIND power plants ,OFFSHORE wind power plants ,WIND power ,LANDSCAPE assessment ,EMPLOYEE attitudes ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,PERCEIVED quality - Abstract
This paper assesses to what extent British councils have addressed onshore wind energy, and the attitudes of councillors and staff about wind farms. Websites of 400 British councils were reviewed regarding assessment of landscapes and policies towards wind energy. An Internet survey of 800 councillors and staff from 275 councils quantified their attitudes towards wind farms, their visual impacts and the acceptability of existing wind farms in Britain. Wind farms reduced perceived scenic quality. Staff opposed wind energy but councillors were more accommodating. Most participants in England found wind farms acceptable, but less than half in Wales and one third in Scotland. Scotland may have reached the limit for acceptability of wind farms. Wales may be approaching that point. Overall, the survey indicated that it is unlikely that there will be widespread installation of additional onshore wind farms across Britain. Expansion of renewable energy may be sought through re-powering of existing sites with larger but fewer turbines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 'Old wine in new bottles'? Smart Specialisation in Wales.
- Author
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Pugh, Rhiannon Elisabeth
- Subjects
CREATIVE ability in business ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This paper explores the translation and implementation of Smart Specialisation in Wales. It finds that rather than taking a new approach to innovation policy, Welsh policy-makers are following a largely cluster-based rationale, which omits the important entrepreneurial discovery process to identify the real strengths of the region. The fresh idea presented by this paper is that a replication of past policy approaches that have been tried and found wanting is taking place rather than a new approach to innovation policy across Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Health and social care access for adults with learning disabilities across the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
- Author
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Flynn, Samantha, Hatton, Chris, and the Coronavirus and people with learning disabilities study team
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,LEARNING disabilities ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL services ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,STAY-at-home orders ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Purpose: This paper aims to present data about access to health and social care services during the COVID-19 pandemic for adults with learning disabilities across England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Design/methodology/approach: Data were collected directly from 621 adults with learning disabilities and through separate proxy reports by family carers and paid support staff of another 378 adults with learning disabilities. The data were collected between December 2020 and February 2021 and concerned the use of health and social care services since the start of the first COVID-19 national lockdown in March 2020. Findings: Access to and use of health and social care services significantly reduced for adults with learning disabilities across the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic between March 2020 and February 2021, with many people not receiving any services at all during that period. Similar patterns were seen across England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. However, data suggest some variations between countries for some services. Practical implications: Future pandemic planning must ensure that access to these essential services is not completely lost for adults with learning disabilities and their family carers, as it was in some cases during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Originality/value: This is the largest study about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on health and social care services for adults with learning disabilities in the UK. The authors primarily collected data directly from adults with learning disabilities, and worked with partner organisations of people with learning disabilities throughout the study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The 'ideal' homelessness law: balancing 'rights centred' and 'professional-centred' social policy.
- Author
-
Fitzpatrick, Suzanne and Davies, Liz
- Subjects
SOCIAL policy ,HOMELESSNESS ,PUBLIC welfare policy ,SOCIAL learning - Abstract
This paper sets out proposals for the 'ideal' legal framework to address homelessness in Great Britain (GB), with potential lessons for other countries seeking to pursue rights-based approaches in this field. Exploiting the 'natural experiment' conditions generated by post-devolution divergence in key aspects of homelessness law, the paper draws on legal and social scientific learning from England, Scotland and Wales, as well as internationally, to formulate proposals for the optimal rights-based model. We argue that an ideal statutory homelessness system, situated in a less than ideal welfare and housing context, requires a balance to be struck between a robust set of individually-enforceable entitlements, on the one hand, and scope for pro-active, flexible approaches on the part of housing practitioners, on the other. The ten core principles we advance would therefore aim to combine the best of 'professional-centred' and 'rights-centred' social policy approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. 'You're only a care worker'. Exploring the status of adult social care work through the intersection of HRM innovation and job quality.
- Author
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Crozier, Sarah E. and Atkinson, Carol
- Subjects
SOCIAL status ,QUALITY of work life ,SOCIAL services ,HOME health aides ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,SKILLED labor ,FOCUS groups ,CAREER development - Abstract
This paper examines the intersection between job quality and innovation by exploring policy-led innovation aimed at delivering high-quality adult social care jobs that attract and retain much-needed skilled workers. Through qualitative enquiry, we examine workforce policy's emphasis on training, development and career progression, key elements of job quality, to create higher-skilled, higher-status roles. Drawing on focus groups and interviews with care providers and care workers in Wales (UK), we question the likely success of policy-led innovation given first its ineffective delivery and second its failure to address broader aspects of job quality. Policy thus fails both to institutionalise skilled roles in care work and to raise the status of the care worker occupation. We contribute to emerging HRM and interdisciplinary theory and policy debates about the complex nature of innovation activities and their outcomes for job quality in care work within a sector typified by low-quality jobs. We illustrate the different ways in which job quality and innovation interact and how both can be constrained by one another as a function of environmental antecedents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Surprise! Public historical geographies, user engagement and voluntarism.
- Author
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Mills, Sarah
- Subjects
PUBLIC history ,VOLUNTEER service ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
This paper aims to expand understandings of 'public geographies', not usually associated with historical geography, through considering voluntarism. It seeks to bring together debates on research practice, positionality and the 'surprise' instances of user engagement. To do so, it draws on two experiences and opportunities that emerged during my doctoral research in Wales on the cultural-historical geographies of scouting in Britain: first, curating an exhibition and second, cataloguing and 'making' an archive collection. Both of these were voluntary collaborative activities and outside 'the research project', and yet they shaped and influenced the research process in unique and unforeseen ways. Overall, the paper uses these examples as a way into exploring geographical debates on research users, non-academic communities and the role of the researcher as a volunteer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Matrimonial property, needs and agreements: the Law Commission's extended project.
- Author
-
Cooke, Elizabeth
- Subjects
DOMESTIC relations ,MARITAL property ,DIVORCE law - Abstract
In September 2012 the Law Commission for England and Wales published a document entitled, unusually, a “Supplementary Consultation Paper”, on the subject of “Matrimonial Property, Needs and Agreements”.1 It was the second consultation within the Commission's current family law project. Rather than repeat what has already been said it may be easier to explain this process by reproducing here part of the Commission's summary of the paper.2 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. City region limits: Questioning city-centric growth narratives in medium-sized cities.
- Author
-
Beel, David and Jones, Martin
- Subjects
COALITION governments ,INNER cities ,ECONOMIC development ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
In this paper, we consider the implications of applying the city region concept to a medium-sized city and whether such an application of a spatial and governmental policy is appropriate when the central city in question is also not necessarily economically dominant or connected to its wider city-region. This gives a deeper understanding to the process of subnational restructuring of the UK state via the production of city regions which has now been in progress since the 2010 Coalition Government. The primary focus governmentally and in academic literature has been on larger (English) city regions, but here we highlight how this has been applied in distinctive ways in devolved nations of the UK. To this end, we focus upon the case of the Swansea Bay City Region, based in South West Wales, looking through the lens of Welsh devolution and through the concept of the city-region as a scalar narrative for the delivery of economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Policing the UK's Anti-fracking Movement: Facilitating Peaceful Protest or Facilitating the Industry?
- Author
-
Gilmore, Joanna, Jackson, Will, Monk, Helen, and Short, Damien
- Subjects
PUBLIC demonstrations ,POLICE ,PUBLIC officers ,POLICE-community relations ,POLICE services ,PUBLIC policy (Law) - Abstract
Official public order policing policy in England and Wales has apparently undergone significant changes in the period since the G20 meeting in London in 2009 in order to move towards a new 'human rights compliant' framework, based on dialogue, communication and a commitment to 'facilitating' peaceful protest, which was proposed as a necessary response to help the police service 'adapt to the modern day demands of public order policing' (HMIC 2009, 27). It was our aim in conducting this research to test this official position against the empirical reality of the policing of 'anti-fracking' protests across the UK. Drawing upon longitudinal case studies of the policing of UK-wide protests against 'fracking', this paper seeks to make a contribution to the growing body of academic research that seeks to evaluate the impact of the apparent policing policy changes on the 'real-world' day-to-day operational policing of such protests. In developing our analysis, we draw attention to the definitions of 'acceptable' and 'unacceptable' protest defined by the police and consider the extent to which these definitions are reflected in the police response to anti-fracking protest. The article suggests that, in the case of antifracking protests, an official policing commitment to a human rights approach to protest facilitation is at odds with the empirical reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Risk factors for intimate partner homicide in England and Wales.
- Author
-
Chopra, Jennifer, Sambrook, Laura, McLoughlin, Shane, Randles, Rebecca, Palace, Marek, and Blinkhorn, Victoria
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,HOMICIDE ,INFERENTIAL statistics ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,DOMESTIC violence ,RISK assessment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,POVERTY ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Intimate partner homicides are often situated within the context of domestic abuse, and although less prevalent than domestic abuse, there have been several multi‐agency approaches to understanding the risk for these fatal crimes. Domestic Homicide Reviews (DHRs) were introduced in 2011 to provide information to help with assessing such risk. This paper aims to analyse DHRs in England and Wales to investigate/determine risk factors for domestic homicide following intimate partner abuse. All publicly available DHRs published between July 2011 and November 2020 where the victim and perpetrator were or had been intimate partners (N = 263) were retrieved from Community Safety Partnership websites in England and Wales. A quantitative design was used to extract data from DHRs, and descriptive and inferential statistics were generated by SPSS 26. Findings identified risk factors relating to domestic abuse, including stalking, separation, and the victim being in a new relationship. Sociodemographic risk factors included higher levels of deprivation, lower income and higher barriers to housing and services. This highlights the role of both individual and sociodemographic factors in domestic homicides, and particularly the need for greater socioeconomic security for victims of domestic abuse. In conclusion, though much of the data is in line with previous research, our analysis highlights the pivotal role of regional poverty, with comfortable socioeconomic conditions offering protection against intimate partner homicides. This research suggests important directions for future research and makes a valuable contribution to a more in‐depth understanding of the relationship between domestic abuse and intimate partner homicide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The means, motive and opportunity of devolved policy responses to an ecosystem approach.
- Author
-
Kirsop-Taylor, Nick
- Subjects
BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 ,ECOSYSTEMS ,POLICY sciences ,BREXIT Referendum, 2016 ,NATURAL resources - Abstract
The 'environment' is a fully devolved concern in UK governance, though the comparative dynamics of devolved environmental governance remain poorly understood. The potential for the repatriation of significant environmental powers from the EU to devolved administrations through Brexit means that the nature of devolved environmental policy-making is increasingly coming under the spotlight. This paper enhances collective understanding about the nature of devolved environmental government and governance by adopting a comparative approach across the devolved nations of the UK. Based upon interviews and policy publications it analyses a number of key policy-making and institutional variables in relation to responses to an international environmental regime. In both Wales and Scotland evidence was found of environmental policy-making, policy-innovation and institution-building that diverged from the UK. Wales, in particular, evidenced how 'the environment' appears to be seen as a dynamic space for policy and institutional innovation. These findings highlight how the devolved-scale of governance might be particularly fruitful for environmental policy-innovation when the means, motive and opportunity are evident. It also highlights how key conditions are evident to ensure that devolved agencies may be empowered to undertake radically divergent approaches and programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A review of the law surrounding female genital mutilation protection orders.
- Author
-
Home, Joseph, Rowland, Andrew, Gerry, Felicity, Proudman, Charlotte, and Walton, Kimberley
- Subjects
FEMALE genital mutilation laws ,CONTINUING education ,HEALTH policy ,NATIONAL health services ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,PUBLIC health laws ,SOCIAL workers ,TEACHERS ,WOMEN'S health ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,HUMAN services programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Performing female genital mutilation (FGM) is prohibited within the UK by the FGM Act of 2003. A mandatory reporting duty for FGM requires regulated health and social care professionals and teachers in England and Wales to report known cases of FGM in under 18-year-olds to the police. An application to the court for an FGM protection order (FGMPO) can be made to keep individual women and girls safe from FGM. This paper reveals the significant disconnect between the number of FGMPO applications and known recorded cases of FGM. The introduction of FGMPOs requires critical exploration as there is insufficient evidence to show that FGMPOs are effective in protecting women and girls from FGM. It is therefore unclear what impact, if any, FGMPOs are having upon the protection of women and girls at risk of FGM. The barriers to the implementation of FGMPOs and possible solutions are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 'Just eating and sleeping': asylum seekers' constructions of belonging within a restrictive policy environment.
- Author
-
Parker, Samuel
- Subjects
POLITICAL refugees ,POVERTY ,DISCURSIVE psychology ,ECOLOGY ,CONSTRUCTION - Abstract
The 'refugee crisis' in Europe has drawn attention to the reasons why people risk desperate journeys to seek safety. However, less research has focussed on what happens to those on the move once they have reached their destination country. In recent years the UK government's 'hostile environment' policy for asylum seekers has taken precedence over attempts to integrate refugees, creating a system in which destitution, dispersal and detention have all become pervasive features. This paper takes a discursive psychological approach to the analysis of interviews with asylum seekers in Wales, UK. It argues that participants draw on economic repertoires of effortfulness to construct accounts in which belonging is dependent upon being able to contribute to the economic and civic life of the host society. It further highlights how participants construct accounts in which restriction from the asylum system is positioned as the reason for not belonging and that time spent as an asylum seeker is policy-imposed liminality. The findings suggest that allowing asylum seekers to work would be a key step forward in integration policy and contribute to generating a greater sense of belonging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Curriculum integration: the challenges for primary and secondary schools in developing a new curriculum in the expressive arts.
- Author
-
Kneen, Judith, Breeze, Thomas, Davies‐Barnes, Sian, John, Vivienne, and Thayer, Emma
- Subjects
ARTS education ,CURRICULUM ,TEACHERS ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Curriculum integration is a feature of many new curricula that have emerged in different countries since around the turn of the millennium. It focuses on removing the boundaries between traditional subject specialisms, to enable more holistic and 'joined‐up' learning opportunities. This study draws on the experiences of a group of primary and secondary teachers in Wales, engaged in creating a framework for an integrated curriculum for expressive arts. Whilst the teachers are united in their ambition for establishing a curriculum that gives greater status to the arts, curriculum integration presents significant challenges, notably in how subject knowledge is understood and presented within an integrated curriculum. The teachers take different approaches to curriculum integration, with primary teachers favouring a transdisciplinary approach, with child‐led learning and themes taking precedence, and secondary teachers opting for multidisciplinary approaches, where the themes are organising devices but where subjects take priority. Differing practices suggest differing conceptions of subject knowledge and mastery within an integrated curriculum. Drawing, in particular, on Bernstein's concepts relating to knowledge discourses, this paper suggests that the danger of an integrated curriculum is weakened disciplinary knowledge. Whilst this paper relates to the arts, the messages about curriculum integration might be applied more widely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Exploring health and wellbeing in prison: a peer research approach.
- Author
-
Perrett, Stephanie E., Gray, Benjamin J., G., L., E., D., and Brooks, Neville J.
- Subjects
PRISONS ,WELL-being ,FOCUS groups ,MEN'S health ,AFFINITY groups ,PILOT projects ,PRISON psychology ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,SATISFACTION ,HEALTH status indicators ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Purpose: Those in prison have expert knowledge of issues affecting their health and wellbeing. The purpose of this paper is to report on work undertaken with male prisoners. This paper presents learning and findings from the process of engaging imprisoned men as peer researchers.Design/methodology/approach: The peer researcher approach offers an emic perspective to understand the experience of being in prison. The authors established the peer research role as an educational initiative at a long-stay prison in Wales, UK to determine the feasibility of engaging imprisoned men as peer researchers. Focus groups, interviews and questionnaires were used by the peer researchers to identify the health and wellbeing concerns of men in prison.Findings: The project positively demonstrated the feasibility of engaging imprisoned men as peer researchers. Four recurring themes affecting health and wellbeing for men in a prison vulnerable persons unit were identified: communication, safety, respect and emotional needs. Themes were inextricably linked demonstrating the complex relationships between prison and health.Originality/value: This was the first prison peer-research project to take place in Wales, UK. It demonstrates the value men in prison can play in developing the evidence base around health and wellbeing in prison, contributing to changes within the prison to improve health and wellbeing for all. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Collaboration for Sustainable Intensification: The Underpinning Role of Social Sustainability.
- Author
-
Wynne‐Jones, Sophie, Hyland, John, Williams, Prysor, and Chadwick, Dave
- Subjects
SOCIAL sustainability ,ACQUISITION of data ,UPLANDS - Abstract
Sustainable Intensification (SI) has been popularised in recent years as an approach seeking to balance the potentially conflicting demands of enhancing agricultural outputs with reducing the negative impacts arising from the current food system. Proponents have argued that SI can benefit from collaboration between farmers, but understanding is limited by a lack of data on current collaborative practices. Questions have also been raised as to whether the SI agenda pays sufficient attention to social sustainability as part of a fully integrated conception of SI. Tackling these issues, this paper reports on mixed methods data collection from seven case areas across the UK, with a particular focus on the experience of upland livestock farmers in north Wales. We evidence: (1) The extent, forms and preferences associated with farmers' collaboration; with findings demonstrating higher levels of collaboration than anticipated and a preference for informal forms of co‐working. (2) The underpinning and mutually reinforcing role of social interconnectedness in the delivery of diverse outcomes from collaboration. (3) How SI is perceived to threaten social sustainability, and thus work against a more integrated model of delivery. The paper concludes by arguing for a genuinely integrative model of SI to secure collaborations going forwards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. How do you solve a problem like Maria? Family complexity and institutional complications in UK social work.
- Author
-
Walsh, Julie, White, Sue, Morris, Kate, and Doherty, Paula
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,CHILD welfare ,COUNSELING ,DECISION making ,FAMILIES ,DOMESTIC violence ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,MANAGEMENT ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL personnel ,NEEDS assessment ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL case work ,PSYCHOLOGY of social workers ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,FAMILY relations ,SOCIAL support ,PATIENTS' families ,SOCIAL worker attitudes - Abstract
This paper draws on UK data from an international, comparative project involving eight countries. The study examined how social workers' conceptions and definitions of family impact on the way they engage with complex families, and how social policies that frame social work context impact on the way social workers engage with families. Focus groups were held in which social workers from four service areas (child welfare, addictions, mental health and migration) were asked to discuss a case vignette. Several factors were embedded in the vignette to represent a realistic situation a social worker may come across in their day-to-day work. Social workers clearly identified the complexity of the family's situation in terms of the range of issues identified and candidate 'causes'. However, typical first responses were institutional, looking for triggers that would signify certainty about their, or other agencies' involvement. This resulted in a complicated story, through which the family was disaggregated into individual problem-service categories. This paper argues that understanding these processes and their consequences is critical for exploring the ways in which we might develop alternative, supportive professional responses with families with complex needs. It also demonstrates how organisational systems manifest themselves in everyday reasoning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Editorial and Conference Report.
- Author
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Marriott, Pru and Neil Marriott
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING education ,ACCOUNTING ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,EDUCATION - Abstract
This article focuses on the papers presented at the 2001 British Accounting Association Special Interest Group in Accounting Education's Annual Conference, which was held in Glamorgan Business Centre of University of Glamorgan, Wales. The conference, which received generous sponsorship from Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, attracted an international audience with delegates coming from Australia and the U.S. Of the 55 delegates attending, just under half of them were involved in presenting a paper. The conference opened with a plenary session by professor James E. Rebele, who gave his personal view of the uncertain environment facing accounting programmes and accounting education research in the U.S. Before the conference dinner, prizes were awarded for the best paper and the best emerging paper at the conference. A special award was also presented to commemorate the contribution to accounting education of the recently deceased professor Frank Wood. The conference closed with a plenary debate opened with an address from professor Stephen Zeff, who called on academics to make accounting more interesting by concentrating more on the why and less on the how, providing examples from the recent history of standard setting in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. 2021 UK floods: event summaries and reflections from the Flood Forecasting Centre.
- Author
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Pilling, Charles, Millard, Jon, Perez, Julia, Turner, Russell, Duke, Anthony, and Egan, Katie
- Subjects
- *
FLOOD forecasting , *FLOOD risk , *FLOODS , *FLOOD warning systems , *CONSUMERS - Abstract
Flooding in 2021 has highlighted the increased risk to national resilience. This is against a backdrop of the UK climate projected to become more extreme over the next few decades. This paper considers the notable river and surface water flood events within England and Wales during 2021 and examines the performance of the Flood Forecasting Centre in highlighting the flood risk to our customers. We reflect on team debriefs as well as feedback and surveys from our customers. We distil our learnings and make connections with improvements in our underpinning science, forecasting tools, products and services. Finally, we highlight challenges associated with surface water flooding and suggest how we may collectively start to overcome these. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Axes to Axes: the Chronology, Distribution and Composition of Recent Bronze Age Hoards from Britain and Northern Ireland.
- Author
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GRIFFITHS, CHRISTOPHER J.
- Subjects
BRONZE Age ,COMPULSIVE hoarding ,CHRONOLOGY ,METALWORK ,INFORMATION society ,REGIONAL differences - Abstract
Copyright of Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Policing registered sex offenders.
- Author
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Kewley, Stephanie
- Subjects
POLICE ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,RISK assessment ,RISK management in business ,SEX offenders ,SOCIAL support ,INDEPENDENT living - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to outline current police risk assessment and management practice when working with those convicted of sexual offences. The paper introduces the newly implemented Active Risk Management System (ARMS), a risk- and strengths-based tool used by the police across England and Wales.Design/methodology/approach A brief review of the literature and current practice is discussed.Findings The paper notes that in order for practitioners to work in a context of rehabilitation and reintegration, particularly one that supports clients convicted of sexual offending, there is a real need for practitioners to have the skills and experiences to work with this group. They also need to hold core values that support the notion of change and they ought to be fully supported through formal supervision and training.Practical implications Following are the practical implications of this paper: ∙training ought to be regular and ongoing; formal supervision sessions should be made available for all ARMS assessors; assessors ought to be assessed and observed in practice; and performance measures must be related to the quality and effectiveness of the design and implementation of risk management plans rather than the quantity of plans or home visits.Originality/value Very little has been written about this unique group of police practitioners who work to assess and manage people with sexual convictions. Even less is known of the effectiveness and applicability of the ARMS tool. Thus, this review is of value to academic and practitioner audiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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