33,172 results
Search Results
52. The Future of Rail? An Evaluation of the 2004 Railway Industry White Paper.
- Author
-
Jupe, Robert
- Subjects
RAILROADS ,RAILROAD companies ,DELEGATED legislation ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) - Abstract
In July 2004, the Government published a white paper on‘The Future of Rail’, which outlined its planned third attempt to reform the railways. This article reviews the new blueprint for rail, in the context of the performance of the industry and its regulatory bodies. The changes proposed are analysed in terms of their likely effects on the infrastructure authority and the train companies. The author concludes that there are major problems with the white paper as key details are omitted, and the proposed changes are heavily reliant on private companies which have performed poorly. The Government has missed the opportunity to renationalize the infrastructure authority, a move which would reduce borrowing costs and bring direct control over infrastructure costs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. 'A paper not so much for the armchair but for the factory and the street': Fenner Brockway and the Independent Labour Party's New Leader, 1926–1946.
- Author
-
Kent, Hazel
- Subjects
- *
SOCIALISTS , *LABOR movement , *WORKING class , *SOCIAL movements , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIALISM - Abstract
In 1926 the weekly journal of the Independent Labour Party (ILP), the New Leader, welcomed a new editor. Fenner Brockway was an experienced journalist, a committed socialist, and devoted to the ILP. His appointment was a consequence of a more militant left-wing outlook gaining prevalence in the party, careful political manoeuvring, and a desire to communicate the necessity for socialism to the ordinary working class. Until 1946 Brockway worked tirelessly on the New Leader, combining this with several other party roles and external commitments. This article scrutinizes the nature of the paper under Brockway's editorship, which has previously been cursorily dismissed as a failure and disappointment. It examines the format and content of the paper, its function within the party, staffing, circulation, and distribution. Despite the decline of the ILP, it is argued that Brockway delivered a newspaper which met the requirements of the party at the time. Further, it demonstrates that, despite the drastically decreasing party membership in these years, the New Leader consistently broadcast the ILP's message to a wider audience than previously thought. Finally, this article contributes the first account of Brockway's New Leader and a detailed provenance for a journal which has regularly been utilized as a source by historians of the ILP and of the wider labour movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
54. Home Defence and the Sandys Defence White Paper, 1957.
- Author
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Grant, Matthew
- Subjects
- *
MANUSCRIPTS , *COLD War, 1945-1991 , *NATIONAL security , *MILITARY readiness , *CIVIL defense - Abstract
Long understood as the key document in Britain's Cold War history, the Duncan Sandys Defence White Paper of 1957 nevertheless has a largely forgotten context: home defence. This article argues that understanding this context allows important new conclusions to be drawn concerning the drafting, presentation and the reception of the document and the deterrent strategy it expounded. It argues that the Paper failed to establish a new doctrine for civil defence which reconciled the policy with the wider deterrent strategy. In doing this, the Paper presented a muddled policy to the public: one which failed to justify the reductions in civil defence provision but which stressed the destructive power of thermonuclear weapons. This had the effect of encouraging the critics of the government's nuclear strategy to flag up the absence of adequate civil defence measures and highlight the 'admission' that there was no defence against the hydrogen bomb. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
55. Quiet Moves Toward Proportionate Dispute Resolution: The Law Commission's Consultation Paper on Administrative Redress.
- Author
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Kirkham, Richard
- Subjects
- *
JUSTICE , *FINANCIAL institutions , *CITIZENS , *LIABILITIES (Accounting) , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *LAW reform , *OBLIGATIONS (Law) , *LAW - Abstract
The article offers information on the Law Commission's consultation paper on administrative redress in Great Britain. It states that the focus of the Law Commission's project has been to consider the liability of public bodies. It notes that there is a genuine concern that the country could be moving towards a compensation culture that would force public bodies to be on the defensive in their relationship with citizens and expose them to the risk of excessive financial liability. It points out that through the consultation paper, the Law Commission has gone a long way towards providing a broad overview of the administrative justice sector and has made a number of very important proposals for reform.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
56. Discussion of "The White Paper of the PhRMA Working Group on Adaptive Dose-Ranging Designs".
- Author
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Hemmings, Robert
- Subjects
- *
CLINICAL trials , *DRUG dosage , *DRUG administration ,EDITORIALS - Abstract
The author reports on the discussion of the white paper on adaptive dose-ranging designs by the Phrma working Group in Great Britain. He states that the discussion is focusing on methodological issues and drug development. He stresses out that the white paper conducts simulations to compare a traditional approach with alternative design-focused and analysis-focused approaches. He also discusses the different level of phases on the pre-clinical trials.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
57. The 2003 UK Government Higher Education White Paper: a critical assessment of its implications for the access and widening participation agenda.
- Author
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Jones, Robert and Thomas, Liz
- Subjects
- *
HIGHER education , *EDUCATION policy , *EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATION , *RIGHT to education , *UTILITARIANISM , *POSTSECONDARY education - Abstract
Fair access and widening participation currently occupy a prominent position in the UK higher education agenda, but these terms remain ambiguous. In this paper we identify two prominent strands of policy in the government's approach to access and the widening of participation and contrast these with a third, more progressive perspective. The academic strand seeks to attract 'gifted and talented' young people into an unreformed higher education system. The second strand, which we term the utilitarian approach, posits a need for reform. However, this is undertaken largely to meet the requirements of employers and the economy. In contrast, a transformative approach values diversity and focuses on creating a system of higher education that does not place the burden of change upon potential entrants. This framework is used to explore some of the implications of the government's White Paper The future of higher education. First, the purpose of higher education is discussed, with particular reference to the distinction between economic and social objectives. Second, the government's view of the structure of the higher education sector is examined, by scrutinizing the notion of institutional differentiation and the role of the access regulator. We conclude that within a more differentiated higher education sector different aspects of the access discourse will become dominant in different types of institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
58. Abstracts of the Fourth Joint Annual Conference, Experimental and Clinical Short Papers Meetings of the British Society of Audiology.
- Author
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Furness, David N
- Subjects
- *
AUDIOLOGY associations , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *AUDIOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on audiology which include the impact of plasticity following unilateral deafness, the use of signal-processing strategies to improve discrimination of amplified speech cues and the management of children with unilateral hearing impairment.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
59. Discussion of Terry Owens' Paper.
- Author
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Williams, Paul
- Subjects
- *
MENTAL health services , *PSYCHOLOGICAL well-being , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs - Abstract
The author discusses Owens' paper from the point of view of a deterioration in mental health services in the US and in the UK with regard to the need in patients to establish trusting relationships as a pre-requisite to psychological stability and wellbeing. The advent of rapidly acting psychotropic drugs and a proliferation of short term psychological treatments, often addressed to very severe disturbance, sometimes with benefit to certain patients, are increasingly used to avoid fundamental needs for dependency. Owens discusses the serious fallout of this problem in the context of disturbed adolescents and bi-polar patients whose most basic developmental needs are too often not met, but the difficulty is widespread, this author suggests. The avoidance of close contact with patients who are disturbed is supported by cultural values that endorse technological and functional achievements above the need for human relatedness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
60. Commentary: Public Parks after the Urban White Paper.
- Author
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Jenkins, Jennifer
- Subjects
- *
PARK policy , *PUBLIC spaces , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Comments on the political importance of public parts in light of the British government's White Paper program. Problems in achieving ideals for parks and open spaces; Impact of the neglect of public open spaces; Sources of funding for the development of public open spaces according to the White Paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
61. The rural white paper in England: The origins, production ...
- Author
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Shaw, Richard and Hodge, Ian
- Subjects
RURAL land use - Abstract
Discusses the origins, production, and consequences of the Rural White Paper in England. Guiding principles established by the White Paper.
- Published
- 1997
62. The UK edition of The Little Red Schoolbook : a paper tiger reflects.
- Author
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Limond, David
- Subjects
- *
HISTORY of the book , *SEX education , *CENSORSHIP , *HARM reduction - Abstract
This paper concerns The Little Red Schoolbook, an English translation of the Danish book Den lille røde bog fur skoleelever. After the book's publication in the UK, opponents were successful in pressing for its publisher's prosecution. The ensuing trial led to its withdrawal and its bowdlerisation. It is argued that the work played some part in changing social and sexual mores and sex education practice in the UK, being, in effect, the Urtext of the ‘harm reduction approach’. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
63. The Enactment Of Cognitive Science Informed Approaches In The Classroom - Teacher Experiences And Contextual Dimensions.
- Author
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Jørgensen, Clara Rübner, Perry, Thomas, and Lea, Rosanna
- Subjects
COGNITIVE science ,TEACHERS ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Cognitive science-informed approaches have gained considerable influence in education in the UK and internationally, but not much is known about how teachers perceive cognitive science-informed strategies or enact them within the contexts of their everyday classrooms. In this paper, we discuss the perceptions and experiences of cognitive science-informed strategies of 13 teachers in England. The paper critically explores how the teachers understood and used cognitive science-informed strategies in their teaching, their views of the benefits and challenges for different subjects and groups of learners, and their reflections on supporting factors and barriers for adopting the strategies in their schools. The teachers' accounts illustrate some of the many complexities of adopting cognitive science-informed approaches in real-life educational settings. Drawing on their narratives, the paper emphasises the importance of acknowledging different contextual dimensions and the dynamic interactions between them to understand when and how teachers enact cognitive science-informed approaches in their classrooms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
64. Diversity and inclusion in UK Higher Education: staff perspectives on institutional representations and their reality.
- Author
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Richards, Kendall, Pilcher, Nick, Galbrun, Laurent, Forster, Alan, and Richards, James
- Subjects
HIGHER education ,POSTSECONDARY education ,SURVEYS ,DIVERSITY in education - Abstract
This paper examines staff perspectives on institutional representations of a range of areas of diversity and inclusion in a key post-compulsory education sector: that of UK Higher Education (HE). The paper focuses on comparing representational statements made by institutions with the reality of their lived experiences as perceived by staff. The paper first reviews literature around key issues of promoting and progressing in these areas, and how these areas are represented by institutions and the sector as a whole. It presents and discusses data from a survey (n = 300) to show strong agreement with representational statements as mirroring those of institutions, yet statistically significant differences between representations and the reality of lived experiences, particularly in relation to the lived experiences of staff. These data are discussed in the light of progress made by institutions, and the challenges faced in translating representations into real lived experience. Suggestions for institutions and policy makers are made to help better align reality with these representations in the UK Higher Education sector and, theoretically, for post-compulsory education sectors elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
65. Advanced therapies and the Brexit process: emerging geographies of legal responsibilities and market opportunities.
- Author
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Bicudo, Edison and Brass, Irina
- Subjects
LEGAL liability ,BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 ,GENOME editing ,GEOGRAPHY ,TISSUE engineering - Abstract
This paper analyses how so-called Brexit, that is the United Kingdom's departure from the European Union (EU), has modified the regional geography of Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products (ATMPs). The latter are therapies deriving from cell manipulation, gene editing, tissue engineering, or a combination of these techniques. Their development and delivery have been realised through research collaborations and commercial relations of international scope. In the EU, this has happened by means of a complex distribution of commercial activities and legal responsibilities. With Brexit, three main kinds of reconfigurations have occurred: the relocation of research and manufacturing activities; the reorganisation of quality control tests aimed to manage clinical risks; and the redistribution of legal responsibilities and representatives. This technical and legal reconfiguration is captured here by means of theoretical insights from the emerging domain of legal geography. Drawing on interviews conducted with both EU and UK professionals involved in ATMP development, this paper reveals the main challenges brought by Brexit to the current and future configuration of the ATMP landscape in the EU and the UK. Furthermore, it demonstrates how shifts in legal arrangements impact on science-intensive domains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
66. The role of an intermediary in back-channel negotiation: evidence from the Brendan Duddy papers.
- Author
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Dochartaigh, Niall Ó
- Subjects
- *
ARMISTICES , *INTERNATIONAL mediation ,BRITISH politics & government - Abstract
This article draws on the newly available private papers of Brendan Duddy, the key intermediary in contacts between the British government and the IRA between the early 1970s and the early 1990s when the IRA moved towards a permanent ceasefire and a negotiated settlement of the conflict. It draws too on extensive interviews with Duddy and other key participants in these contacts, and on newly available documents from the UK National Archives to identify some of the key dimensions to the role of intermediary in back-channel communication. It argues that these sources help us to better understand the complexity and ambiguity of the role of intermediary in sensitive covert negotiations, as well as shedding light on the extent to which an intermediary shapes communication between two parties rather than simply acting as a channel between them. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
67. Consensus paper: Resources for teaching critical appraisal.
- Author
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Coughlin, Sean and Molyneux, David
- Subjects
- *
EVIDENCE-based medicine , *MEDICAL practice , *GENERAL practitioners - Abstract
The article offers information on the significance of critical appraisal in ensuring the reliability and efficiency of using research evidence in evidence-based medicine in Great Britain. It mentions that the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP) introduced its Critical Reading Question paper in 1990. It notes that the evidence-based medicine asks a clinical question, locate the evidence, appraise the evidence, and interpret the evidence in the context of everyday medicine practice.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
68. Defending dissertations on economic history.
- Author
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Ojala, Jari, Hemminki, Tiina, and Nevalainen, Pasi
- Subjects
HUMAN capital ,PAPER industry ,COMMERCE - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various reports within the issue on topics including human capital in Great Britain, industry renewal and restructuring in Sweden during the post-war era, and profit distribution in the restructuring of the Swedish pulp and paper industry.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
69. On Reading the Morris Papers: 1959 Revisited.
- Author
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Lee, John Michael
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION policy , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *DECOLONIZATION , *POSTCOLONIALISM , *EDUCATION conferences - Abstract
The private papers of Sir Philip Morris reveal how he prepared himself for the chairmanship of the 1959 Oxford Conference on Commonwealth Education with briefing from the Commonwealth Relations Office, what he brought to the meeting from his own experience, and what he learnt from the chair. British ministers and officials as hosts of the conference were ambivalent about its outcome. They could not disentangle the prospect of educational co-operation across the Commonwealth from all that was being done to set up a system for giving development assistance to the new states created by decolonisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
70. Education for All: Papers from the 2005 Conference of the History of Education Society (UK).
- Author
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Myers, Kevin, Grosvenor, Ian, and Watts, Ruth
- Subjects
- *
ANNIVERSARIES , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *MIDDLE age , *EDUCATION , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *PUBLICATIONS - Abstract
The article offers information on the twentieth anniversary of the publication of the Swann Report in Great Britain in 2005. The issues investigated by Swann remains resonating both in Great Britain and beyond and the significance and the legacy of the report remain subjects of significant debate. There were 51 papers presented over the two days conference at the University of Birmingham. The subject of Gary McCulloch's article is about class and more particularly the education of the middle age class. Christine Mayer's article is providing details on the changing educational practices for girls and women between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries in Germany.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
71. Using the papers of contemporary British politicians as a testbed for the preservation of digital personal archives.
- Author
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Thomas, Susan and Martin, Janette
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIVES , *PERSONAL archives , *DIGITAL media , *DIGITAL libraries , *POLITICIANS - Abstract
Paradigm (Personal ARchives Accessible in DIGital Media) is an exemplar project to explore how archivists might select, acquire, process, store, preserve and provide access to the digital archives of individuals for the use of future researchers. Using the papers of contemporary British politicians as a testbed, the project team will evaluate existing and emerging theoretical and practical work in the fields of archival science and digital curation. We intend to learn from both disciplines and apply this knowledge to our exemplar scenario with the goal of striking a balance between theoretical principles and practical procedures. This article places the Paradigm project in the broader framework of digital preservation initiatives in the UK and abroad, introduces the key aims of Paradigm and outlines some of our initial findings. We also confront the implications of exponential growth in the creation of personal digital collections—from digital images, and music files to personal websites and blogs—and conclude with a discussion of what this means for the wider archival profession. 1 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
72. Mainstreaming interprofessional education in the United Kingdom: A position paper.
- Author
-
Barr, Hugh and Ross, Fiona
- Subjects
- *
CONTINUING education , *MEDICAL personnel , *SOCIAL workers , *MEDICAL care , *CAREER development , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
Interprofessional education (IPE) is being built into the mainstream of professional education for all health and social care professions throughout the United Kingdom (UK) driven by the Labour Government elected in 1997, coincidentally the year that this Journal hosted the first All Together Better Health conference in London. The incoming government prioritized pre-qualifying IPE to be provided in partnership by universities and service agencies supported regionally by workforce development confederations, later absorbed into strategic health authorities (SHAs), and centrally by educational, professional and regulatory bodies. Ambitious agenda for pre-qualifying IPE set by government are being tempered by realistic assessment of current outcomes borne of experience and corroborated by evidence. This paper suggests some ways to ease constraints and improve outcomes, but emphasizes the need to generate continuing interprofessional learning opportunities that build on the basics. It argues that accumulating experience and evidence must be brought to bear in formulating criteria for the approval and review of IPE within regulatory systems for professional education. Can IPE be sustained within mainstream professional education once initial enthusiasm ebbs and earmarked funds run dry? That is the issue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
73. A Dealer's Perspective on the Future of Paper Maps.
- Author
-
Guy, Russell
- Subjects
- *
MAPS , *MAP industry , *MAP dealers , *MAP publishing - Abstract
The paper discusses changes that have occurred over the last 15 years in how maps are sold, where they are sold and who is buying them. The emphasis is on the situation in the United States of America, but developments in Europe and the United Kingdom are also included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
74. 'Judging educational research' and the selection of papers for publication.
- Author
-
Pitts, John
- Subjects
- *
EDUCATION research , *REPORT writing , *EVIDENCE-based medicine , *EDUCATION & politics , *EDUCATIONAL publishing - Abstract
Evaluates educational research and the selection of research papers for publication in the U.S. Development and promotion of the concept of evidence-based medical practice; Relationship between research and politics; Factors that influence the understanding and interpretation of an educational event or process.
- Published
- 2004
75. Climate Change and Planning and Consultation for the UK Aviation White Paper.
- Author
-
Upham, Paul John
- Subjects
- *
AERONAUTICS , *AIR travel , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *ENVIRONMENTAL sciences , *PLANNING - Abstract
This note discusses environmental aspects of the planning and consultation process undertaken for the UK aviation White Paper. The process as a whole has involved some three years of forecasting and assessment of the operational, economic and environmental implications of some 28 options for airport expansion at 14 UK locations. Unconstrained passenger demand forecasts have been used as a basis for the planning and consultation, and a mitigation approach to environment has predominated. This is inadequate, given the climate impacts of the forecast aviation expansion. Greenhouse gas emissions reduction should be a high priority in transport infrastructure planning, not the subject of post-hoc analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
76. THE URBAN WHITE PAPER AND THE CHURCHES.
- Author
-
Purvey-Tyrer, Neil
- Subjects
- *
URBAN renewal , *CHRISTIAN sociology - Abstract
Considers the issue of the Church of England's involvement in urban areas in Great Britain. Key points in the Urban White Paper 'Our Towns and Cities: The Future Delivering an Urban Renaissance'; Argument for church involvement in urban renaissance, regeneration and renewal; Possible mission structures that take seriously the complex social layers of a post-industrial urban landscape.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
77. Biopolitics and lifelong learning: the vitalistic turn in English further education discourse.
- Author
-
Beighton, Christian
- Subjects
FURTHER education (Great Britain) ,BIOPOLITICS (Philosophy) ,DISCOURSE ,VITALISM ,ADULTS ,CONTINUING education - Abstract
This paper argues that a shift in discourse about the nature and purpose of Further Education is under way in England. A recent White Paper, 'Skills for jobs: lifelong learning for opportunity and growth', issued by the UK government, is couched in terms which suggest that a prior reliance on the ideology of neoliberalism is now moving towards the objectives and instruments of what Michel Foucault termed biopolitics or the exploitation of life itself. I analyse the White Paper and related recent texts to show how a form of vitalist discourse accompanies attempts to accelerate potentially problematic processes of value-extraction. While these developments respond partly to the societal changes resulting from the threats to life of the Coronavirus pandemic and other existential crises, their likely impact suggests a shift in the discourses of lifelong learning: an existing apparatus of normalisation and control is now turning to biopolitical exploitation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
78. When is a fund not a fund? Exploring the financial support for levelling up.
- Author
-
Atherton, Graeme and Le Chevallier, Marc
- Subjects
PUBLIC finance ,ELECTIONS - Abstract
This paper will examine the different funding streams associated with the levelling up agenda pursued by the Conservative government elected in the United Kingdom in 2019. It will explore in detail a number of funding streams that this government has associated with levelling up to understand their relationship to the levelling up agenda. The article will also analyse the relationship between the levelling up missions and the funding associated with levelling up. The Levelling Up White Paper released in February 2022 included 12 missions that were intended to provide a 'targeted, measurable and time-bound objective, or set of objectives, from which a programme of change can then be constructed or catalysed'. The analysis of the funding streams outlined in this paper shows that the relationship with the missions is overall a tangential one. The lack of clarity on what is and is not a levelling up fund, coupled with the loose relationship with the levelling up missions may diminish the impact that the levelling up agenda will have on regional inequality in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
79. Britain's new government, new White Paper, new aid? Eliminating world poverty: a challenge for the 21st century.
- Author
-
Burnell, Peter
- Subjects
- *
POVERTY , *INTERNATIONAL economic assistance , *ECONOMIC policy , *POLITICAL parties - Abstract
The November 1997 White Paper (WP) Eliminating world poverty: a challenge for the 21st century is only the third ever substantive WP on Britain's aid policy. It offers a focus on poverty, emphasises partnerships for sustainable development and ranges over far wider issues than just aid. It makes some significant departures from previous White Papers by Labour governments, partly reflecting a changed Labour Party but also following an evolution that is taking place in international development cooperation more generally. The 1997 White Paper also displays some continuities with the past, however. Policy effectiveness will depend inter alia on circumstances external to the UK and on the Department for International Development's political effectiveness in central government. The low profile of international development in political studies in the UK could also improve if proposals to increase public awareness of global interdependence take effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
80. Major Accessions to Repositories in 2009 Relating to Politics (Twentieth Century).
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,BRITISH politics & government ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
A list of accessions given to the British National Archives in 2009 is presented, including minutes and policy papers of the Avon Liberal Party between 1977-1995, minutes and notes of the Exeter Labour Party between 1963-1968, and the correspondence of the British communist figure Bill Moore between 1916-1999.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
81. The papers.
- Author
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Roberts, Helen E.
- Subjects
- *
AUTHORS , *LABOR unions , *MINERS , *INFORMATION resources - Abstract
This article looks into information resources regarding the histories of the miners' trade unions. The papers are dominated by the work which Robin Page Arnot undertook in writing the official history of the miners' trade unions in Great Britain. Amongst the earliest trade union records collected by Arnot is a volume of printed annual reports of the Amalgamated Association of Miners of West Bromwich. A similar depth of coverage is provided by Arnot's papers relating to the establishment of the Marx Memorial Library and his role in developing the institution as a center for Marxist education.
- Published
- 1994
82. World War I and the Transformation of British Engineering Call for Papers.
- Subjects
ENGINEERING ,WORLD War I - Abstract
A call for papers about World War I and the developments in British engineering is presented.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
83. Major Accessions to Repositories in 2003 Relating to 20th Century Politics.
- Author
-
Haunton, Melinda
- Subjects
ARCHIVAL materials ,MANUSCRIPTS ,BRITISH history - Abstract
Presents a list of the manuscripts/record repositories concerning the history of Great Britain, collected by the National Archives: Historical Manuscripts Commission in 2004.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
84. Abstracts of papers and posters presented at 39th Annual SRIP Conference, City University of London, 5th-6th September 2019.
- Subjects
CHILD psychology ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,HUMAN reproduction ,INTERNATIONAL agencies - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
85. Abstracts of the British Society of Audiology annual conference (incorporating the Experimental and Clinical Short papers meetings).
- Subjects
- *
AUDIOLOGY associations , *AUDIOLOGY , *AUDIOMETRY , *AUTISM , *COCHLEAR implants , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *HEARING disorders , *NOISE , *SPEECH perception , *TINNITUS , *METHODOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on audiology topics, which include "Identification and prioritising uncertainties in the treatment of tinnitus," "A guinea pig model of tinnitus" and "Evaluation of pitch perception tests for cochlear implant users."
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
86. The Interface Between South Asian Culture and Palliative Care for Children, Young People, and Families-a Discussion Paper.
- Author
-
Brown, Erica, Patel, Reena, Kaur, Jasveer, and Coad, Jane
- Subjects
- *
PALLIATIVE treatment , *MEDICAL care standards , *ASIANS , *BLACK people , *CINAHL database , *COMMUNICATION , *CULTURE , *HEALTH , *HEALTH services accessibility , *HEALTH status indicators , *HINDUISM , *ISLAM , *RELIGION & medicine , *MEDLINE , *MINORITIES , *PEDIATRICS , *INFORMATION resources , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *CULTURAL competence , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
A fundamental element of quality healthcare is that provision is accessible to all users and culturally sensitive to them. However, there is evidence to suggest that there is inequity of provision across all cultures. Furthermore, there is a paucity of published research in the United Kingdom concerning palliative care for minority ethnic families with a life-threatened or life-limited child or young person. The article sets out to discuss the findings of a literature review and, drawing on current work by the Centre for Children and Families Applied Research at Coventry University under the leadership of Professor Jane Coad, to explore the interface between South Asian cultures and the experience of palliative care services of children, young peoples, and families. All families require a broad range of services which are appropriately delivered and accessible throughout the trajectory of their child's illness. The literature review findings reveal that how families understand concepts such as health and disease arise from the complex interaction between personal experience and cultural lifestyle including language, family values, and faith. There is an urgent need to involve South Asian families in research in order to provide a robust evidence-base on which to develop service provision so that care is matched to the unique needs of individuals concerned. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
87. ‘Bless the Gods for my pencils and paper’: Katie Gliddon's prison diary, Percy Bysshe Shelley and the suffragettes at Holloway.
- Author
-
Schwan, Anne
- Subjects
- *
ENGLISH prisoners' writings , *WOMEN'S suffrage , *SOCIAL classes , *REFORMATORIES for women , *HISTORY - Abstract
This article discusses the life and imprisonment of the largely unknown middle-class artist and British suffrage activist Katie Gliddon and analyzes her extensive prison diary, secretly written and drawn in her copy of The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley at London's Holloway Prison in March and April 1912. By creating a platform for the voices of ‘ordinary’ prisoners and by opening up a space for a transgressive gaze between suffragettes, ‘ordinary’ prisoners and female officers, Gliddon's writings allow us to complicate our understanding of cross-class relations within the women's suffrage campaign and in women's prisons more generally speaking. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
88. Re-visioning disability and dyslexia down the camera lens: interpretations of representations on UK university websites and in a UK government guidance paper.
- Author
-
Collinson, Craig, Dunne, Linda, and Woolhouse, Clare
- Subjects
- *
WEBSITES , *DIGITAL resources for universities & colleges , *DYSLEXIA , *DISABILITIES - Abstract
The focus of this article is to consider visual portrayals and representations of disability. The images selected for analysis came from online university prospectuses as well as a governmental guidance framework on the tuition of dyslexic students. Greater understanding, human rights and cultural change have been characteristic of much UK governmental policy regarding disability, and legislation has potentially strengthened the quest for equality of opportunity. However, publicly available institutional promotional visual material appears to contradict policy messages. To interrogate this contradiction, this article presents a tripartite critique whereby three researchers provide a self-inventory of their backgrounds and theoretical and ontological positioning, before presenting their differing interpretations of visual representations of disability. Following an agreed methodological and analytical framework, they addressed the question: what do visual representations of dyslexia and disability look like and what messages do they convey? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
89. Abstracts of the British Society of Audiology annual conference (incorporating the Experimental and Clinical Short papers meetings).
- Subjects
- *
AUDIOLOGY associations , *ABSTRACTING , *CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on audiology which include frequency selectivity and local map structure in human auditory cortex measured with 7Tesla functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), cortical processing of coded speech and the effect of direction attention to the target in speech-in-speech identification.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
90. 'I am almost the middle-class white man, aren't I?': elite women, education and occupational trajectories in late twentieth-century Britain.
- Author
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Worth, Eve and Reeves, Aaron
- Subjects
ORAL history ,MIDDLE class ,WHITE men ,DIVISION of labor ,TWENTIETH century ,SCHOOLGIRLS ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,SEX discrimination - Abstract
This paper makes a major intervention in the historiography of elites through analysis of the experience of women occupational elites born in post-war Britain. The paper draws on a new set of oral history interviews recently conducted with women born in the post-war decades with an entry in Who's Who which is the leading biographical dictionary of 'noteworthy and influential' people in the UK. The women we interviewed were all highly occupationally successful and those analysed here also attended one of twelve elite girls' schools. This article argues that our interviewees can be separated into two distinct post-war cohorts: one born between early 1940s and mid-1950s and the other born late 1950s to late 1960s. The shape and structure of the cohort's trajectories were different, their relationship to their careers were different, and, even though both groups faced sexual discrimination and unequal divisions of labour, the nature of these gendered inequalities changed too. By foregrounding elite women within this shifting historical context, this article illuminates broader trends in both classed and gendered experience and how this related to the changing nature of the economy in recent history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
91. Predicting new firm survival and growth: The power of alternative data.
- Author
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Wang, Su
- Subjects
SMALL business ,ORGANIZATIONAL performance ,GREAT Recession, 2008-2013 ,INVESTORS ,BUSINESS enterprises - Abstract
This paper demonstrates that the alternative data of manager turnover can provide investors and policymakers with a more timely and available predictor of new firm performance beyond the traditional financial information. This paper constructs a comprehensive alternative dataset of manager turnover that covers a near-population sample of new firms in the United Kingdom. It shows that manager departures and appointments can predict new firms' survival and growth, even after controlling for firm financials. In addition to the within-firm prediction, the average manager turnover in other firms of the same industry can cross-predict individual firm performance. The within-firm prediction is more pronounced for non-family firms, smaller firms and firms incorporated during or after the Great Recession, and the cross-firm prediction is stronger for younger firms. This paper sheds light on the power of alternative data in the prediction of firm performance, particularly for new firms that often do not have available information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
92. Do tourists want sustainability transitions? Visitor attitudes to destination trajectories during COVID-19.
- Author
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Wilkinson, Timothy and Coles, Tim
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,DESTINATION image (Tourism) ,TOURIST attitudes ,SUSTAINABLE tourism ,SUPPLY & demand ,TOURISTS - Abstract
The need for more sustainable tourism has long been recognised, and the COVID-19 pandemic precipitated renewed calls for large-scale and rapid transformation of the sector. Attractive as such calls were, implementing aspirations for more sustainable futures requires significant 'buy-in' from the demand side. Yet, substantive evidence of tourists desiring more sustainable futures was lacking. This paper aims to address this empirical deficit and to critically reflect on early pandemic rhetoric calling for transformative change. It reports on the results from a panel survey conducted with visitors to Northern Devon—a UK destination with a long-standing commitment to sustainable development—who stayed overnight in the region during Coronavirus restrictions. Of three possible trajectories for tourism development, the majority of respondents preferred a sustainable future. However, just under a quarter preferred a scenario associated with further growth in tourism, and this trajectory was perceived as the most likely to occur. Using a case-study approach, the paper critiques emergent discourse around sustainability transitions in tourism, highlighting a supply-side emphasis in extant analysis and the need for closer examination of tourist preferences for transitional pathways. If conceptual architectures from Transitions Studies are to support the implementation of sustainability transitions in tourism, both the Multi-Level Perspective and the Transitions Management approach must consider tourists' perspectives on destination change more carefully. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
93. 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
94. A discussion paper on Promoting Sport and Physical Activity as part of the role of the Social Work sector.
- Author
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Paylor, I.
- Subjects
- *
PHYSICAL activity , *HEALTH promotion , *SPORTS , *PHYSICAL fitness , *PUBLIC welfare , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
There are many benefits to be gained from participation in sport and physical activity. There are also many barriers which prevent people from participating, and in particular, from achieving the UK Government recommended guidelines of physical activity. Many people identified as being the least physically active can also be categorised into those groups of people which receive support from social services. Government initiatives currently focus on increasing levels of physical activity within the country to improve health and lower crime. These documents, however, display little association to the Social Work sector, and the contribution and relevance of how social workers can impact on the growing problem of sedentary behaviour. This article identifies the diverse range of obtainable benefits, the barriers to activity, and how sport and physical activity is relevant to social workers. Looking at how social workers can promote participation, through individual methods or as part of a wider strategy, whilst also assessing the limitations encountered with promoting sport and physical activity within the Social Work sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
95. Information Technology Management into the 1990s: A Position Paper.
- Author
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Holtham, Clive
- Subjects
- *
INFORMATION technology , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *HIGH technology industries , *COMPUTER input-output equipment , *INDUSTRIAL management , *PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Information technology poses many challenges both to general management and to the IT industry itself. After extrapolating some of the technological trends that could have significant impacts on commercial and public sector IT in the 1990, the paper reviews four major challenges. These are the need to develop IT strategies, both nationally and for individual organisations; the need to create alliances: the need to avoid misalliances; mechanisms for converting ideas into action. A considerable emphasis is placed on the need to understand the managerial environment within which IT is used, and to see IT as only one element within wider organisational systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
96. A response to John Hockey's paper `Establishing Boundaries'.
- Author
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Filler, Ann
- Subjects
- *
DOCTOR of philosophy degree - Abstract
Presents a response to John Hockey's paper `Establishing Boundaries' about the role of Doctor of Philosophy degree (PhD) supervisors, published in the same issue of `Cambridge Journal of Education.' Consideration of the peer group as a resource for meeting a range of student needs.
- Published
- 1994
97. Candidates undertaking (invigilated) assessment online show no differences in performance compared to those undertaking assessment offline.
- Author
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Hope, David, Davids, Veronica, Bollington, Lynne, and Maxwell, Simon
- Subjects
INTERNET ,MEDICAL students ,EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements ,ACADEMIC achievement ,MALPRACTICE ,CLINICAL competence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDICAL prescriptions ,MEDICAL education ,PATIENT safety ,VIDEO recording - Abstract
Medical education has historically relied on high stakes knowledge tests sat in examination centres with invigilators monitoring academic malpractice. The COVID-19 pandemic has made such examination formats impossible, and medical educators have explored the use of online assessments as a potential replacement. This shift has in turn led to fears that the change in format or academic malpractice might lead to considerably higher attainment scores on online assessment with no underlying improvement in student competence. Here, we present an analysis of 8092 sittings of the Prescribing Safety Assessment (PSA), an assessment designed to test the prescribing skills of final year medical students in the UK. In-person assessments for the PSA were cancelled partway through the academic year 2020, with 6048 sittings delivered in an offline, traditionally invigilated format, and then 2044 sittings delivered in an online, webcam invigilated format. A comparison (able to detect very small effects) showed no attainment gap between online (M = 0.762, SD = 0.34) and offline (M = 0.761, SD = 0.34) performance. The finding suggests that the transition to online assessment does not affect student performance. The findings should increase confidence in the use of online testing in high-stakes assessment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
98. The Artists' Papers Register.
- Author
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Bourne, Robin and Tomkins, David
- Subjects
ARTISTS ,ARCHIVES - Abstract
Focuses on the Association of Art Historians' Artists Papers Register project, which aims to compile a computerized location register of papers and primary sources relating to artists and designers in Britain. Geographical areas into which thee project has been divided; Contact information; Model for the creation of a central information source devoted to artists' archives.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
99. Restoring Faith: Resolving the Roman Catholic Church’s Sexual Scandals Through Restorative Justice (Working Paper I).
- Author
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Gavrielides, Theo and Coker, Dale
- Subjects
- *
RESTORATIVE justice , *SCANDALS , *SEX crimes - Abstract
Two years ago, Independent Academic Research Studies, a UK based international network, started a research and implementation project to explore the potential of restorative justice to help resolve sexual offending cases involving children and young people. One aspect of this project is the use of restorative justice with sexual offending cases that occurred within the Catholic Church. The purpose of this article is to report on the main findings of the first stage of the project, based on desk research into existing or past international projects dealing with the matter. The aim, however, is not to provide a literature review of the main arguments surrounding the topic, but rather a critical overview of the restorative programs and research projects that have been implemented to test the notion’s application in sexual offending cases. The results of these programs will be contrasted with notorious cases that have been processed through the traditional criminal justice system. Therefore, this article is the first in a series on how restorative justice could be applied to help resolve the sexual scandals in the Catholic Church. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. From Carbon Paper to E-mail: Changes in Methods in the Foreign Office, 1950-2000.
- Author
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Campbell, Alan
- Subjects
- *
FOREIGN offices (Government agencies) , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *INTERNATIONAL law - Abstract
Attempts to modernise the working practices of the Foreign Office within the last half century have largely been successful. Technological advances have rendered the work of today's Foreign Secretaries and Diplomatic Service totally different from their immediate post-war predecessors. This has not only speeded up the pace of diplomacy but resulted in a more 'intimate' approach to diplomatic contact through the use of video and satellite links, for example. These changes have taken place against the backdrop of a decline of Britain as a world power and a realignment of the British relationship with Europe through the European Union. At the same time, however, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office was anxious to preserve its architectural and historical heritage, and the author praises the Thatcher government's commitment to restoring Gilbert Scott's building in Whitehall to its original splendour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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