5,950 research outputs found
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It's America, where you stand up to be accountable
This is an extract from The next phase: rewiring local decision making for political judgement, published by the New Local Government Network
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Can policy making be evidence-based?
Ministers are always calling for more evidence-based interventions. Do they apply the same criterion to their own work of making policy? Perhaps surprisingly, policy making is not an evidence-free zone. However, it is important to understand the ways in which policy makers in different situations will use information differently, count different kinds of information as evidence, and so exercise different styles of judgment
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Entitlement cards: do the Home Secretary's proposals comply with data protection principles? Part I
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Giving consumers of British public services more choice: what can be learned from recent history?
British Prime Minister Tony Blair announced in the autumn of 2001 that he wanted to extend individual consumer choice in the public services (Blair, 2001). What do we know from recent experience about the conditions under which such policies can be sustained? In this article, the experience of individual consumer choice over the last ten, and in some cases, fifteen years, is compared across nine fields of British public services. The article identifies the policy goals for introducing choice, considers how far they were typically achieved, and identifies problems and unintended side-effects, including distributional problems, inefficiencies and one type of political risk. This provisional evaluation is based on a widely ranging review of literature spanning several disciplines. The principal products of the argument are two detailed tables, setting out, respectively, the degree to which the goals seem to have been achieved for each choice programme, as far as the available literature can tell us, and how far distributional, efficiency and political risk problems have dogged consumer choice in each field. In the discussion section, trends and variations are summarised. Finally, some lessons are drawn from the comparisons, for policy makers who may be considering the further extension of consumer choice in public services
Volunteering for all? Explaining patterns of volunteering and identifying strategies to promote it
In policy terms in the UK, as elsewhere, volunteering has become increasingly associated with training for the workplace; a view which offers little to individuals âbeyondâ the labour market because of age, disability or care commitments. Applying a neo-Durkheimian framework to a study of volunteers we examine how far the patterns of volunteering can be explained by the underlying institutional factors of strong and weak social regulation and social integration. This framework can offer insights into a range of possible policy levers for individuals rather than a âone size fits allâ emphasis on volunteering for personal gain for the workplace
Biosensors
Proceedings of"Conference on Recent Advances in Biomaterials Dec 17-18 '10"Held at Saveetha School of Engineering, Saveetha University, Thandalam, Chennai-602 105, Tamilnadu, IndiaTheme 6 Biosensor
Life in the Times of Coronavirus
Stories from DMACC students, faculty, and staff.https://openspace.dmacc.edu/coronaviruslife/1021/thumbnail.jp
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