Audio

Britain: a country divided?

April 21, 2011 1115

John Hills, professor of social policy at LSE, and Dr Polly Vizard gave another lecture in the LSE Works series on Thursday, March 3, 2011. Sponsored by SAGE, this lecture series showcases the fundamental insights of LSE’s Research Centres and offers an opportunity for discourse on various findings.

Attended by 150, this lecture was held at the Hong Kong Theatre at Clement House and focused on the Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion (CASE). Founded in 1997, CASE is a multi-disciplinary research centre and studies the impact of social disadvantages and the policies related to these difficulties. Professor Hills is the director at CASE and Dr Vizard is one of the centre’s research fellows.

During the lecture, the discussion revolved around the recent work of the National Equality Panel and the implications of the Equality Measurement Framework (EMF). The National Equality Panel researched the relationships between economic outcomes and the characteristics of the people who experience these results. On the other hand, the EMF analyses multidimensional inequalities.

While the lecture indicated a large degree of economic inequality, Professor Hills noted the narrowness of judging inequality solely based on economic measures. Proceeding from this idea, Dr Vizard described a capability list of ten life domains as a better means of analysing quality of life and wellbeing. Dr Vizard further suggested a dashboard approach in accomplishing a comprehensive citizen wellbeing analysis instead of a single metric like economic situation.

Sir Tony Atkinson, centennial professor in the Department of Economics at LSE, and David Darton, Director of Foresight at the Equality and Human Rights Commission, both gave responses to the lecturers on these views.

Slides and audio are available from this event.

Sage, the parent of Social Science Space, is a global academic publisher of books, journals, and library resources with a growing range of technologies to enable discovery, access, and engagement. Believing that research and education are critical in shaping society, 24-year-old Sara Miller McCune founded Sage in 1965. Today, we are controlled by a group of trustees charged with maintaining our independence and mission indefinitely. 

View all posts by Sage

Related Articles

Free Online Course Reveals The Art of ChatGPT Interactions
Resources
March 28, 2024

Free Online Course Reveals The Art of ChatGPT Interactions

Read Now
Apply for Sage’s 2024 Concept Grants
Announcements
March 7, 2024

Apply for Sage’s 2024 Concept Grants

Read Now
New Podcast Series Applies Social Science to Social Justice Issues
Impact
February 28, 2024

New Podcast Series Applies Social Science to Social Justice Issues

Read Now
Why Don’t Algorithms Agree With Each Other?
Innovation
February 21, 2024

Why Don’t Algorithms Agree With Each Other?

Read Now
A Black History Addendum to the American Music Industry

A Black History Addendum to the American Music Industry

The new editor of the case study series on the music industry discusses the history of Black Americans in the recording industry.

Read Now
When University Decolonization in Canada Mends Relationships with Indigenous Nations and Lands

When University Decolonization in Canada Mends Relationships with Indigenous Nations and Lands

Community-based work and building and maintaining relationships with nations whose land we live upon is at the heart of what Indigenizing is. It is not simply hiring more faculty, or putting the titles “decolonizing” and “Indigenizing” on anything that might connect to Indigenous peoples.

Read Now
New Dataset Collects Instances of ‘Contentious Politics’ Around the World

New Dataset Collects Instances of ‘Contentious Politics’ Around the World

The European Research Center is funding the Global Contentious Politics Dataset, or GLOCON, a state-of-the-art automated database curating information on political events — including confrontations, political turbulence, strikes, rallies, and protests

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments