Parliaments are not monoliths. They are highly complex political organisations. Anthony King’s 1976 article ‘Modes of executive–legislative relations: Great Bri...
In Alan Ware’s latest defence of his views on higher education, “a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing” (Macbeth), he claims that ...
There is a table at the Tate Britain restaurant that the waiters there always referred to as ‘Professor King's table’. It is situated near the bar, a discreet d...
It is not every day that a film about administrative justice wins a BAFTA. Ken Loach's success with I, Daniel Blake, a film in part about the protagonist's trag...
University education in Britain currently exhibits two serious problems of social justice. There are far more graduates than jobs requiring the skills obtained ...
The growing capability of machines has raised the spectre of mass technologically induced unemployment and profound economic disruption. Yet despite the acceler...
We asked a selection of authors to respond to ‘The New Politics of Class’ by Geoffrey Evans and James Tilley
Writing in mid-2017, it is very hard for anyone to...
We asked a selection of authors to respond to ‘The New Politics of Class’ by Geoffrey Evans and James Tilley
The New Politics of Class by Geoffrey Evans and Ja...
In the UK’s uncertain economic landscape, one bright spot continues to shine. The country is wonderfully rich when it comes to property wealth.
The ONS put the...
We asked a selection of authors to respond to ‘The New Politics of Class’ by Geoffrey Evans and James Tilley
Class still fundamentally affects politi...
It is time to take stock of what austerity policies have meant for the school system in England.
Seven years after the election of a Conservative-led coalition...
At just seventy words, the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Act 2017 is roughly half the length of an article abstract. But, in terms of impact, it i...