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Showing 1 to 15 of 44 results Save | Export
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Rachel Abigail Harrison; Jill Bradshaw; Michelle McCarthy – Journal of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities, 2025
Background: Since the introduction of austerity measures in 2008, funding for care, welfare, services and support systems in the United Kingdom has been reduced. There is little research that explores the experiences of parents of adults with intellectual disabilities and service providers regarding care, relationships and social networks in times…
Descriptors: Adults, Intellectual Disability, Economic Climate, Budgeting
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Watermeyer, Richard; Shankar, Kalpana; Crick, Tom; Knight, Cathryn; McGaughey, Fiona; Hardman, Joanna; Suri, Venkata Ratnadeep; Chung, Roger; Phelan, Dean – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2021
Universities in the UK, and in other countries like Australia and the USA, have responded to the operational and financial challenges presented by the COVID-19 pandemic by prioritising institutional solvency and enforcing changes to the work practices and profiles of their staff. For academics, an adjustment to institutional life under COVID-19…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, COVID-19, Pandemics, Universities
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Cano, Michele; Murray, Rowena; Kourouklis, Athanassios – Studies in Higher Education, 2022
Problems associated with managerialism are well established in Higher Education. Driven by pressures of funding cuts, league tables and the associated competitive environment, Higher Education followed other public sector bodies in adopting Lean Management principles. While there is scepticism about Lean Management because it is seen as an…
Descriptors: College Administration, Administrative Organization, Higher Education, Guidelines
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Heffernan, Troy A. – International Journal of Leadership in Education, 2021
Vice-chancellor salaries have been a topic of media interest and scholarly research for decades. In recent years, however, the media's interest and criticism of vice-chancellors' salaries has escalated, as negativity surrounding university performance and administration has led to a significant increase in articles concerning these matters. This…
Descriptors: Salaries, Cross Cultural Studies, College Administration, Educational Quality
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Winter, Laura Anne; Hanley, Terry; Bragg, Joanna; Burrell, Kimberley; Lupton, Ruth – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2020
This paper presents a novel conceptualisation of the school context by examining the 'personal' (emotional wellbeing), the 'political' (everyday political actions and power relations) and the 'Political' (the Political system, including electoral politics and governmental policy) and how these interrelate. Informed by literatures from a range of…
Descriptors: Activism, Well Being, Political Influences, Political Power
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Jones, Chris – Learning, Media and Technology, 2015
Open education emerged when the state had an active role in shaping and financing post-secondary education. In the twenty-first century, two pressures influence the way openness is conceived. The first is the compounding of neo-liberal economics with austerity following the financial crash of 2008. The second is the consolidation of networked and…
Descriptors: Open Universities, Open Education, Online Courses, Electronic Learning
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Gibson, Howard – Citizenship, Social and Economics Education, 2015
During his quest for leadership of the English Conservative Party, David Cameron declared his intention to turn Britain into a Big Society. In May 2010, having gained office as Prime Minister, he unveiled a string of policies to bring his vision to fruition. After five years, however, talk of the Big Society has withered in public debate such that…
Descriptors: Political Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Citizenship
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Power, Andrew; Bartlett, Ruth; Hall, Edward – Journal of Intellectual Disabilities, 2016
Whilst personalization offers the promise of more choice and control and wider participation in the community, the reality in the United Kingdom has been hampered by local council cuts and a decline in formal services. This has left many people with intellectual disabilities feeling dislocated from collective forms of support (Needham, 2015). What…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peer Relationship, Peer Groups, Social Support Groups
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Broussine, Michael; Ahmad, Yusuf – Teaching Public Administration, 2013
The aim of this article is to discuss ways in which we as educators of public managers can help our students deal effectively with the challenges thrown up by the sweeping cuts in public services arising as a consequence of the fiscal crisis brought about by the failure of the banks. While our focus is on the UK, we feel that the issues raised…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Administration Education, Economic Climate, Public Support
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Watts, A. G. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2013
The Coalition Government's policies on career guidance are analysed. Its rhetorical concern for career guidance provision is based largely on its support for social mobility, and its recognition of the role of career guidance in moving towards a demand-led skills system. Initial policy statements affirmed its intention to establish an all-age…
Descriptors: Career Guidance, Role, Foreign Countries, Social Mobility
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Slater, Jenny – Disability & Society, 2012
In May 2010, amidst the "global financial crisis" a Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government succeeded a 12-year reign of New Labour in the United Kingdom, and ushered in massive welfare cuts. Although New Labour tabled major welfare and disability benefit reform, they arguably did not activate the harshest of these. This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Politics of Education, Youth, Disabilities
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Feigenbaum, Anna; Iqani, Mehita – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2015
What are the ramifications of current changes in the higher education landscape in the UK for the ways in which teaching staff perceive their teaching practices? What impact are funding cuts, increases in student fees and the concomitant increased workloads having on faculty morale? How might this influence "quality cultures" in teaching…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Retrenchment, Teacher Attitudes
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Gateley, D. E. – Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 2015
The UK government's austerity cuts have negatively impacted many voluntary-sector interventions that provided support to refugees. One such intervention, the Refugee Integration and Employment Service (RIES), is discussed in this paper. The RIES was a UK Border Agency-funded integration programme for recognised refugees and operated through…
Descriptors: Refugees, Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Intervention
Labi, Aisha – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
When the global financial crisis hit in 2008, it looked at first as if many European universities were going to escape the worst. Higher education has long been considered a public right and a taxpayer-financed obligation, and there was optimism that universities, which government leaders hail as drivers of economic growth, would emerge relatively…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Foreign Countries, Brain Drain, Economic Progress
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Gewirtz, Sharon; Cribb, Alan – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2013
This paper argues that the "Times Higher" provides a powerful tool for understanding the changing character of UK higher education (HE) and can usefully be seen as representative, and in some ways constitutive, of that changing character. Drawing on an analysis of a sample of stories from the "Times Higher," it documents the…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Educational History, Higher Education, Educational Change
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