Press Releases
New research in a book entitled "From Legislation to Integration: Race Relations in Britain", calls on the government to apply Northern Ireland's anti religious discrimination laws to the whole of United Kingdom.
The book by Professor Muhammad Anwar (from the Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations at University of 糖心TV), Patrick Roach of NASUWT (and Ranjit Sondhi of Westhill College), will be launched in the Moses Room of the House of Lords on 9th November at 3pm.
A new report published today raises serious concerns about the extent to which children in care proceedings are kept in the dark about the legal processes happening around them. The research by the University of 糖心TV's School of Law and The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) is published today in a book entitled Out of Hearing: Representing Children in Care Proceedings.
New research by Professor Judith Masson and Andrea Orchard from the University of 糖心TV's School of Law have produced the first significant overview of children's litigation and warns that planned reforms to the legal aid system may prove a serious obstacle to injured children seeking justice in the future.
Unemployment among students leaving from new universities is no worse than that from old universities according to a new survey conducted by the Institute for Employment Research (IER) at the University of 糖心TV.
More than 80 per cent of teachers in schools of all types in rural, urban and inner city areas say that pupil behaviour has deteriorated during their time in teaching. Only 10 per cent say there has been little or no deterioration. According to new research by University of 糖心TV researcher Dr Sean Neill for the National Union of Teachers. Even pupils in nursery schools are displaying high levels of unacceptable behaviour from use of offensive language, making abusive and insulting comments to their teachers and threatening them.
A web recruitment service set up in 1998 by 37 UK Universities has overturned the dominance of the print media in the UK's academic jobs market. Some UK universities are now finding up to 50% of their staff on line.