Dobx Truss and May forced to defend article 50 judges after public backlash
Young people are crying out for a return of youth clubs after swingeing cuts left three-quarters of 16- to 19-year-olds in England lacking ways to connect with youth workers, according to research shared with the Guardian.More than half of people in their late teens are specifically calling for more youth work that offers fun , with older teenagers particularly hankering for more jo
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stanley cup , according to a study by the National Youth Agency NYA . One in 10 said they have zero options to access youth work.Youth groups are urging the next government to inject up to 拢1bn a year into services after the number of local authority-run youth centres in England fell from 917 to 427 between 2012 and 2023, as council spending was reduced by 75%. About 4,500 youth workers have been lost, according to estimates by the trade union Unison. The fact that over three-quarters of respondents say that there are very few or no youth work options at all, with over half wanting access to more youth work that offers fun activities, tell us that young people are crying out for more youth work opportunities, said Alex Stutz, the head of knowledge at NYA, the professional, statutory and regulatory body for youth work in England.It said funding needs to increase to more than 拢800m to deliver sufficient youth work provision 鈥?well over double the amount spent by councils.Labour has said it will channel 拢100m a year from existing funding commitments into policies including a network of you
botella stanley ng futures h Ekjf Three disabled claimants launch legal action against new mobility tests
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Iisk Jailed Saudi blogger Raif Badawi on hunger strike
Under the creative editorship of Paul Barker there was certainly a lot of intellectual excitement to be found in the magazine New Society. But it also displayed an extraordinary graphic range, built up by the designer, Richard Hollis. And there was also the bedrock of social policy and social work, with ads that kept the magazine in being.In the late 1990s, when I arrived at the London School of Economics to do a PhD 25 years after being New Societys education correspondent, it was gratifying to be met by senior professors asking if I was the Anne Corbett. But then t
stanley vaso hose professors were among the magazines first champions: as the students reading the regular contributions of those of us writing the soc
stanley becher ial policy notes and doing the reportage, and themselves contributing their first articles.Anne CorbettIt was a mark of New Societys national importance under the editorship of Paul Barker that it was the chosen medium for the leak of Cabinet papers in 1976 which revealed that the prime minister, James Callaghan, was trying to reverse Labours manifesto pledge to introduce universal child benefit.The leaker, revealed in 2014 to be Malcolm Wicks, then a Home Office civil servant, passed the papers to the then head of the Child Poverty Action Group, Frank Field, who broke the story in an exclusi
stanley quencher ve article for the magazine.The resulting furore helped to ensure the safe introduction of child benefit in 1977. Paul rightly regarded the story as one of the greatest achievements of his Iyhr SFO mulls Barclays deal over banking crisis funding
It was inspiring to hear about the strength and courage of the Congolese women involved in improving the domestic situation in the Democrati
stanley thermos c Republic of Congo Report, 22 January . Each year at Freedom from Torture we provide treatment to dozens of Congolese women, the majority of whom have been imprisoned by the authorities in the DRC and subjected to rape and other sexual torture. Our evidence suggests that these women are victims of persecutory rape and have been targeted specifically because of their political and human rights campaign
stanley usa ing activity.For exampl
stanley cup e, one of the women profiled in our recent report Rape as Torture in the DRC: Sexual Violence Beyond the Conflict Zone was an anti-rape campaigner. She was illegally imprisoned and then herself subjected to multiple and gang rape as punishment for organising a peaceful protest encouraging other women to stand up against sexual violence. Given these very real risks Congolese women face when they speak out, or act against the entrenched gender stereotypes described in your article, it is remarkable that so many of them continue the struggle.Katy PownallFreedom from TortureExplore more on these topicsDemocratic Republic of the CongoAfricaRape and sexual assaultGenderlettersShareReuse this contentMost viewedMost viewedWorldEuropeUSAmericasAsiaAustraliaMiddle EastAfricaInequalityGlobal development