
Manchester Metropolitan
Articles
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1 week ago |
inkl.com | Michelle McManus |Manchester Metropolitan
Mariana Serdynska/ShutterstockThe announcement of a national inquiry into group-based child sexual exploitation raises urgent questions: How did we end up here again? Haven’t there been enough reports? Why weren’t children protected the first time? And will these reforms actually change anything? As someone who has worked for years in safeguarding policy and research into grooming, county lines drug trafficking and child criminal exploitation, I believe this moment could be different.
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Dec 7, 2024 |
eventbrite.co.uk | Manchester Metropolitan
Please note this session will not be recorded. Domestic abuse is a complex and multi-layered issue and as such, requires a holistic, systemic multi-agency safeguarding response. The Child Safeguarding Review Panel (2022) highlighted that from their sample of reviews which they analysed they found “there was no evidence of a coordinated multi-agency response to domestic abuse”.
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Dec 5, 2024 |
tolerance.ca | Sarah James |Manchester Metropolitan
By Sarah E. James, Professor of Visual Culture, Manchester Metropolitan University Kaur’s acceptance speech focused on the plight of Palestinians, and this year’s Turner Prize exhibition speaks to issues surrounding cultural loss, colonial histories and racism. Read complete article© The Conversation -
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Nov 28, 2024 |
ca.finance.yahoo.com | Katy Jones |Manchester Metropolitan
The UK government has put forward ambitious plans to reform the UK’s employment support system. Helping people to find, stay in and succeed at work is a complex policy area. With unemployment at historically low levels, the key issue driving these new reforms is the high number of people – nine million across the country – considered to be “economically inactive”. Economic inactivity measures the number of people who are not in work, but who are also not actively seeking it.
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Nov 14, 2024 |
link.springer.com | Manchester Metropolitan
The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) handed down its judgment in Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) v BZ (Case C-650/22, known as Diarra) on 4 October 2024.Footnote 1 The CJEU has required what could be significant changes to the transfer system, perhaps even a completely new one, and has ushered in a rebalancing of the relationship between International Sports Federations (ISFs) and the athletes that they seek to govern.
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