In the past two years we have had two official ‘stock takes’ of equality from the National Equality Panel and the Equality & Human Rights Commission, revealing the true contours of inequality in Britain. But with 1200 pages of detailed data, it can be difficult to see the big picture. Ben Baumberg summarises the messages from LSE’s key contributors to the reports, and argues that policy needs to reflect both the broad canvas and the individual brush strokes of inequality in order to successfully tackle it
A new series of Election Analyses is now available from the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance (C...
This paper analyses what happened to economic inequalities in the United Kingdom in the two decades ...
by Lisa Muggeridge, MSc student in the Department of Sociology at the LSE At long last inequality is...
Mike O’Donnell argues that reducing social inequality is a vitally important objective for the UK. I...
The report of the National Equality Panel received a lot of coverage over the last couple of days. A...
Economic inequality has become centre stage in the political debate, but what the political leaders ...
In his March 2015 Budget speech, Chancellor George Osborne emphasised that austerity measures over t...
Inequalities are deeply embedded in our society, permeating throughout our social structures and ins...
Contrary to what is often believed, people hold sophisticated interpretations and understandings of ...
This paper scrutinizes the conventional wisdom about trends in UK income inequality and also places ...
When New Labour came to power in 1997, its leaders asked for it to be judged after ten years on its ...
In his Budget, George Osborne claimed inequality is at its lowest level in 28 years. Yet recent rese...
The interdisciplinary study of inequality has exploded across the social sciences over the past five...
Britain is an unequal country, more so than many other industrial countries and more so than a gener...
The UK cost of living crisis has thrown the government’s Levelling Up agenda into sharper relief. Wi...
A new series of Election Analyses is now available from the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance (C...
This paper analyses what happened to economic inequalities in the United Kingdom in the two decades ...
by Lisa Muggeridge, MSc student in the Department of Sociology at the LSE At long last inequality is...
Mike O’Donnell argues that reducing social inequality is a vitally important objective for the UK. I...
The report of the National Equality Panel received a lot of coverage over the last couple of days. A...
Economic inequality has become centre stage in the political debate, but what the political leaders ...
In his March 2015 Budget speech, Chancellor George Osborne emphasised that austerity measures over t...
Inequalities are deeply embedded in our society, permeating throughout our social structures and ins...
Contrary to what is often believed, people hold sophisticated interpretations and understandings of ...
This paper scrutinizes the conventional wisdom about trends in UK income inequality and also places ...
When New Labour came to power in 1997, its leaders asked for it to be judged after ten years on its ...
In his Budget, George Osborne claimed inequality is at its lowest level in 28 years. Yet recent rese...
The interdisciplinary study of inequality has exploded across the social sciences over the past five...
Britain is an unequal country, more so than many other industrial countries and more so than a gener...
The UK cost of living crisis has thrown the government’s Levelling Up agenda into sharper relief. Wi...
A new series of Election Analyses is now available from the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance (C...
This paper analyses what happened to economic inequalities in the United Kingdom in the two decades ...
by Lisa Muggeridge, MSc student in the Department of Sociology at the LSE At long last inequality is...