Joelle Grogan (Middlesex University) explains the law and governance put in place by the UK government to try to reduce the spread of COVID, finding that it was characterised by executive dominance, uncertainty, and inconsistency
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The tendency to consume news information to mitigate uncertainty is well-known to scholars. But cons...
Pandemics and the social and economic crises they cause are not inevitable, says Winnie Byanyima (Un...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
Joelle Grogan highlights some points of concern as regards the UK’s response to the pandemic, and ad...
David Spiegelhalter (University of Cambridge) and Anthony Masters (Royal Statistical Society) highli...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
The government’s ‘deal’ with the EU is atrocious, writes Ruth Lea. The Withdrawal Agreement and the ...
The UK has traditionally exerted significant influence on the global human rights agenda through dip...
Brexit has removed the EU as an external support system that prevented devolution from escalating an...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
Looking back at New Labour’s 1997 election campaign, Nick O’Donovan highlights the importance of ide...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The tendency to consume news information to mitigate uncertainty is well-known to scholars. But cons...
Pandemics and the social and economic crises they cause are not inevitable, says Winnie Byanyima (Un...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
Joelle Grogan highlights some points of concern as regards the UK’s response to the pandemic, and ad...
David Spiegelhalter (University of Cambridge) and Anthony Masters (Royal Statistical Society) highli...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
In February 2015, the UK’s Investigatory Powers Tribunal ruled that data sharing systems between the...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
The government’s ‘deal’ with the EU is atrocious, writes Ruth Lea. The Withdrawal Agreement and the ...
The UK has traditionally exerted significant influence on the global human rights agenda through dip...
Brexit has removed the EU as an external support system that prevented devolution from escalating an...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
Looking back at New Labour’s 1997 election campaign, Nick O’Donovan highlights the importance of ide...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The term ‘impact’ has become so familiar that it is easy to forget how much effort was invested in e...
The tendency to consume news information to mitigate uncertainty is well-known to scholars. But cons...