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Subject:

Fw: BA Science Festival: On Inequalities

From:

Jay Ginn <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Jay Ginn <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 24 Jul 2001 10:55:44 +0100

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-----Original Message-----
From: Mcdaid,D <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>
Date: 20 July 2001 16:46
Subject: BA Science Festival: On Inequalities



Dear All,

apologies for the inevitable cross posting, this event looks very good and
may be of interest to some of you

David


>From : Adrian Sinfield [[log in to unmask]]

PROMOTING SOCIAL POLICY AT THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION
All Welcome
BA Festival of Science, UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW
4 - 6  September 2001

This year I am putting up the full programme for the Social Policy and
Sociology Section, and not just the SPA contribution on the Thursday
morning, as I have been able to get details earlier.

This is the third year that the SPA has organised the papers for a half day
for the Sociology and Social Policy Section of the British Association for
the Advancement of Science, presenting some papers from this yearıs Social
Policy Review, which will be on sale at the session on Thursday morning. The
British Sociological Association presents the other papers that day.

While I hope that some of you will be able to come, my main reason for
publicising this is to ask you to tell people in the wider community who
might be interested.  The British Association for the Advancement of Science
exists to gain a wider audience for scientific work reaching beyond our
colleagues - and particularly including schoolteachers and potential
students.  So, if you know of any schools or continuing education courses
taking part in this yearıs Festival of Science, please encourage them to
come to our session.  Modern Studies courses should be particularly
interested.

The BA's charge for non-speakers is £15 for the half-day and £25 for a full
day, with reductions for BA members.  It is possible to register on the day.
Students pay £5 a day and Glasgow University students have free entry.  Full
details in the BA programme and at www.the-ba.net/festivalofsci That is what

you need to type and not stop at festival!  But it keeps coming up on my
screen in this very odd way!

There will be flyers at Belfast for anyone who wants them.

Adrian Sinfield


BA FESTIVAL OF SCIENCE, UNIVERSITY OF GLASGOW

Tuesday, September 4th  -  Kelvin Building, room 222
Presidentıs Day. President: Professor David Donnison
Theme: Inequality
Investigating equality and inequality in all aspects of life, from
healthcare to education to the notion of restorative justice. Is inequality
linked to age, class or profession? Why do we still have so much inequality
in this country? What can be done to balance the scales? This will relate
mainly to society using science as a means to make sense of itself. Each
paper will be followed by a discussion led by members of the CAP Network of
the Poverty Alliance.

10:00 -10:45 Introduction - Professor David Donnison: University of Glasgow

10:45-11:15  Health Inequalities - Professor Ken Judge: University of
Glasgow
of the Poverty Alliance
11:15-12:00  Inequalities in the Labour Market - David Webster:
Glasgow City Council
This paper will consider how unemployment is measured in order to disclose
the huge scale and geographically concentrated nature of Britainıs problem
of worklessness, and will spell out the implications for policy.

12:00-12:45  Inequalities of Income - Professor David Piachaud:
London School of Economics
Social spending intended to redistribute income and opportunities has
increased dramatically over the last 50 years. Equality, however, has not
increased. Has redistribution failed? What contribution can redistribution
make to equality in the future?

2:00-2:45 Educational Inequalities - Professor Lindsay Paterson:
University of Edinburgh
This paper surveys the evidence on patterns of educational inequality in
several parts of the UK since the middle of the twentieth century, and also
the history of political and academic thinking about educational inequality.


2:45-3:30 Restorative justice: achieving a better balance?
Professor David Miers: Cardiff University
Restorative justice is a world-wide initiative designed to give victims of
crime an opportunity to tell their offenders about the personal impact of
their offending, and to encourage offenders to accept responsibility for,
and to repair, the harm they caused.

3:30-4:00 Poverty and Inequalities - members of the Poverty Alliance,
including Frank McCarter


Wednesday, September 5th  - Humanities lecture theatre, Main building
Departmental Day.
Theme -  Bridging the Divide: Linking people and communities with the
mainstream.
This is local day from the host department incorporating talks on criminal
justice, family policy, children's issues, disability issues, gerontology,
community development and participation, poverty and income inequality
research, community care and more.

10:00-10:45 Building Social Capital: Implications for people with learning
disabilities - Professor Sheila Riddell: Strathclyde Centre for Disability
Research

11:15-12:00 Reducing Social Exclusion amongst Recovering Drug Addicts -
Professor Neil McKeganey and Professor Jim McIntosh: University of Glasgow
In this paper we will look at the impact of drug addiction on the family
life of addicts in Scotland and consider the opportunities for rebuilding
the addict's links with his or her family and recovering a sense of self
esteem.

12:00-12:45 Consulting Children and Young People - Professor Malcolm Hill:
University of Glasgow
The presentation will review the purposes and methods of consulting children
and young people. Particular attention will be given to assessments of
consultation processes involving children in general and looked-after young
people

2:00-2:45  Bitch or Lover: How men construe women in violent relationships-
Professor Joan Orme: University of Glasgow
This paper describes research that evaluated a programme for perpetrators of
domestic violence and examines how men construe women in these
relationships.

2:45-3:30  Making a Difference: The usefulness of community projects in
areas of social need - Professor Bob Holman: University of Glasgow
Bob Holman was involved in a community project on the Southdown Estate,
Bath, 1976-86. In 1998, he went back and asked 51 former youngsters about
its influence upon them. For the last 15 years, he has worked and lived in
Easterhouse, Glasgow, and will compare the two projects.

3:30-4:15 Thresholds and Limits: Making sense of the requirements of older
people with support needs - Professor Alison Petch: University of Glasgow
Political debate over the funding of long-term care raises important
questions as to the preferences and needs of older people themselves. These
questions will be explored in a presentation drawing on research with
individuals receiving intensive support packages.


Thursday, September 6th - Kelvin Building, room 222
Social Policy Association and British Sociological Association Speakers

10:00-10:45  People and Their Money: Theory and Practice in Personal
Finances - Professor Jan Pahl: University of Kent at Canterbury
Do we make rational choices with regard to our money? This research examined
the economic, social and cultural factors which affect relationships between
people and their money, and explored the implications for social policy and
financial exclusion.

11:15-12:00 Community values and social morals: welfare realities in Blair's
Britain
Dr. Emma Heron: Sheffield Hallam University
The Labour governmentıs social and public policy agenda emphasises social
and moral behaviour. Recent policy developments emerge around an axis of
rights and responsibilities. This can be seen in particular within the
worlds of housing and regeneration, social security, criminal justice and
education.

12:00-12:45  The Welfare of Future Generations - Dr. Tony Fitzpatrick:
University of Nottingham
As systems of social insurance unravel, the idea that there is a contract
between generations becomes less meaningful. Can we reinvent the notion of
an intergenerational contract? What kind of social policies might be
appropriate?

2:00-2:45  Place and Urban Renewal - Professor Gareth Williams
Regeneration is in fashion. No-one is entirely sure what it means and some
communities are fed up with being regenerated. Studies of regeneration in
'deprived communities' are exploring the need for more partnership and
participation and how this can be achieved.

2:45-3:30 Promoting Mental Health and Well being: a challenge to society -
Professor Steven Platt : University of Edinburgh
The relationship between the organisation of society and the health of the
population is reciprocal and inter-dependent. An integrated and
inter-sectoral approach to tackling mental ill-health and enhancing
well-being is long overdue.

4:00-4:45 Transforming Scotland: Devolution and the State of Britain -
Professor David McCrone: University of Edinburgh
Two years after the Scottish Parliament was established, how are we to
assess its impact? To what extent has it begun to transform Scotland? Has
Scottish devolution had much impact on the rest of the UK?

******************************************************
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Radstats list is set up for public discussion so please be generous with your
thoughts and share them us all.
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