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VISITING SPEAKER: New and Complementary Approaches to Equality

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Today's date is Friday, March 29, 2024
New and Complementary Approaches to Equality : Guest lecture regarding alternative ways to achieve equality policy objectives Other events...
The presentation is concerned with alternative ways to achieve equality policy objectives - drawing upon unrelated areas such as dietary health or workplace health and safety. It is based on current inter-disciplinary work with the UK Government to generate practical insights to inform policy and institutional design. It begins by assessing how well - and why - interventions work to mitigate public harm or detriment in other unrelated spheres (such as public health, food safety, professional standards and financial regulation). Citing the public interest, government and regulatory agencies are able to utilise such knowledge to deliver safer homes, more punctual pupils, healthier diets, cleaner streets, and so on. It then looks at how far attitudinal change and behavioural change are interconnected, and specifically the degree to which attitudinal change serves as a pre-requisite to behavioural change. For instance, securing a legal framework that creates minimum standards of fire safety in workplaces or homes may be influenced by public attitudes but is certainly not dependent on such settled public attitudes to start with. Indeed, legislation, and what this requires of employers and households in practice, can have a demonstration effect, normalising behavioural change in the process. And attitudinal change alone is unlikely to drive behavioural change and may be unwanted or unnecessary in any case, particularly where the potential citizen detriment is hard to spot by individuals themselves. Finally, it considers the implications for policymaking in three regards: first, optimally blending incentives and sanctions to sustain behavioural change relevant to equalities outcomes; second, mapping relationships between background factors that indirectly shape decision-making and choices and foreground factors that can be influenced through policy; and third, targeting policy instruments at hard-to-move individuals, groups and interests.
Speaker(s) Shamit Sagger (Professor of Political Science, University of Sussex & former Senior Policy Advisor in the UK Prime Minister's Strategy Unit, Cabinet Office)
Location Myers Street Lecture Theatre (2nd Floor), Myers Street Building
Contact Dr Petra Buergelt <[email protected]> : 0404877798
Start Mon, 20 Aug 2012 15:00
End Mon, 20 Aug 2012 16:15
Submitted by Petra Buergelt <[email protected]>
Last Updated Fri, 02 May 2014 13:41
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