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7828 results for: ‘Primary Education’

  • ‘You want Pay-Rise with that?’ Strike Action, Fast-Food Style

    Posted by Paul Brook in School of Business Blog on November 19, 2014 In the age of much austerity and few alternatives, Paul Brook , Senior Lecturer in the Sociology of Work and Employment at the School, makes a renewed claim for a politics of labour mobilisation   Not...

  • Nigerian Judiciary Workers and the Pursuit of Good Governance

    Posted by awynne in School of Business Blog on June 24, 2015 Senior Lecturer in Public Financial Management at the School, Andrew Wynne , considers the explicitly contested – and implicitly concealed – issue of good governance in Nigeria There have been numerous calls for a...

  • Work-life balance supports improve employee well-being

    Posted by Stephen Wood in School of Business Blog on February 19, 2018 In this blog post Professor Stephen Wood presents some interesting findings on work-life balance and well-being, arguing that the main reasons for the improvement of employee well-being where work-life...

  • The Appeal of Hybrid Working

    Homeworking’s contradictory nature means in its pure form it can never be a perfect answer, but this means that hybrid working has the potential to be an alternative imperfectly perfect working arrangement.

  • School of Business Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 4

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Job Security in the Public Sector is Dwindling

    Posted by Stephen Wood in School of Business Blog on November 27, 2013 Professor Stephen Wood, co-author of the latest Workplace Employment Relations Survey (WERS) Report, “Employment Relations in the Shadow of Recession” , suggests the Government’s austerity programme will...

  • Inequality causes Corruption…or is it the other way around?

    Posted by awynne in School of Business Blog on September 25, 2015 Senior Lecturer in Public Financial Management at the School, Andy Wynne , briefly surveys one of today’s most pressing debates Last December, in Paris, attendees at an OECD donor symposium entitled...

  • The Morning after Brexit

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on July 5, 2016   Brendan Lambe. Lecturer in Finance and an Irish European, reflects on the meaning of the referendum.   On the morning of the 24 th of June we awoke to a Britain which had changed utterly.

  • What happens when the cash disappears?

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on February 17, 2017   ULSB PhD student Secki Jose explores the paradoxical effects of India’s recent decision to get rid of some of its banknotes to combat corruption. Secki can be emailed on spj15@le.ac.uk.

  • Macron’s railway reforms: the ultimate test for French trade unionism

    Posted by hconnolly in School of Business Blog on April 19, 2018   In this blog Dr Heather Connolly reflects on the on-going strike action in France.

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