Home About us Contact | |||
UK Response (uk + response)
Selected AbstractsSolidarity and Difference: A Contemporary Reading of Paul's EthicsCONVERSATIONS IN RELIGION & THEOLOGY, Issue 1 2006Article first published online: 24 APR 200 Books reviewed: Solidarity and Difference: A Contemporary Reading of Paul's Ethics, David G. Horrell Reviewed by Leslie Houlden Temple Balsall, UK Response to Leslie Houlden By David G. Horrell University of Exeter, UK [source] Roman Wives, Roman Widows: The Appearance of New Women and the Pauline CommunitiesCONVERSATIONS IN RELIGION & THEOLOGY, Issue 1 2006Article first published online: 24 APR 200 Books reviewed: Roman Wives, Roman Widows: The Appearance of New Women and the Pauline Communities, Bruce W. Winter Reviewed by Helen K. Bond School of Divinity Edinburgh University, UK Response to Helen Bond By Bruce W. Winter University of Cambridge, UK [source] The Impact of Shocks on the UK Economy in and Out of EMUECONOMIC OUTLOOK, Issue 4 2002Article first published online: 16 DEC 200 Entry to EMU at an inappropriate exchange rate could trigger a full-blown business cycle in the UK. Once inside EMU, the UK's response to a number of different economic shocks would change , partly because of the fixed exchange rate, and partly because of the common monetary policy. In particular, when an asymmetric shock occurs , one that hits the UK harder than other Eurozone economies , the UK response is generally likely to be more pronounced inside EMU than outside. We find that that result still applies even in a reformed EMU , one in which the ECB and the labour market are reformed to bring them closer to the Anglo,Saxon model. [source] From Head Start to Sure Start: Reflections on Policy TransferCHILDREN & SOCIETY, Issue 2 2010John Welshman This article uses the history of debates over the US Head Start programme (1965), Early Head Start (1994) and the UK Sure Start initiative (1998), as a window on to policy transfer. In all the three, the aim was that early intervention could offer a means of boosting children's educational attainment and of countering the wider effects of poverty on development. Nevertheless, there were also important differences between them. The first part of the article looks at UK responses to Head Start, the second at Early Head Start and the creation and subsequent direction taken by Sure Start. In the Conclusion, we sum up the arguments relating to Head Start and Sure Start and offer some broader reflections on policy transfer. [source] The Impact of Shocks on the UK Economy in and Out of EMUECONOMIC OUTLOOK, Issue 4 2002Article first published online: 16 DEC 200 Entry to EMU at an inappropriate exchange rate could trigger a full-blown business cycle in the UK. Once inside EMU, the UK's response to a number of different economic shocks would change , partly because of the fixed exchange rate, and partly because of the common monetary policy. In particular, when an asymmetric shock occurs , one that hits the UK harder than other Eurozone economies , the UK response is generally likely to be more pronounced inside EMU than outside. We find that that result still applies even in a reformed EMU , one in which the ECB and the labour market are reformed to bring them closer to the Anglo,Saxon model. [source] |