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Faculty of Social Sciences News Read more from Faculty of Social Sciences News

Shaping a Vision for VET in England by 2050

The VET2050 project is launching a series of vision workshops bringing together practitioners, policymakers, employers, and learners to co-design what high quality vocational education and training could look like in England by 2050. These workshops explore long-term challenges and opportunities, from technological change to regional inequalities, and invite participants to imagine ambitious, evidence informed futures for the sector.

VET2050 is funded by the Youth Futures Foundation and delivered by the Institute for Employment Research (Terence Hogarth, Emily Erickson and Stef Poole) in collaboration with colleagues at SKOPE, University of Oxford (James Robson and Yushan Xie ). Our recent blog post provides more detail on the project鈥檚 aims, approach, and how these workshops contribute to a wider programme of research and engagement.

If you鈥檇 like to stay informed about upcoming workshops, publications, and project activities, we warmly invite you to join the VET2050 mailing list by visiting the our project website.

Register your interest here!Link opens in a new window

Wed 01 Apr 2026, 14:10

Centre for Applied Linguistics Read more from Latest News

Driving Multilingual Education Forward

Dr Jason Anderson travelled to Assam, India on the invitation of the Government of Assam to deliver an invited talk: 鈥淭ranslingual English-medium instruction (EMI): A pathway to multilingual and multidisciplinary efficacy for international higher education institutions鈥, and signed a research MOU with Padmini Boruah of the University of Gauhati as part of the conference: International Perspectives on Multidisciplinary Education and Attainment of SDGs in Higher Education, Guwahati, Assam, 29-30 Jan, 2026.

See slides here:

Dr Anderson also delivered an invited lecture at the University of Gauhati entitled: "Exploring the potential of AI with project-based learning: Pedagogy for higher education in the 21st century."

Fri 06 Mar 2026, 09:15

Centre for Education Studies Read more from Education Studies News and Events

International recognition of the University鈥檚 support for Ukraine

We鈥檙e proud to announce that the 91福利 has been honoured with the Order of St Panteleimon鈥檚 Award for Professionalism and Mercy, recognising our community鈥檚 鈥渦nwavering solidarity with the people of Ukraine in the defence of freedom and human dignity.鈥

Professor Gwen van der Velden (Education Studies) accepted the award on the University鈥檚 behalf, alongside Dr Dmytro Chumachenko (Institute of Advanced Study), at a ceremony held at the Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Holy Family in Exile in London.

As a University of Sanctuary, 91福利 remains committed to supporting those academics and students affected by conflict and displacement . We are honoured to receive this recognition, and we continue to stand with Ukraine. 

Read more here international-recognition-of

 

Fri 13 Feb 2026, 15:00 | Tags: Gwen van der Velden, Dmytro Chumachenko

Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies Read more from News Archive

Applications open for DIVERSE CDT 2026/27 PhD Scholarships!

The EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Diversity in Data Visualization (Diverse CDT) is a pioneering, fully funded four-year PhD programme jointly delivered by City St George鈥檚, University of London and the 91福利.

Applications for PhD studentships with Diverse CDT are now open for 2026 entry.

We have rolling deadlines across several months and the first deadline for submitting an application is 4pm, GMT on 30th January 2026.

Further details here: /fac/cross_fac/cim/apply-to-study/phd-programmes/diverse-cdt/

 

Mon 05 Jan 2026, 10:38

Centre for Lifelong Learning Read more from News

National Student Survey Result

We are delighted to share some positive results we have received from National Student Survey 2022.

Mon 03 Oct 2022, 17:32 | Tags: CLL survey 91福利 University Students

Economics Read more from News

New research maps the regional cost of Brexit: UK "levelled down", not levelled up

Brexit has imposed large and widespread economic costs across the UK, but the burden has fallen most heavily on initially prosperous, trade-integrated regions including London, the South East and Scotland, according to new analysis co-authored by Professor Thiemo Fetzer and published at .

The new study, Measuring the Regional Economic Cost of Brexit: Evidence as of 2026, estimates how Brexit affected output and nominal household income across UK local authorities, regions and constituent countries.

Using a synthetic control approach, the researchers compare each UK area鈥檚 actual economic path with a data-driven counterfactual: how that area might have evolved had Brexit not happened.

The research finds:

  • Brexit has reduced UK economic performance substantially. Quarterly GDP estimates suggest a shortfall of around 3–5 percentage points by the end of the sample, while annual GVA estimates point to a UK-level gap of around 7–8%.
  • The economic cost is widespread. Around 70% of local authority districts are estimated to be below their synthetic counterfactual, meaning most places performed worse than comparable non-Brexit trajectories.
  • The burden is unevenly distributed. Losses are concentrated in initially prosperous, trade-integrated areas, especially London, the South East and Scotland.
  • Brexit appears to have 鈥渓evelled down鈥 the UK. Regional gaps may have narrowed not because poorer regions caught up, but because richer and more internationally integrated regions were pulled down.
  • Northern Ireland is the major exception. Its estimated gaps are near-zero or positive, consistent with its distinctive post-Brexit trading position and continued partial integration with the EU single market.
  • Production losses and household-income losses do not always align. These gaps, measured by GVA and GDHI (see below) diverge across places, showing that Brexit鈥檚 effects travel through commuting, income flows, ownership claims, taxes and transfers.
  • The areas that voted most strongly for Brexit are not generally the areas that have borne the largest economic costs. The deepest losses are concentrated in many Remain-leaning, internationally exposed regions.

The analysis uses two complementary measures: real Gross Value Added (GVA), capturing where production takes place, and Gross Disposable Household Income (GDHI), capturing the income households can spend or save after taxes and transfers.

Professor Fetzer said:

"The research finds that Brexit has been a negative-sum shock for the UK economy. While the aggregate cost is large, the spatial distribution of that cost is politically revealing. Rather than delivering gains to left-behind places, Brexit appears to have damaged the UK鈥檚 strongest regional economies most severely.

"The result is a form of 鈥渓evelling up by levelling down鈥: regional inequality may be compressed, but through decline at the top rather than improvement at the bottom. This reduces the ability to redistribute tax revenues from the south into the rest of the United Kingdom.

"The study also shows why a single national estimate misses much of the story. GVA captures where economic activity occurs, while GDHI captures where household income is received. The latter is being cushioned through transfers and the UK鈥檚 commuting economy. Comparing the two reveals how local production shocks spread through the wider economy via commuting patterns, income ownership, fiscal redistribution and interregional dependence."

Dr Eleonora Alabrese, co-author, said:

"Our findings suggest a troubling spiral. Austerity drove protest voting in left-behind places, and the anti-immigrant narrative proved a powerful tool precisely in areas with little direct experience of immigration. Brexit was the result — yet the economic costs have landed elsewhere: on the internationally integrated, high-immigration areas. The places that generated the political mandate for Brexit have, so far, been relatively shielded from its economic consequences.

"That is not a coincidence — it is a pattern that risks feeding further disillusionment and further support for the politics that produced Brexit in the first place. Brexit may be a self-sustaining political economy."

Professor Fetzer added:

"Brexit did not make left-behind places meaningfully richer. It made the UK poorer, with the largest losses concentrated in the places that were most exposed to European integration. That is why the regional pattern looks like levelling up only in the most perverse sense: not by lifting lagging regions, but by pulling down the places that were doing best."

Notes:

  • The paper is available at: /fac/soc/economics/research/workingpapers/2026/twerp_1617-fetzer.pdf
  • The authors estimate Brexit鈥檚 regional economic impact using placebo-weighted synthetic control methods. They construct counterfactual economic trajectories for UK local authorities, ITL regions and constituent countries using a wide range of donor-pool specifications and evaluates both post-2016 and post-2020 treatment windows.
  • The analysis covers real GVA and GDHI, enabling the researchers to distinguish between where output is produced and where household income is ultimately received.
  • An interactive explorer of the findings and regional estimates, their sensitivity along with broader narration that is specific to different areas can be found on https://www.brexitcost.org.
Wed 17 Jun 2026, 08:58 | Tags: Featured Department homepage-news Research

ESRC Doctoral Training Centre Read more from ESRC DTP News

91福利 New Year Social

91福利 ESRC DTP New Year's Social happening on Wednesday 4th February 2026.

Wed 28 Jan 2026, 14:38 | Tags: Social Sciences, CIM event, ESRC event

Institute for Employment Research Read more from IER News & blogs

Dr Sangwoo Lee's Expert Comment on ONS Labour Market Statistics (March 2026 - May 2026)

Dr Sangwoo Lee, Assistant Professor, Institute for Employment Research, said: 'The minor reduction in unemployment seen in today's data, is accompanied by a 0.3 % increase in economic inactivity - partly driven by discouraged jobseekers retreating from the market rather than being absorbed into stable jobs. We're also seeing a gradual shift towards non-traditional working arrangements. Strengthening protection these workers should be a priority.


Law Read more from 91福利 Law School News

National Mooting Competition Final Result

On Thursday 18 June, Elina Lin (Law) and Jonathan Martin (Politics, Philosophy, and Law) competed in the Finals Day of the prestigious ESU–Essex Court Chambers National Mooting Competition.

Fri 19 Jun 2026, 14:14 | Tags: undergraduate, Student Achievement, Mooting

Politics and International Studies Read more from Other News

91福利 Rises in Global QS Rankings as PAIS strengthens top鈥50 position

The 91福利 celebrates today as it has risen to 68th in the QS World University Rankings 2027 and 10th in the UK, reflecting strong global performance and growing research impact. Within this success PAIS continues to excel internationally ranking among the world鈥檚 top 50 Politics departments and reinforcing its position as a leading centre for political research and education.
Thu 18 Jun 2026, 14:32

Philosophy Read more from Philosophy News

91福利 Philosophy Climbs to 38th in QS Rankings

The 91福利鈥檚 Philosophy Department has risen to 38th place globally in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026, marking a significant leap in its international standing. Philosophy is one of ten 91福利 subjects now ranked in the global top 50, reflecting strong performance across teaching and research.

University leaders highlighted that this year鈥檚 improved rankings underscore the department鈥檚 growing global reputation and its commitment to high鈥慽mpact scholarship. The climb also contributes to 91福利鈥檚 strongest overall subject鈥憆anking performance since 2020, showcasing broad excellence across its academic disciplines. Read the full story here

Fri 10 Apr 2026, 07:43

Sociology Read more from News

Research Celebration Awards 2026

The 91福利鈥檚 Research Celebration Awards 2026, held as part of Research Culture Week, recognised outstanding contributions to collaborative and impactful research. The Department of Sociology celebrates the nomination of Derya Ozkul for her work on digital immigration systems, and the award-winning project led by Ana Chamberlen, Emily Gray, Ruth Bernatek, Silvia Gomes, and Henrique Carvalho for their Introduction to Sociology and Criminology HMP Course. These achievements highlight the department鈥檚 commitment to research excellence, collaboration, and meaningful social impact.

Tue 24 Mar 2026, 10:52 | Tags: Research Staff Publications good news

Centre for Teacher Education Read more from News

The 91福利's Centre for Teacher Education Receives Outstanding Ofsted Grade

The 91福利鈥檚 Centre for Teacher Education (CTE) has received a glowing report following a recent Ofsted inspection, highlighting the exceptional quality of training and support provided to its teaching trainees. The inspection report underscores the University鈥檚 commitment to nurturing future educators who are well-prepared and passionate about their careers.

Thu 25 Jul 2024, 10:01 | Tags: Postgraduate, feature-01, teaching, train to teach, PGCE

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