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Helen Barnard from Joseph Rowntree Foundation wants to turn the tide of in-work poverty by putting progression out of low pay at the heart of what the sector does.
‘I was shocked at how little he [Rishi Sunak] did’ Helen Barnard from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation says she is ‘incredibly disappointed’ by the Chancellor’s Spring Statement. Watch on TV: Freeview 236, Sky 515, Virgin 626 Listen on DAB+ Radio Download the GB News App to watch live wherever you are, catch up with all our shows and get the latest news from the GBN family. 🤍 Don't forget to follow us on social media too! Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 LinkedIn: 🤍 TikTok: 🤍 Click here for the latest Covid-19 guidance from the World Health Organisation ► 🤍 Click here for the latest NHS information on COVID-19 vaccines 🤍
"Economic inactivity - it's about 400,000 people higher than it was pre-pandemic. And that growth is now being driven by rising ill health." Helen Barnard (Director of Policy and Research, Pro Bono Economics and Associate Director, Joseph Rowntree Foundation), discusses the challenges facing policy-makers & businesses of UK labour market. On Tuesday 15 February, the Work Foundation hosted their inaugural event of their Work Matters series. The expert panel of speakers reviewed the labour market statistics from the Office for National Statistics and what it meant in the run up to the Spring Budget in March 2022. For more information about the Work Matters series please see: 🤍theworkfoundation.com.
Helen Barnard, director of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, discusses the cost of living crisis with Trevor Phillips. She reveals some of the hardships many people are having to endure as incomes are squeezed. Last week it was revealed that the wife of Chancellor Rishi Sunak avoided paying millions of pounds in taxes in the UK while her husband was raising National Insurance for millions of people. SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more videos: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Instagram: 🤍 Follow us on TikTok: 🤍 For more content go to 🤍 and download our apps: Apple: 🤍 Android 🤍 Sky News videos are now available in Spanish here/Los video de Sky News están disponibles en español aquí 🤍 Sky News videos are also available in German here/Hier können Sie außerdem Sky News-Videos auf Deutsch finden: 🤍 To enquire about licensing Sky News content, you can find more information here: 🤍
Our Special Guest this week is Helen Barnard, Associate Director of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Help Ukraine Emergency Appeal: 🤍 Other Ways You Can Help (PDF Download): 🤍 Episode resources can be found on our website here: 🤍 Have We Got Planning News for You is a light-hearted review of the week's latest developments by five barristers from across the Planning Bar: Paul Tucker QC, Mary Cook, Sasha White QC, Charles Banner QC and Christopher Young QC. Intro: 00:00 Mary's Case: 05:45 Charlie's Case: 11:09 Paul's Case: 16:10 Sasha's Case: 20:14 Interview with Helen Barnard: 23:11 We five friends from different chambers/firms have decided to come together during COVID-19 to do a weekly hour-long show about the latest legal, policy and other news & decisions in the world of planning. Donate here: 🤍 Apple Podcasts: 🤍 Spotify: 🤍 Anchor: 🤍 Website: 🤍 Music provided by The Ruby Tuesdays: 🤍 Production: 🤍 #HWGPNFY
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Check out this thought provoking interview with Helen Barnard, Director at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Helen is responsible for driving forward JRF’s strategy to inspire action to solve UK poverty. In this interview we talk 'poverty'.
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Helen Barnard, (Director of Policy and Research, Pro Bono Economics and Associate Director, Joseph Rowntree Foundation),called on the Government to introduce a new Employment Bill at the next Queen's Speech in May to improve security at the bottom end of the labour market. On Tuesday 15 February, the Work Foundation hosted their inaugural event of their Work Matters series. The expert panel of speakers reviewed the labour market statistics from the Office for National Statistics and what it meant in the run up to the Spring Budget in March 2022. For more information about the Work Matters series please see: 🤍theworkfoundation.com.
'The big levelling up promises keep having the legs kicked out from under them. Because the Treasury isn't willing to put the money into the North that they are willing to put into London and the South East of England' Deputy Director of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Helen Barnard on the government's u-turns. Download the GB News App to watch live wherever you are, catch up with all our shows and get the latest news from the GBN family. 🤍 Don't forget to follow us on social media too! Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 LinkedIn: 🤍
'I think it's about making sure the money that's spent is good value and goes to the people that need it most... the government has to pick it's path very carefully.' Helen Barnard on making sure any spending from Covid measures is 'focused' on going where it's needed most. Download the GB News App to watch live wherever you are, catch up with all our shows and get the latest news from the GBN family. 🤍 Don't forget to follow us on social media too! Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 LinkedIn: 🤍 Click here for the latest Covid-19 guidance from the World Health Organisation ► 🤍
2017 Welsh Masters Closed
Women's 45+ Final Welsh Masters Open 2016 Sunday 11/12/16 Court 2
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Welsh Masters Open 2016 Saturday 10/12/16 Court 2
In this episode, Ronnie welcomes Jill Vexler, a cultural anthropologist who specializes in curating exhibitions about cultural identity and social history. She has brought her expertise to Barnard College as Project Manager of the exhibit called "Helen Suzman: Fighter for Human Rights." Suzman was a politician and member of South Africa's Parliament. The exhibit describes her work, her family and South Africa during apartheid. Talk show on issues and politics in New York City, hosted by Ronnie M. Eldridge. Watch more at 🤍tv.cuny.edu/series/eldridge.
’We need the Government to give some serious targeted help.’ Helen Barnard, from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, criticises the Government for their role in the UK’s cost of living crisis. Watch on TV: Freeview 236, Sky 515, Virgin 626 Listen on DAB+ Radio Download the GB News App to watch live wherever you are, catch up with all our shows and get the latest news from the GBN family. 🤍 Don't forget to follow us on social media too! Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 LinkedIn: 🤍 TikTok: 🤍 Click here for the latest Covid-19 guidance from the World Health Organisation ► 🤍 Click here for the latest NHS information on COVID-19 vaccines 🤍
Jaywick has become a byword for deprivation, suffering the stigma of topping the government's list of the most deprived areas in the country three times now. (Subscribe: 🤍 But like many of the other areas across the country which also feature high on what some call "the map of misery", despite being in government sights, nothing seems to change. In Jaywick a severe housing shortage has meant prefabs and chalets which were meant for occasional holidaymakers have become permanent homes. As they deteriorate, some of the most vulnerable people in society are left to live in appalling conditions, with housing benefit sent straight to the landlords for the privilege. It all speaks of a system failing the very poorest. I've been to Jaywick to talk to residents desperate for change. - Follow us on Instagram - 🤍
Social Research Association (North & Midlands Group) free evening seminar: Using Geographical Analysis to Influence Policy, held on 28 June 2017 at DWP in Leeds. Helen Barnard, Head of Analysis at the widely respected social research charity the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, will discuss a range of analyses to understand the geographical patterns of poverty. The seminar covers the aims of the analysis, the audiences and impacts, and challenges in relation to data, interpretation and how the work has been used. This is the first in a newly launched series of free seminars arranged by the SRA North and Midlands Group. (Helen Barnard leads the team undertaking JRF’s analysis and data monitoring work, focusing on social, economic and public policy trends and changes affecting people and places in poverty. Helen joined the Foundation in 2005 as a Policy and Research Manager. She has developed and led programmes of research and policy focusing on child poverty, labour markets, poverty and ethnicity, destitution and education. Before joining the Foundation she worked at BMRB Social Research and Opinion Leader Research, carrying out research on topics including benefits, tax credits and tax, education, and housing. Helen studied Social and Political Sciences at Clare College, Cambridge University.) Visit the SRA website: 🤍 Join the events & training mailing list: 🤍 Video by Steve Mason: stevemason785🤍yahoo.co.uk Please subscribe to see new videos as they are published.
Seniors at Barnard College look back on why they initially applied to Barnard College and what they learned and gained on their academic and personal journey. They share their surprises, their reflections, and their love for Barnard College and the community they found as they prepare to graduate.
‘Never let a good crisis go to waste’ was Churchill’s infamous wartime quip, and the early days of the pandemic seemed the ideal opportunity to pivot to a fairer way of life in Britain. Cherished systems were re-invented wholesale, underpaid frontline workers propped up the nation and big state intervention saved millions of lives – prime conditions for a shake-up of priorities. But as the months passed, it seemed COVID only magnified existing disadvantage and entrenched poverty further. The crisis cleaved the nation into the ‘exposed poor and the shielded rich’ (FT) and the nightly round of applause for NHS workers replaced pay rises, protections or altered conditions. Indeed, the wealth of British billionaires and tech companies rose to dizzying new peaks in the last two years, whilst its poorest areas struggled with high mortality rates and deepening poverty and desperation. How can we reverse this trend and break a 200-year high-inequality, high-poverty cycle that is only worsening? What can we learn from the ongoing pandemic, and how can we prevent the gulf widening even further in future years? Author and visiting fellow at the University of Bristol’s School of Policy Studies, Stewart Lansley is one of the country’s leading experts on inequality. He is joined by Professor Kate Pickett, co-director, The Equality Trust; Helen Barnard, associate director, Joseph Rowntree Foundation; and Anthony Painter, chief research and impact officer, RSA, to discuss what we should be aiming for in a truly fair Britain. The RSA’s research found that 30 percent of workers do not feel they earn enough to maintain a decent standard of living. Read more about the RSA’s work on economic insecurity, Universal Credit, and the levelling up debate. Become an RSA Events sponsor: 🤍 #RSAInequality Donate to The RSA: 🤍 Follow RSA Events on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the RSA on Twitter: 🤍 Like RSA Events on Facebook: 🤍 Listen to RSA Events podcasts: 🤍
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Joined by Helen Barnard from Pro Bono Economics, Dr Debbie Weekes-Bernard from the Greater London Authority, Eric Klinenberg from NYU, Heather Fraser from IBM, Mike Wilson from Pembroke House, The Law Family Commission on Civil Society in partnership with Ratio will explore the role of civil society, businesses and government in addressing the challenges of loneliness. After more than a year of lockdowns, social distancing and self-isolating, levels of loneliness in Britain have increased by almost 50%. Yet loneliness is not just a challenge for people experiencing it – with strong connections between loneliness and mental health, this also means more pressure on public services and adverse effects on businesses’ ability to function. Civil society has a major role to play in tackling loneliness – from neighbourhoods and communities, to networks and shared spaces, to charities focused on tackling the causes of loneliness. Yet this is not a challenge that one sector alone should solve, and there are important roles for both the government and the private sector to play. With all three sectors are invested in creating a less lonely society, how can they all work effectively together to achieve it? In this webinar, our expert panel explored the challenges and pay offs of addressing loneliness, the distinctive role each sector has to play in addressing it, and how the public and private sectors can work with civil society to both improve individuals’ wellbeing and to address the wider social and economic impacts of loneliness.
🤍 - Equal Opportunities Committee. Agenda: 1. Decision on taking business in private: The Committee will decide whether to take item 3 in private. 2. Removing Barriers: race, ethnicity and employment: The Committee will take evidence from— Helen Barnard, Policy and Research Manager, Joseph Rowntree Foundation; Maggie Kelly, Independent Consultant; Jim McCormick, Associate Director, Scotland, Joseph Rowntree Foundation. 3. Female Genital Mutilation: The Committee will consider its plans for an event at the beginning of 2016. We do not facilitate discussions on our YouTube page but encourage you to share and comment on our videos on your own channels. If you would like to join in our conversations please follow 🤍scotparl on Twitter or like us on Facebook: 🤍
Helen Barnard's vulnerability around the subject of disappointment in her life was so REAL. There are many women who go through what Helen is continuing to navigate and they think they are the only one. I am so grateful for Helen's honesty about her journey through singleness and our hope is that it brings encouragement to those watching who feel the same way.
More families are at risk of becoming trapped in poverty in Wales, according to a State of the Nation survey. But is full time work the answer? Helen Barnard from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation spoke with Julia Hartley-Brewer.
arr: Jordyn Tomlin CC'21 solos: Eva Mullineaux BC'20, Asiya Jaffer BC'20, Romina Tafreshi BC'20, Lizzy Phillips CC'20, Taylor Thompson BC'20, Hannah Welles BC'20
A tribute to South African anti-apartheid activist and liberal politician, Helen Suzman, 100 years after her birth.
New York City's Barnard College gathered influential African women leaders for the school's third annual Global Symposium in Johannesburg, South Africa. The event, Women Changing Africa, brought together exceptional women from across the continent—leaders in government, commerce, academia, media, and the arts—for a day of collaboration, networking and discussion, including two panels entitled, "Conversations on Leadership" and "Voices of the Next Generation." For more information, visit 🤍
As the country faces an extended period of cold weather, our panel of experts will be answering your questions on the cheapest way to keep warm, cold weather payments and more #CostOfLiving #Cold #SkyNews SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more videos: 🤍 Follow us on Twitter: 🤍 Like us on Facebook: 🤍 Follow us on Instagram: 🤍 Follow us on TikTok: 🤍 For more content go to 🤍 and download our apps: Apple: 🤍 Android 🤍 Sky News videos are now available in Spanish here/Los video de Sky News están disponibles en español aquí 🤍 Sky News videos are also available in German here/Hier können Sie außerdem Sky News-Videos auf Deutsch finden: 🤍 To enquire about licensing Sky News content, you can find more information here: 🤍
Source: 🤍 On #SkillsWorldLive tonight, guests: Glenys Stacey | Steven Cooper | Carl Ward | Helen Barnard | Alun Francis | Elena Magrini | Rebecca Conway are discussing Levelling up: from rhetoric to reality? #SkillsWorldLive 2.8: Thursday 29th October 2020 Presented by the Chief Executive of the Federation of 🤍AwardingBodies, Tom Bewick, #SkillsWorldLive is a new radio show that builds on the popular #SkillsWorld podcast series, where Tom interviews leading figures shaping the post-compulsory education and skills systems, including apprenticeships in the UK, and across the world. Tonight's Guests: Glenys Stacey- Chief Executive and Chief Regulator, Ofqual Steven Cooper - Commissioner, Social Mobility Commission Carl Ward - Executive Chairman at Foundation for Education Development Helen Barnard - Deputy Director of Policy and Partnerships, Joseph Rowntree Foundation Alun Francis, Principal and Chief Executive, Oldham College Elena Magrini - Analyst at Centre for Cities Rebecca Conway - Head of Policy and Strategy, Federation of Awarding Bodies We are looking for industry experts to get involved with the debate, and to offer their views, advice and recommendations to help support the education sector at this time of disruption and change. If you are keen to get involved, or you know others that are, please let us know, and send your questions and comments to: Email: skillsworld🤍fenews.co.uk Call: 020 32 900 111 Twitter: #SkillsWorldLive 🤍FENews Please let us know if there is an important topic you would like to debate that we haven’t included yet! Tune in to #SkillsWorldLive and subscribe here for notifications!