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Welcome. This website comprises mostly Hilary's sociological papers and articles about patriarchy, (gendered) harmful practices (e.g. female genital mutilation / FGM) and thoughts on science, health, environmental issues, sociological analysis, social policy and good practice.

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Launching The BURA Regeneration Equality And Diversity Framework

February 16, 2008

Next week sees the launch in Westminster, London of the British Urban Regeneration Association (BURA) Regeneration Equality and Diversity Framework. The BURA Board has unanimously resolved to try honestly to do what regeneration is supposed to do – reduce inequality and discrimination through the creation of environments where people can lead sustainable, happy and fulfilling lives.
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How Many Science And Technology Graduates In Liverpool And Merseyside?

January 8, 2008

The Liverpool city region (Merseyside) looks on available evidence to have only about half the number of scientists which might be expected on the basis of the overall national statistics.  The reasons for this deficit are not immediately obvious, given the number of HE institutions in the sub-region.

So by what indicators might Merseyside measure progress in the retention and development of graduate scientists and technologists?

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King’s Cross: Community And Colossal Opportunity Combined

November 9, 2007

The renewal of King’s Cross – St Pancras and all that surrounds it is long overdue, but it looks to be a spectacular project worth the wait. The final moves to achieve success in terms of the local community will however require those who should, to put their heads above the parapet so that everything comes together to make the best possible result. This project will ‘work’ for everyone as long as people really try to collaborate to get it right.

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Liverpool: Governance, Growth And Going (Somewhere)

October 15, 2007

Abrupt curtailment of the 2007 Mathew Street Festival, silly ideas about removing fish so the docks become a concert arena, questions about preparations for the Big Year. Liverpool 2008 is a drama unto itself. The leading arts venues have devised a pretty good cultural programme for European Capital of Culture Year, but concerns about what else needs to be done remain…. There’s a jolly good row going on in Liverpool just now.
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What Makes A Good Regeneration Worker?

October 5, 2007

All regeneration and strategic planning professionals need to have excellent formal qualifications and wide experience; the job is far too important for anything less. But what other characteristics are also required to make a good regeneration official into an outstanding agent of delivery on the ground? A list of such characteristics follows, starting from a rather specific observational position. Here are some suggested stereotypical characteristics of the ideal regeneration or urban / rural planning worker:
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Sky-High Homes For The UK’s Regional Cities?

September 18, 2007

How many people reading this article actually live in a city centre? How many readers live in a high-rise apartment? And how many of these readers are aged 30-50? My guess is that fewer readers live in high-rise than have views on them; the evidence certainly shows that most people past a certain age choose to live in suburbia or out-of-town. So is the commercial emphasis on city centre ‘executive’ apartments sustainable?
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Graduate Retention Strategies: Ageist, Sexist Or Just Shortsighted?

March 11, 2007

Graduate retention is a serious aspect of any decent policy for regeneration. But the emphasis on new / young graduates alone is strange, when there are always also other highly qualified and more experienced people who might offer at least as much in developing economies. A recurring theme in the regeneration of cities and regions is the emphasis on retention of graduates, is generally a task allocated to the regional universities which have educated them. But is the talent hunt wide enough?
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Policy-Related Scientific Research In Context

February 24, 2007

Avian influenza (‘bird flu’) has again made us aware of the scientific research which underpins government policy. Some have great faith in this science, others have none.
Our growing understandings of how scientific research and public policy inter-relate can however help inform both science itself, and how political / policy decisions might be taken in real life has provoked quite a debate in The Guardian about how science and politics inter-relate.

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Science And Regeneration

December 9, 2006

Science may sometimes be difficult for people in regeneration to understand; and perhaps this doesn’t always matter. But we do all need to see what science in its operation and applications has to offer. For optimal outcomes at every level dialogue between scientists and regeneration practitioners is critical.

Why is science important in regeneration? And why, if it is important, is it also largely invisible in that field?

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The Conference Diversity Index

September 22, 2006

Conferences involving public funds and public policy are still too often devised and conducted as though the vast majority of the population were white, male, able-bodied and middle class.   The time has come to start measuring in some way the extent to which this limited approach offers the general public value for money. This is the twenty first century. We in Britain live in a democratic and accountable society run, on the whole, by people who are serious about ‘getting it right’.
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No-Win Or Win-Win Gender And Babies Agenda?

March 1, 2006

Choosing if and when to have a baby has never been an easy decision, especially if both partners want to continue in employment.  More recently the debate has shifted a little, and perhaps a deeper understanding is emerging of what ‘work-life balance’ is about.  But the question still to be asked is how can you get it right, if you’re a mum who wants to make her way in the world of work?

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Big Science, Technology And The New Localism

February 1, 2006

Big Science is a central part of the U.K. economy.  The Knowledge Economy, with science and technology as the tangible drivers, is critical to economic success.   But for many in regeneration, Big Science remains a mystery, especially at the level of the ‘new localism’.  Here we consider regeneration strategies, science policy and the synergy of science and economies at regional and local level.

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HOPES Millennium Commission Presentation (London, 22 September 2000)

November 1, 2005

HOPES: The Hope Street Association (Liverpool) was honoured by being invited in September 2000 to give the ‘community festival’ perspective at a national meeting in London attended by the Secretary of State for Culture, Chris Smith M.P., the Millennium Commissioners, their special guests and members of the national press and other media.

This is the paper written and presented on that occasion by HOPES’ founding hon. Chair, Hilary Burrage

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Cultural Leadership And Vision In Cities

October 12, 2005

When and how does a Big Town become a City? And, just as importantly, how does a Great City ensure it will never seem to be just a Very Big Town?
Doubtless we all have our first-off answers to this slightly strange question; but at base we would probably agree it’s not simply Size that matters. Quality rather than just Quantity is what counts in the metropolis status stakes – as perhaps would also an Elected Mayor.

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Cultural Tourism As A Catalyst For Renaissance (Arts-Based Community Development)

October 12, 2005

The Mersey Partnership Cultural Impact Conference
Wednesday 31 July 2002, Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts:  
Cultural Tourism as a Catalyst for Renaissance
This brief presentation will look at some of the things which I hope perhaps represent best practice in local Arts-Based Community Action & Development (ABCA /D) and then examine a number of threads which may lead us to consider the challenges and opportunities of such activity.

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HOPES And The Two Hope Street Cathedrals

October 12, 2005

Northern European Cathedrals Conference, 26 January 2005,  Talk given in Liverpool Cathedral:   The Hope Street Quarter, Liverpool  (Cultural Tourism as a Catalyst for Renaissance)
HOPES: The Hope Street Association was formed in the early 1990s as a result of widening the work of the voluntary group CAMPAM, the Campaign to Promote the Arts on Merseyside.

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Regionalism And The Very High Skills Knowledge Economy

October 12, 2005

Which is the more challenging?
Is it to install, say, a number of large-scale commercial manufacturing units for similar but complex products in several sites across Europe? Or to bring to functionality, as other possible example, a particle accelerator (synchrotron) involving resources from many separate locations, but on one site?    And who, in each case, should lead the development of the programme?

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Hilary's Publications

August 16, 2005

Please note:
Hilary’s more recent public commentary is posted as on this website as the category Hilary’s Publications, Lectures & Talks.

Hilary’s lectures, reports, publications responsibilities & published papers include ~
(tbc) 2010: A Million Small Conversations, book on dialogue to support positive public service and other social transitions in a rapidly changing world
(tbc) late 2009: ‘Green Hubs, Social Inclusion and Community Engagement’, in a professional journal
2009: ‘From Regeneration to Sustainability: A northern take on knowledge’, Journal of Urban Regeration and Renewal, October
2009: ‘Where should we put the ‘evidence base’ when we make policy?’, New Start blog, July
2009: Biography (‘The tale of a jobbing sociologist’), British Sociological Association Sociologists Outside Academia magazine, June
2009: ‘Can Liverpool’s Arts And Culture Businesses Thrive Post-2008?’, Liverpool Chamber magazine of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce, January / February
2009: ‘Was Liverpool a truly inclusive Capital of Culture in 2008?’, New Start magazine, January
2008: ‘Arachnid ‘art’, big toys and cultural communties’, a-n magazine, December
2008: ‘Liverpool 08: Cultural Turn or Cultural Tourism?’, lecture at the Architectural Association seminar supported by the Architectural Review, London, 5 December
2008: ‘If only scientists could remember – science has its responsibilities’, an analysis of the DIUS A Vision for Science and Society, Science Review, 5 November.
2008: DIUS Science and Society consultation submission, October
2008: From ‘Regeneration to Sustainability: A Northern Take On Knowledge’, keynote address at the NUREC conference, Liverpool, 28 July
2008: ‘Regeneration Rethink’ (equality and diversity), Public Service Review: Transport, Local Government and the Regions, issue 12, Spring
2008: ‘Places for People: Hope Street Quarter as a case study’, Communities and the Public Realm Masterclass, Bradford, 21 April
2008: ‘Alice in economic context’, (re: Big Science in Regional Economic Contexts: Daresbury Laboratory and the ALICE programme) Education Guardian letters page, 13 April
2008: Introductory speaker (and instigator) at the BURA Equality and Diversity Network Launch, London, 20 February
2008: Member, Editorial Support Team, Neighbourhood: The International Journal of Neighbourhood Renewal
2007: Putting scientific research in context, The Guardian (letters), 17 February
2006: ‘Can I have a speaker that reflects the community? Too white, too male and too posh. It’s time conferences had an injection of diversity’, New Start, 27 October, p.11 (website version)
2006: ‘Should women be starting more businesses?’, Vision (Liverpool Daily Post‘s regional business magazine), Summer, p.52
2006: Sure Start in Halewood: Service Provision Overview, report for Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council, March
2006: ‘No-Win or Win-Win Gender and Babies Agenda?‘, Diverse Liverpool , March, pp. 113-115
2006: ‘Knowledge Economies and Big Science: A challenge for governance,’ Centre for Local Economic Strategies (CLES) Local Work: Voice, No.68, February (website version)
2006: ‘Make a move too far and you might find yourself exposed’, New Start, 27 January, p.11 (website version)
2005: ‘Regional Issues around the Very High Skills Knowledge Economy’, Knowledge Economy Network Conference, London
2005: Evaluation Report on the Positive Activities for Young People (PAYP) & Schools and Youth Service (SaYS) Collaborative Programme, Salford Youth Service
2005: ‘The Hope Street Quarter, Liverpool’, Northern European Cathedrals Conference, Liverpool2002: ‘Cultural Tourism as a Catalyst for Renaissance’, Mersey Partnership Cultural Impact Conference.
2000: Paper presented to the Secretary of State for Culture, and the Millennium Commissioners on the Hope Street Millennium Festival, London, September
2000: ‘Imagine all the people – and all the things they’d do…..‘, Manifesto for a New Liverpool (eds: M. Lyons & J. Egan), University of Liverpool et al
2000: Art at the Heart: The Role of Established Cultural Quarters in City Renaissance (commissioning editor, for HOPES: The Hope Street Association)
1987-96: Member of Editorial Board of Gender and Education
1993: ‘The Sociology of Science and the Science of Society’, Chapter 1 of Sociology Reviewed (eds: T. Lawson et al), Collins Educational
1991 onwards: articles and reports in the arts media and cultural publications (eg: Classical Music magazine, writing as Frances South) & many response / positional documents for CAMPAM and HOPES.
1991: ‘Gender, Curriculum and Assessment Issues at 14-16+’, Gender and Education, vol.3, no.1 (March)
1990: ‘Health Education’, Chapter 4 in The New Social Curriculum (ed: B. Dufour), Cambridge University Press
1986-90: Editor, Social Science Teacher (national professional journal)
1989: ‘”Recent, Relevant Experience”: How CATE legitimates narrowly defined concepts of teacher education’ (with W. Boxall), Journal of Further and Higher Education, vol.13, no.3 (Autumn)
1987: ‘Epidemiology and Community Health:a strained connection?’, Social Science & Medicine, vol.25, no.8 – later cited by WHO
1987: ‘Striking at the Heart: sociology’s place in the school curriculum’, The Guardian, 11 August
1987: The National Curriculum 5 – 16: Response of the Joint Forum of Academic and Teaching Associations in the Social Sciences
1986: Paper delivered to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences / SANA symposium of The Socio-Economic Consequences of World War Three (July, Budapest)
1986: ATSS Submission to the Winfield ESRC Enquiry on PhD Completion Rates
1984: ‘Doctors and Patients – Bird’s Eye or Worm’s Eye View?’, Scottish Medicine (December)
1983: ‘Women University Teachers of Natural Science, 1971-2: An Empirical Study‘, Social Studies of Science, vol.13, no.1, (February) (Report of M.Sc. research of same title)

About this website

August 14, 2005

For Nick, this site is an example of how some of the current trends in social computing can be used to implement co-operative information systems.
Commenting
Hilary would be delighted if you wish to leave comments about the material on the website. You will be asked to leae your name and email address (as a protection for us all against spam) and your comments may take a short while to appear.
Your own website?
If you are interested in having your own website like this one, you can contact Nick Prior at Nick Prior Designs by phone on +44 (0) 77 67 23 81 88 or by mail at nick@nickpriordesigns.com. He would be delighted to talk to you about creating websites that make it simple for you to to publish your news, views and opinions on the internet. You can find more details about the websites he designs, builds and hosts at nickpriordesigns.com