Posted by Benjamin Hopkins in School of Business Blog on March 25, 2015
Recently appointed Lecturer in Work and Employment, Benjamin Hopkins, ponders a little about how he has been represented in the popular media, and a lot about how research subjects are represented within academic media. The forthcoming election has sparked a flurry of television programmes discussing immigration: Channel 4’s UKIP: The First 100 Days, ITV’s Tonight: […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged ABS, BBC, Channel 4, Election, Green Party, Immigration, Interview, Interviewing, Jo Brewis, Mass Media, media, Media Appearances, Natalie Bennett, NHS, Plaid Cymru, Public Debate, Qualitative Research, REF, Representation, Research, Research Ethics, Research Methodology, Research Methods, The Smiths, UKIP, Week In Week Out |
Posted by Doris Ruth Eikhof in School of Business Blog on September 4, 2014
Doris Ruth Eikhof, Senior Lecturer in Work and Employment at the School, shares some earlier* thoughts on the Research Excellence Framework (REF) In the past two years UK universities have frantically prepared their submissions to the sector-wide assessment of their research prowess and output, the Research Excellence Framework, or REF. They have evaluated research outputs, written […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Action Research, Bureaucracy, Business School, Critical Management Studies, Impact, Ivory Tower, Knowledge, Leo Tolstoj, Management, Management Education, Max Weber, Organisation Studies, Policy Making, Practitioner Research, Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, Public Sector, REF, Research Excellence Framework, Research Outputs, Science as a Vocation, Social Science, Steve Jobs, University Management, University Politics |
Posted by in School of Business Blog on February 19, 2014
Neil Lancastle, one of the School’s current PhD students, brings his experience of curricular reform in economics to bear upon the promises (and problems) of being “critical” in a School of Management. Early in my PhD studies I was fortunate enough to read the sort of economic work which can now rightly claim to have […]
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged Business Ethics, Code of Ethics, Critical Management Studies, Critique, CSEP, Economic Crisis, Economic Education, Economics, Economics Pedagogy, Ethics, Financial Crisis, German Pluralist Economics Network, Heterodox, Heterodox Economics, Higher Education, Management Education, Management Pedagogy, Managment Ethics, Martin Parker, Noam Chomsky, PEPS-Economie, Post-Crash Economics Society, REF, Responsibility of Intellectuals, Rethinking Economics, SOAS, Social Science, Stephen Dunne, Valerie Fournier |
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