‘Brilliant rhetoric’ – Malcolm X at LSE, 11 February 1965
This article was originally posted on the LSE History blog On 11 February 1965 LSE’s Old Theatre was packed to listen to Malcolm X; on 21 February he was murdered while preparing to address a meeting...
View ArticleWomen’s Library@LSE archive – women and the Miners’ Strike
This article was originally posted on the LSE History blog In celebration of Women’s History Month, Archivist Kate Higgins uses the Women’s Library@LSE archive to look back at women’s response to the...
View ArticleRacial Biases in Recruitment
Many organisations are promoting diversity throughout their workforce to create a competitive edge in the market. However, there are questions as to how bias in the recruitment and selection process...
View ArticleSingapore’s Social Experiment Key To Economic Success
This article was originally posted on Forbes Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam stated of their current diversity policy for housing that “As a result of this policy Singapore has...
View ArticleFive tips for LGBT+ inclusive communications at work
To mark the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) on 17 May, Hayley Reed sensitises the readers to the need for appropriate language, avoiding unnecessary divisions...
View Article‘Tackling diversity’: student workshop to promote diversity
Juliane Hoss – an LSE postgraduate student – reflects on the importance of diversity in the workplace and its impact on the productivity of organisations. This provides a context for the ‘Tackling...
View ArticleInterview with Julia Gillard: It is in everybody’s interest to make sure that...
The world’s children must be equipped to meet the challenges of our globalised world – irrespective of their gender, ethnicity, or location – argues Julia Gillard. She talks to Artemis Photiadou about...
View ArticleBook Review: The Equality Effect: Improving Life for Everyone by Danny Dorling
In The Equality Effect: Improving Life for Everyone, Danny Dorling delivers evidence that more equal countries enjoy better outcomes, with their populations being happier, healthier and more creative,...
View ArticleThe Porous University: Impact is not some added extra of academic life, but...
The current university set up has led to a deep malaise. The culture of retreat and lack of an inclusive commitment has fed public perceptions that universities are unapproachable. Michael Stewart...
View ArticleWomen are less likely to study STEM subjects – but disadvantaged women are...
The gender divide in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics study is more complicated than most researchers, policy makers, and practitioners previously thought, writes Natasha Codiroli...
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