441 research outputs found

    Welfare-to-work: new labour and the US experience

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    In this timely work the authors track the influence of US ideology and experience on New Labour's reforms.Andreas Cebulla, Karl Ashworth, David Greenberg, Robert Walke

    Report on a meta-analysis of US welfare-to-work programs

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    David Greenberg, Andreas Cebulla, Stacey Bouche

    Unemployment and the insurance compensation principle in Britain and Germany

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    Andreas Cebulla, Hubert Heinelt, Robert Walke

    From job seekers to job keepers: job retention, advancement and the role of in-work support programmes

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    Karen Kellard, Laura Adelman, Andreas Cebulla and Claire Heave

    Drugs and alcohol as barriers to employment : final report

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    Andreas Cebulla, Claire Heaver, Noel Smith, Liz Sutto

    Profiling London’s rough sleepers: A longitudinal analysis of CHAIN data

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    Broadway, in conjunction with the National Centre for Social Research and supported by the DCLG, conducted a longitudinal analysis of data from CHAIN. This report provides extensive analysis of data collected about rough sleeping in London since that late 1990s, exploring the backgrounds and experiences of rough sleepers (nationality, ethnicity, age, substance use, mental health) and the effectiveness of routes off the street.Andreas Cebulla, Becky Rice, Wojtek Tomaszewski, Juliette Hough, Edited by Tamsin Savag

    Risky behaviour and social activities

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    The aim of the study was to explore whether risky behaviour is reinforced or counterbalanced by various types of social and individual activities and the impacts on educational outcomes at age 16. The analysis is based on four waves of the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England together with National Pupil Database data. The data did not allow identification of the type of ‘structured and supervised’ positive activities promoted by policy to reduce risky behaviour and therefore could not (and was not intended to) test the effectiveness of this policy focus.Andreas Cebulla and Wojtek Tomaszewsk

    Spotlight on refugee integration: findings from the Survey of New Refugees in the United Kingdom

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    This report summarises the results of the Survey of New Refugees (SNR), a longitudinal study of refugee integration in the UK. Integration was considered in terms of the English language skills, employment and housing of new refugees. The research was initiated by Analysis, Research and Knowledge Management (ARK) within the UK Border Agency, which commissioned the National Centre for Social Research (NatCen) to undertake the longitudinal data analysis and preparation of this report.Andreas Cebulla, Megan Daniel and Andrew Zurawa
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