Liberal-left think tank roundup


by Liam Murray    
May 10, 2008 at 9:51 am

This is the start of a weekly round up of what various think tanks and such organisations on the liberal-left are doing and publishing. I do a weekly round up on my blog for think-tanks on the left and the right.

  • The IPPR challenges a union \ left-wing shibboleth in highlighting that at least some of the problems we see in education can be attributed to poor teachers. “[I]n the last ten years teachers’ pay has improved and the number of people choosing teaching as a career has increased. But teaching is still not attracting the very best graduates and poor performing teachers are not being dealt with effectively”
  • They also carry an worthwhile report on the complexity of UK migration numbers - half of those who’ve arrived from new EU members since May ‘04 have now left but I think the Daily Mail missed that story.
  • “New Labour is now dead” - according to Compass who, to be fair, have been trying to administer last rights since about 1998. Last Thursday’s results have boosted their confidence somewhat - “The strategy that saw the Party continually triangulate interests and concerns, tacking endlessly to the right, doing what the Tories would do only doing it first, fixating on a mythical middle England and denying that free market policies are having a damaging effect on society is now finished”
  • Also on Compass Hilary Wainwright takes a pop at the impact triangulation has on traditional supporters and one of their regular ‘thinkpieces’ tackles ‘Capitalism and Social Recession’.
    Anthony Painter also did a write-up on LC after a Compass event here.
  • The Social Market Foundation have an interesting piece on individual behavioural change and the challenges policymakers face in linking that with broader cultural changes.
  • CentreForum have a great (and timely) piece on whether Liberal Democrats and Conservatives can co-operate. David Cameron and Nick Clegg are “two declared liberals [who] share a vision of a new, ‘post-bureaucratic’ politics in which power is devolved, not just from central to local government, but from government at all levels to individuals, families and communities”

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at 3:07 pm on May 12, 2008
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1.  comment by
     QuestionThat

Hmm, that 5th link is interesting, in a rather depressing kind of way.

at 4:57 pm on May 12, 2008
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2.  comment by
     Nick

Typical of IPPR to correctly diagnose one problem (poor teaching) and suggest the solution is to order in more management.

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