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Election 24: can we achieve sustainable growth? | Election 24 

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On 23 November 2023, the Academy of Social Sciences, in partnership with the University of Southampton, co-hosted a 'Question Time' style discussion, including local politicians and academics, exploring the concept of sustainable growth and whether it was achievable.
Chaired by Professor Jane Falkingham (University of Southampton), the panel featured: Professor Chris Armstrong (University of Southampton), Alice Brock (Sustainability and Resilience Institute, University of Southampton), Professor Jagjit Chadha (National Institute of Economic and Social Research), Daniel Fitzhenry (Southampton Council Opposition Leader) and Satvir Kaur (Southampton Council Leader).
The views and opinions expressed in this event are those of the speakers and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Academy of Social Sciences.
This event was part of Election 24: Ideas for change based on social science evidence, a Campaign for Social Science project which drew on a range of social science research to suggest evidence-based social policy directions in the run up to a UK general election in 2024.
You can find out more on our website at: www.acss.org.uk

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12 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 1   
@colsylvester639
@colsylvester639 9 месяцев назад
Tiresomely obvious Conservative rhetoric over sovereign control over immigration, demonstrably false based on the control the UK had on immigration prior to Brexit, and that migration figures have doubled since Brexit. Therefore this sovereignty that Daniel speaks of, is somewhat laughable. On one hand stating open yet criticising what was considered too open before hand, which is a befuddlement of the facts and circumstances. Additionally Jagjit rightly reminded Daniel of the facts regarding immigration, tax revenue gained by the employment of migrants. Daniel later speaks about productivity and an aging population in the UK, and without any irony misses how migration can assist the UK in those endeavours. Daniel appears to have disregarded in his other reply, the nature of the climate future facing us all; let us recall the first world and the UK's role in the industrial revolution and therefore the historical carbon debt that the rest of the world is paying for even when their contribution to that debt is miniscule in comparison. Climate migration is a collective responsibility and I expect political parties to demonstrate greater humility. Most panel members were better at that than others. Thank you for a balanced and considered conversation.
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