Afleveringen
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Dr Jo Cutter speaks to Hunter Moskowitz and Dr Mijin Cha from UC Santa Cruz about their case study, exploring the key themes in just transition in the US. The team discuss the roles of unions, coalitions, and policy priorities.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2. Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in May 2024.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected].
A transcript of this episode is available.
You can listen to the rest of the episodes in this series.
About the speakers:
Dr Jo Cutter is a lecturer in Work and Employment Relations at Leeds University Business School. Her research focuses on employment relations, social dialogue and the regulation of work with a core focus on skills, education and training. She is currently researching these themes in relation to two contexts: workers and the just transition and labour mobility.
Hunter Moskowitz is a doctoral candidate in World History at Northeastern with a BS in Industrial and Labor Relations from Cornell University. He also works as a research specialist, examining climate and labor policy and just transitions at the University of California Santa Cruz.
Dr Mijin Cha is an assistant professor of environmental studies at the University of California at Santa Cruz and a fellow at the Climate Jobs Institute, Cornell University. Dr Chaâs research focuses on labour/climate coalitions and how to actualize just transitions.
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Drs Gabriella Alberti and Jo Cutter are joined by Caroline Keohane and Tanya Barringer from the Food and Drink Federation to discuss how the workforce in the UK food and drink sector has been affected since the end of the free movement of labour from the EU, and other subsequent crises.
This episode has been recorded as part of the Labour Mobility in Transition (LIMITS) project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). Visit the project webpage.
You can read the manifesto discussed in the episode here, and the LIMITS project Employer Survey report here.
This episode was recorded on 11 June 2024. If you would like to get in touch regarding this episode, please contact [email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers:
Dr Gabriella Alberti is an Associate Professor in Work and Employment Relations. Her research interests revolve around the conditions of workers at the bottom end of the labour market, whether on non-standard contracts, engaged in gig/platform work, excluded from social protections, migrants and minorities workers facing multiple and intersectional forms of discrimination and exclusion.
Dr Jo Cutter is a lecturer in Work and Employment Relations. Her research focuses on employment relations, social dialogue and the regulation of work with a core focus on skills formation and training. She is currently researching these themes in relation to two contexts: workers and the just transition and labour mobility.
Caroline Keohane is Head of Industry Growth at the Food and Drink Federation (FDF) which is the voice of the UKâs largest manufacturing sector. Caroline leads FDFâs policy work on growth, productivity and investment and works closely with senior government officials within the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) and the Department for Business and Trade (DBT). She is also a Non-Executive Board member of the National Skills Academy for Food and Drink.
Tanya Barringer is a Senior Industry Growth Policy Executive at the Food and Drink Federation. Her areas of focus include skills (apprenticeships and...
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Professor Vera Trappmann, Dr Janina Myrczik and Dr Justyna Kajta discuss their paper - âBecoming a young radical right activist, biographical pathways of the members of radical right organizations in Poland and Germanyâ.
Read the paper here.
âBecoming a young radical right activist, biographical pathways of the members of radical right organizations in Poland and Germany.â, Current Sociology, Janina Myrczik, Justyna Kajta, Arthur Buckenleib, Mateusz Karolak, Marius Liedtke, Adam Mrozowicki and Vera Trappmann.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in May 2024.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers:
Vera Trappmann is Professor of Comparative Employment Relations at Leeds University Business School. Her research engages with the comparison of labour relations across Europe, focusing on the dynamics of economic and organisational restructuring and its impact on working biographies, and organized labour.
Justyna Kajta is a Professor Assistant at the Institute of Social Sciences, SWPS University (Warsaw, Poland). Her main research interests concern youth, social movements, class (im)mobilities, and social and political changes in Central and Eastern Europe. She is the author of several publications, including the book (in Polish) Young Radicals? On the Identity of the Polish Nationalist Movement and Its Participants (Nomos, 2020).
Janina Myrczik is a Lecturer in Qualitative Methods and a Researcher at Medical School Berlin. Her research centres on rehabilitation, ageing, and the radical right. She is particularly interested in qualitative research, social inequality and political sociology.
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Dr Olga Ustyuzhantseva speaks to Mattia DessĂŹ about Russiaâs energy situation and the state's views on it; the ecological impact of coal in Russia; and the role of the labour movement in Russia's coal industry.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2.
Visit the project webpage. business.leeds.ac.uk/faculty/dir-reâŠs-11-countries
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in May 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available. business.leeds.ac.uk/downloads/downâŠal-exploration
About the speakers: Mattia DessĂŹ is a Postgraduate Researcher at Leeds University Business School. His PhD research focuses on new technologies and the future of work in the South African mining industry.
Dr Olga Ustyuzhantseva is a Senior Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa). Her recent research focuses on the sociotechnical transition to the sustainable development of coal-mining countries (South Africa and Russia), particularly climate, energy, and just transition policies and their impact on the coal phase-out trajectory.
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Dr Jo Cutter is joined by Sam Perry, Green Bargaining Officer for Yorkshire and the Humber Trades Union Congress (TUC) to discuss the work the TUC is doing in the region to support a Just Transition for workers.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in November 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. To find out more about the TUCâs Just Transition work, or to join the Yorkshire and Humber Just Transition Network, email Sam Perry [email protected].
A transcript of this episode is available.
You can listen to the rest of the episodes in this series.
About the speakers:
Dr Jo Cutter is a lecturer in Work and Employment Relations at Leeds University Business School. Her research focuses on employment relations, social dialogue and the regulation of work with a core focus on skills, education and training. She is currently researching these themes concerning two contexts: workers and the just transition and labour mobility.
Sam Perry is the Green Bargaining Officer for Yorkshire and the Humber TUC. He is focused on raising the profile of environmental action within the labour movement and building capacity in trade unions to bargain for justice as organisations adapt to the need to decarbonise. His special interest is in making the case for a massive growth of energy efficiency retrofits to homes across Yorkshire and the Humber, where he brings together a background in social housing and political and union activism.
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Lena Jaspersen and Tony Morgan talk about their pedagogical research on the development of employability skills in students engaged in challenge-based learning in diverse teams. Drawing on assignments produced for their own module âInnovation, Thinking and Practiceâ, Tony and Lena analysed reflective diaries that the students wrote throughout the module. Findings provided useful insights into how team-based learning can be designed to improve inclusivity and enhance learning outcomes, including employability skills. Lena and Tony discuss how pedagogical research can connect research and teaching activities in mutually beneficial ways.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in December 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contact âŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
Useful resources:
LITE Research Project: https://teachingexcellence.leeds.ac.uk/research/fellowships/i-de-es-project/ Diverging and Converging for Team-Based Learning: https://teachingexcellence.leeds.ac.uk/diverging-and-converging-for-team-based-learning/ Design Thinking for Student Projects book: https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/design-thinking-for-student-projects/book276875About the speakers:
Lena Jaspersen is an early-career researcher with a multidisciplinary background in international sociology and organisation studies. Lenaâs overarching research interests are in collaborative innovation processes, in particular in the context of global development, and qualitative research methods.
Tony Morgan (FHEA) is an Associate Professor in Innovation Management Practice at the University of Leeds in the UK, where he teaches interdisciplinary and team-based innovation modules. He previously held senior innovation and technology roles at IBM. Tony's primary interests include design thinking, innovation and innovation management, emerging technology, pedagogy and student skills development.
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Mattia DessĂŹ speaks to Dr Alexander Beresford about their South African research as part of the project looking at just transitions across the globe. They discuss factors affecting just transition in South Africa, including how international partners fit into the domestic debates, the political sphere, and the role of the ruling elite.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in October 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers: Mattia DessĂŹ is a Postgraduate Researcher at Leeds University Business School. His PhD research focuses on new technologies and the future of work in the South African mining industry.
Dr Alexander Beresford is an Associate Professor in African Politics, and Director of Research and Innovation for the School of Politics and International Studies at the University of Leeds. His research provides a multi-layered insight into how global normative order is mediated and contested within and between two interwoven spaces - political struggles over inequality, power and corruption from everyday sites of politics through to the highest tables of power in South Africa; and the global diplomatic contestation of vaccine access, conflict resolution and climate change led by South Africa as an emerging power.
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Dr Peter Gittins and Dr Deema Refai discuss their research on constrained rural entrepreneurship. They talk about the constraints and opportunities farmers are facing post-Brexit, and also discuss how other entrepreneurs work within constraints to achieve positive changes.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in November 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contact âŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
Visit the project webpage for further information. The project is funded by Leeds University Business Schoolâs Impact and Engagement Support Fund and International Research Collaborations Fund.
About the speakers:
Peter Gittins is a Lecturer in the Centre for Enterprise and Entrepreneurship Studies (CEES) at Leeds University Business School. He has a practical working background in farm management, helping to run his family-owned livestock farm in West Yorkshire. His research interests are centred around agricultural business management, specifically rural entrepreneurship and approaches to strategic management in farming businesses.
Deema Refai is an Associate Professor in Enterprise and Entrepreneurship in CEES and is currently Joint Editor in Chief of The International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Deemaâs research focus is developed around constrained entrepreneurship, with a particular interest in the refugee and rural contexts.
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In this latest episode of the âJust Transitions - a Global Explorationâ series, Professor Vera Trappmann and Dr Felix Schulz discuss German workersâ perception of the climate crisis, and the role of policy in transitioning to a greener economy.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2. The Competence Centre mentioned in this episode is also funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in November 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contact âŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers:
Vera Trappmann is Professor of Comparative Employment Relations at Leeds University Business School. Her research engages with the comparison of labour relations across Europe, focussing on the dynamics of economic and organisational restructuring and its impact on working biographies, and organized labour. Currently climate crisis and just transition are her main focus.
Felix Schulz is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the Digital Futures at Work (digit) Research centre and on an international Hans-Böckler-Stiftung funded project on the role of labour in the âJust Transitionâ. His research is interdisciplinary, drawing on labour economics, industrial relations, environmental labour studies and social psychology, with justice and inequality as the overarching focus.
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In this episode of the âJust Transitions - a Global Explorationâ series, Professor Vera Trappmann speaks to Dr Ursula Balderson about the Foundation Industries: how they can transition to Net Zero, how the energy crisis has affected the industry, and what the government is (or isnât) doing to support the transition.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2.
Visit the project webpage.
The research on the foundation industry is also available as a report with the European Trade Union Institute, funded by the European Climate Foundation.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in July and October 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers:
Vera Trappmann is Professor of Comparative Employment Relations at Leeds University Business School. Her research engages with the comparison of labour relations across Europe, focussing on the dynamics of economic and organisational restructuring and its impact on working biographies, and organized labour. Currently climate crisis and just transition are her main focus.
Dr Ursula Balderson is a postdoctoral research associate on a project on Work, Labour and Climate Change. She is an interdisciplinary social scientist interested in how the transition to a greener economy can improve worker well-being and quality of life.
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Dr Lilith Brouwers asks Dr Abbie Winton about Abbieâs research on the impact of technology on labour in food retail. They discuss how technology is influenced by society, the economy, politics, culture, and pre-existing technologies, and how all these different aspects affect the future of work in retail â not just new technology in isolation. They also discuss how understanding historical context is a useful way to interpret what is happening in the labour market today.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in August 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Dr Abbie Winton is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Centre for Employment Relations, Innovation and Change (CERIC). Her research explores issues related to sociotechnical change in the retail, warehousing and logistic industries, and the quality of work. Currently, Abbie is working on the HuLog project which investigates how digital technologies shape work and employment conditions in warehouses across Europe.
Dr Lilith Brouwers is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at CERIC. Their research focuses on marginalised workers in informal labour, how hyper-precarious workers use labour mobility, and on the intersection of disability and marginalised forms of work.
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Dr Jack Daly speaks to Dr Lilith Brouwers about their recent report on sex workersâ experiences of management and other third parties. Lilith gives an overview of the legal status of sex work and third parties in England, which third parties exist in sex work, why sex workers choose to work with or without third parties, and what kind of changes sex workers want to improve their relationships with those third parties.
View the report discussed in this episode here.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in July 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Dr Lilith Brouwers is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Centre for Employment Relations, Innovation and Change (CERIC). Their research focuses on marginalised workers in informal labour, how hyper-precarious workers use labour mobility, and on the intersection of disability and marginalised forms of work.
Dr Jack Daly is also a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at CERIC. His research focuses on equality, diversity and inclusion in traditionally male-dominated industries, with a specific interest in the role of men as resistance to and facilitators of inclusive working practices.
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Dr Matthew Davis speaks to Afshan Iqbal about Afshanâs research on technostress and the impact it has on remote and hybrid workers. They discuss what technostress is, the effect it can have on workflow and work-family conflict, and coping mechanisms for how to deal with it.
A summary of Afshanâs research on technostress is available.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in July 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this research, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers: Dr Matthew Davis is an Associate Professor at Leeds University Business School, a Chartered Psychologist and an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society. His research focuses on how people interact with their environments, office design, hybrid working and future workplaces. He also researches how businesses engage in CSR, particularly to address sustainability and modern slavery.âŻ
Afshan Iqbal is aâŻResearch Fellow in Organisational Behaviour and Socio-Technical Systems, with a keen interest in virtual working, hybrid work, the future workplace and the use of technologies in new ways of working.âŻHer doctoral research focused on the antecedents to technostress in remote workers and the impact this had on work-family conflict, performance and job satisfaction when boundaries between work and professional lives are increasingly blurred.
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In this episode of the âJust Transitions - a Global Explorationâ podcast, Ursula Balderson and Aleksander Szpor â members of the project team â discuss the role of the European Union in Just Transition policymaking and action in Poland.
This project is funded by the Hans Böckler Foundation â Just Transition: AktivitĂ€ten im internationalen Vergleich 2021-582-2.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in May 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.
About the speakers: Ursula Balderson is a postdoctoral research associate on a project on Work, Labour and Climate Change. She is an interdisciplinary social scientist interested in how the transition to a greener economy can improve worker wellbeing and quality of life.
Olek (Aleksander) Szpor is a Lead Consultant in Climate and Energy at Ecorys Research Consultancy Poland.
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Professor Annina Kaltenbrunner is joined by Dr Bianca Orsi and Dr Sophia Kuehnlenz to discuss Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and whether CBDCs alone are enough to change the hierarchical nature of the international monetary system. The team also talk about what effect CBDCs could have on the US dollar.
Read the journal article.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Annina Kaltenbrunner is Professor of Global Economics at Leeds University Business School. She is a pluralist Macro-Development Economist with an interest in financial and monetary dynamics in developing and emerging economies.
Dr Bianca Orsi is a lecturer in the Economics department at Leeds University Business School. Her main research interests are on monetary policy, monetary policy transmission mechanism, inflation, capital controls, interest rate, exchange rate, currency internationalization and currency hierarchy, and financial integration.âŻ
Dr Sophia Kuehnlenz is a lecturer in Economics at the Manchester Metropolitan Business School. Her research aims to establish an improved Minsky â inspired theory and an overhaul of methodology (mainstream and heterodox) with regard to modelling crisis episodes specifically and capitalist production economies more generally.
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How do we bridge the gap between textile workers and consumers? And how can we encourage responsible production and responsible consumption?
Dr Mark Sumner (University of Leeds), is joined by his colleagues, Dr Divya Singhal (Goa Institute of Management, India) and Dr Bethan Bide (University of Leeds), to discuss their latest project - âCotton hidden voices: stories from the makers of your clothesâ - and how this follows on from their past research looking at unravelling the trail of modern slavery in the fashion and textile industry, and how Covid-19 affected the management to eradicate modern slavery from global supply chains.
Visit the project website for further information about the research discussed in this episode.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
âCotton hidden voices: stories from the makers of your clothesâ is a University of Leeds and Goa Institute of Management project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AH/W006936/1).
About the speakers: Dr Mark Sumner is a lecturer in the School of Design, focussing on sustainability within the textile, clothing and fashion industry. His research interests cover a diverse range of subjects such as textile technology, innovation, sustainability and consumer behaviour.
Dr Divya Singhal is a Professor at the Goa Institute of Management, India. Her research focuses on responsible management.
Dr Bethan Bide is a Lecturer in Design and Cultural Theory at the University of Leeds. Her research centres around the cultural, social and business histories of fashion.
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Professor Marina Papanastassiou is joined by Professor Peter Buckley to discuss new challenges for multinationals in the fractured global economy, including political challenges, governance issues, and resilience in Global Value Chains.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
Visit the CIBUL website for further information about the research discussed in this episode.
About the speakers: Marina Papanastassiou is Professor of International Business at Leeds University Business School, and is a member of the Centre for International Business University of Leeds (CIBUL). Marinaâs research interests include the global innovation strategies in multinationals (MNEs) and their network of overseas subsidiaries and R&D laboratories; the decision-making process in MNEs and in particular the dynamics between HQs and subsidiaries; global value chains and the role of MNEs in SDGs such as food security; impact of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) on growth and development; the internationalisation of start-ups, and the role of incubators in local systems of innovation.
Peter Buckley OBE is Professor of International Business at Leeds University Business School, and is the Founder/Director of CIBUL. His current research interests centre on the theory of the multinational firm; knowledge management in multinational firms; the international transfer of technology; the impact of foreign direct investment particularly in China; and outward direct investment from emerging countries: China and India.
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Dr Asiya Islam (Leeds University Business School) is joined by Nishi Khandelwal (Nirantar) to discuss their research project on gender inequalities in digital India, exploring digital literacy, access and use. Asiya and Nishi also talk about the work Nirantar does, as well as the intersection between location (rural and urban), caste and gender when it comes to digital literacy in India.
Read the working paper.
Visit the project webpage.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Asiya Islam is Lecturer in Work and Employment Relations. Her research interests are in gender, class, emerging forms of work, particularly service work, and feminist research methods.
Nishi Khandelwal heads the Womenâs Literacy, Education, and Empowerment work at Nirantar, where she plays a crucial role in visualizing and planning the women's education programme, and training project staff and teachers of partner organisations. She is interested in researching issues around digital literacy of women and young girls to further strengthen their literacy and digital literacy skills.
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Professor Jennifer Tomlinson speaks to Dr Jack Daly about his research that explores the role of men and masculinity in the gender pay gap, focusing on the legal and financial professions. They discuss how the gender pay gap canât solely be closed by providing equal opportunities for women when careers remain structured in a way that disproportionately favours male behaviours and traits.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Dr Jack Daly is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in Work and Employment Relations. His research focuses on equality, diversity and inclusion in traditionally male-dominated industries, with a specific interest in the role of men as resistance to and facilitators of inclusive working practices.
Jennifer Tomlinson is Professor of Gender and Employment Relations at the Centre for Employment Relations, Innovation and Change. Her research focuses on gender and social inequalities inâŻorganisational, occupational andâŻlabourâŻmarket contexts.
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Postgraduate researcher, Clare Matysova (University of Leeds), is interviewed by Emily Humphreys (London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine), as part of the Business Schoolâs Research and Innovation podcast series for International Womenâs Day 2023. In this episode, Emily and Clare discuss how the gender pay gap is linked with parental leave, the difference between inequalities and inequities within parental leave, and what practical solutions the government and employers should be considering to make parental leave more equitable.
This podcast episode was recorded remotely in March 2023.âŻIf you would like to get in touch regarding this podcast, please contactâŻ[email protected]. A transcript of this episode is available.âŻ
About the speakers: Clare Matysova is a postgraduate researcher in the Centre for Employment Relations, Innovation and Change at the University of Leeds, focusing on gender equality and exploring the impact of the UKâs shared parental leave policy from the perspective of couplesâ decision-making. Clare also currently works as a Senior Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Partner at the University of Aberdeen. She has been working in EDI-related roles within HE for the past 15 years. Previously, she worked at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, the University of East London and the University for the Creative Arts.
Emily Humphreys is a part-time PhD student in social epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. She also works part time in public health, with experience in policy development and interests in mental health, wellbeing and health inequalities. She is particularly interested in how local or national government policies can affect health outcomes. She joined LSHTM as a research student in September 2021. Her research is investigating how changes to maternity, paternity and parental leave policies in the UK might have affected mental health for parents.
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