EVENT

100 days of Labour: Are we any closer to solving inequality? w/ Danny Dorling

11 Oct 2024 – 18:30 - 20:00 BST
University of York
Room SLB/118
Spring Lane Building
Campus West
University of York
397 Harewood Way
Heslington
York YO10 5DS

Hear Kate Pickett, Richard Wilkinson and Danny Dorling as they are interviewed by Matthew Taylor, Chief executive officer of NHS Confederation, on where they consider inequality to be today. They will discuss what are the new opportunities and challenges and how do they see the future unfolding?

100 days after the new Labour government came into power and 15 years since The Spirit Level – the ground-breaking book that sounded the alarm on the corrosive effects of economic injustice – was published, we ask what progress has been made in tackling inequality?

More than a decade on, social epidemiologists Professors Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson, present The Spirit Level at 15. A report updating and reviewing the The Spirit Level, which in 2009 linked the negative effects of inequality to a wide range of social ills – from higher rates of imprisonment and mental health issues to eroded trust within society. It revolutionised the way we looked at, measured and understood the impacts of inequality. 15 years later, do the warnings ring truer than ever now?

Revealing their findings, they will be joined by social geographer Professor Danny Dorling, who, as explored in his latest book Seven Children, considers injustice and hope for children in modern Britain.

In Seven Children, Danny constructs seven ‘average’ children from millions of statistics—each child symbolising the very middle of a parental income bracket, from the poorest to the wealthiest. Dorling’s seven were born in 2018, when the UK faced its worst inequality since the Great Depression and became Europe’s most socially divided nation. They turned 5 in 2023, amid a devastating cost-of-living crisis. Their country has Europe’s fastest-rising child poverty rates, and even the best-off of the seven is disadvantaged. Yet aspirations endure.

Hear Kate, Richard and Danny as they are interviewed by Matthew Taylor, Chief executive officer of NHS Confederation, on where they consider inequality to be today. They will discuss what are the new opportunities and challenges and how do they see the future unfolding?

This event is in partnership with The York Policy Engine (TYPE) is a cross-faculty initiative, supporting all academic disciplines at the University.

The event will be followed by a book signing.

 

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