Professor of Human Geography@lborouniversity
Associate Dean (Education & Student Experience) School of Social Sciences and Humanities
Editor @ChildrensGeogs
Is it depressing or heartening to have SEND as a headline on BBC's pm? Our most vulnerable children are systematically failed by a flawed policy framework and chronic underfunding. What an indictment to society! #specialeducationalneeds#InclusiveEducation#SEND@bphillipsonMP
#Young people are often put together in #schools so that they will change social differences: race, religion and #disability/mind-body-emotional diversity/#SEND but do they? Sometimes! See my new Open Access book
https://t.co/r3HINfF0d8 @ChildrensComm@ChildrensGeogs
Quantitative post-doctoral research job available @lboro.ac.uk School of Social Sciences & Humanities working with Fran Azpitarte (@LboroCSSP) and I (@lborogeog) on our ESRC funded project ‘postcode lottery of education for children with SEND’. Details: https://t.co/V9WfGp5qUr
@alanshearer Boycotting Match of the Day. Thank you all for speaking the truth. My first political tweet. I am not stopping. I recognise 1930s Germany discourse denying our common humanity. Thank you for speaking the truth.
Refugee Council reckons the Rwanda scheme will cost taxpayers £1.4 billion a year. Quite on top of the nasty, immoral nature of it that's a hell of a lot of money to placate some racists.
📢 JOB ALERT | Lecturership @lborogeog@lborouniversity. Lots of exciting research and teaching opportunities + a supportive group of colleagues. Fab students too! Please help spread the word. Closing date is 31 Oct. Full details here https://t.co/7ziu6EKGay
More than 2 years since Theresa May first apologised, only 60 victims of the #Windrush scandal have received compensation, totalling £360,000.
This is an appalling failure of a generation which asked for so little but gave so much #WindrushDay2020
https://t.co/9x8GE4Yapo
Thank you for your thoughts and prayers for Dario Yanomami who is now recovering from coronavirus.
Listen to Dario’s video to hear more about the spread of coronavirus in the Yanomami territory in the Brazilian Amazon, and how indigenous communities are protecting themselves. 👇
This is a tragedy we knew was coming. “Nearly 2,000 people in and around Leticia are sick with COVID-19. About 70 have died. That might not sound like a colossal death toll at first. This amounts to the highest per-capita death rate in all of Colombia” https://t.co/byhu0ePxhF