Épisodes

  • Household responses to trade shocks
    Feb 2 2024

    In Episode 12 of Linking our Lives we're in conversation with Dr Aitor Irastorza-Fadrique who, together with colleages at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, has used the ONS-LS to investigate how individuals and their partners in England and Wales have responded to rising Chinese import competition in the 2000s.

    • Household responses to trade shocks is an IFS Working Paper by Aitor Irastorza-Fadrique, Peter Levell and Matthias Parey

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    14 min
  • How equal are the impacts of cycling investments?
    Jul 27 2023

    In Episode 11 of Linking our Lives, we're joined by Dr Richard Patterson, from the MRC Epidemiology Unit at the University of Cambridge. Richard has been using the ONS LS to investigate the impacts of funding to support cycling in urban areas and specifically to see whether there are any differences in those impacts.

    Further information

    • Equity impacts of cycling investment in England: A natural experimental study using longitudinally linked individual-level Census data is research by Richard Patterson, David Ogilvie, Anthony Laverty and Jenna Panter and is published in SSM Population Health

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    14 min
  • Britain’s cultural and creative industries: open to all or dominated by the privileged few?
    Apr 20 2023

    In Episode 10 of Linking our Lives, we're joined by Dr Orian Brook, Chancellor’s Fellow in Social Policy at the University of Edinburgh. Orian has been using the ONS Longitudinal Study to help investigate whether Britain’s cultural and creative industries are as open to all as some say or whether they remain dominated by the privileged few.

    Further information

    • Social Mobility and ‘Openness’ in Creative Occupations since the 1970s is open access research by Orian Brook, Andrew Miles, Dave O'Brien and Mark Taylor and is published in the British Sociological Association Journal
    • Culture is bad for you, Inequality in the cultural and creative industries is a book by Orian Brook, Dave O'Brien and Mark Taylor and is published by Manchester University Press and the audio book is is on Spotify

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    15 min
  • Creative and ambitious research: what digital data infrastructure do we need for that?
    Sep 22 2022

    In Episode 9 of Linking our Lives recorded at the UK Census Longitudinal Studies Conference 2022 at Cardiff Castle, we are in conversation with Catherine Bromley the ESRC’s Deputy Director of Data Strategy and Infrastructure to find out what’s needed to create a digital research infrastructure that underpins ambitious and creative research

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    17 min
  • Measuring health: does it matter how we do it?
    Jul 26 2022

    In Episode 8 of Linking our Lives we're joined by Drs Emily Murray and Brian Beach from University College London to discuss recently submitted evidence to the UK's 2nd State Pension Age Review using findings from Emily's Health Foundation funded research project on the Health of Older People in Places. Here they talk about the research, explain why the way we measure health matters and discuss the implications for policy makers and pensioners.

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    23 min
  • Social mobility - what do we really know?
    Mar 23 2022

    In Episode 7 of Linking our Lives, we're talking to Professor Patrick Sturgis from the London School of Economics and Professor Franz Buscha from the University of Westminster. Together they have been researaching social mobility for some 15 years to try to get to grips with what we really know. In this episode they discuss how and why they have used the ONS Longitudinal Study in that work, what they have learned and what policymakers seeking to tackle inequality need to consider.

    Some further reading

    • Spatial and social mobility in England and Wales: a sub-national analysis of differences and trends over time

    • Declining social mobility? Evidence from five linked censuses in England and Wales 1971–2011

    • Selective Schooling Has Not Promoted Social Mobility in England

    • Declining Social Mobility? Evidence from five linked Censuses in England and Wales 1971-2011

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    26 min
  • Moving out to move on: migration, disadvantage and social mobility
    Feb 3 2022

    In Episode 6 of Linking our Lives, we're talking to Dafni Papoutsaki from the University of Brighton about research using the ONS Longitudinal Study and other secondarty data to look at who moves avay from where they grow up to try to improve their prospects and the implications of that.

    Further reading

    • Moving out to move on, migration, disadvantage and social mobility Social Mobility Commission, July 2020

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    21 min
  • Addressing health: lessons from the past about ill health in the workplace
    Dec 16 2021

    In Episode 5 of Series 1 of the Linking our Lives podcast, David Green, Professor of Historical Geography at Kings College London, Nicola Shelton, Professor of Population Health at University College London and social history enthusiast and volunteer Becky Darnill discuss the research project Addressing Health: Morbidity, Mortality and Occupational Health in the Victorian and Edwardian Post Office - a fantastic collaboration exploring the timing and geography of ill health, and the responses of the Post Office and the workforce!

    Read/Download a full transcript

    Voir plus Voir moins
    27 min