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Social Justice Ireland
Добавлен 4 дек 2013
Annual Social Policy Conference 2024
Managing Change to Build a Just Society - Policy Outcomes for a New Social Contract
Join Social Justice Ireland for our 2024 Annual Social Policy Conference, to hear from experts on what we need to do to build a Just society and deliver change for a New Social Contract.
Join Social Justice Ireland for our 2024 Annual Social Policy Conference, to hear from experts on what we need to do to build a Just society and deliver change for a New Social Contract.
Просмотров: 67
Видео
Budget 2025 Analysis and Critique Seminar
Просмотров 2322 месяца назад
Take a look back at the launch of our Budget 2025 Analysis and Critique from the 2nd October 2024. If you want to read the publication in full, it's available on our website at: www.socialjustice.ie/publication/budget-2025-analysis-and-critique
Budget Choices 2025
Просмотров 1035 месяцев назад
Budget Choices 2025 contains detailed, fully-costed Budgetary packages across more than a dozen policy areas including health, housing, education, welfare, sustainability and more; it also contains a range of costed, revenue-raising proposals.
Dermot McCarthy - The Impact of Social Justice Advocacy: a policy maker’s reflections
Просмотров 809 месяцев назад
Dermot McCarthy became a public servant in 1977 and rose to occupy two of the most senior posts in the Irish civil service. He became Secretary Gen- eral to the Government in January 2000 and, in July 2001, joined that role with Secretary General in the Department of the Taoiseach. He presented his paper at the conference to mark the retirement of Seán Healy and Brigid Reynolds.
President Michael D Higgins Opening Address
Просмотров 1299 месяцев назад
President Michael D. Higgins gives the opening address at the conference to mark the retirement of Seán Healy and Brigid Reynolds.
Micheál Collins & Catherine Kavanagh - Income Inequality and Poverty: a fifty-year view
Просмотров 369 месяцев назад
Dr Micheál L. Collins is an economist and Assistant Professor of Social Poli- cy at the School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice, UCD. His research interests and publications are in the areas of income distribution and poverty, taxation, fiscal welfare, pensions, economic evaluation and public policy. Dr Catherine Kavanagh is a Lecturer in Economics at University College Cork. He...
Tony Fahey - Social Justice and the Secularisation of Catholic Ethics in Ireland
Просмотров 359 месяцев назад
Tony Fahey is Professor Emeritus of Social Policy in University College Dublin. Before joining UCD in 2007, he worked for 15 years as a researcher in the Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin. He has published on many aspects of social policy and social change, including social equality, housing, demography, and cultural and religious patterns. Professor Fahey is the current Chair of S...
Michele Dillon - An International Perspective: Catholicism and Social Justice since Vatican II
Просмотров 499 месяцев назад
Professor Michele Dillon is Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and the UNH Class of 1944 Professor of Sociology at the University of New Hampshire, USA. Her paper was presented at a conference to mark the retirement of Seán Healy and Brigid Reynolds.
2024 Launch of Sustainable Progress Index
Просмотров 7610 месяцев назад
On Global Justice Day, 2024, Social Justice Ireland published our Sustainable Progress Index. Watch now as Prof. Charles Clark, Dr. Catherine Kavanagh, and John McGeady present this report.
Budget 2024 Analysis and Critique Seminar
Просмотров 132Год назад
Take a look back at the launch of our Budget 2024 Analysis and Critique from the 12th October 2023. If you want to read the publication in full, it's available on our website at www.socialjustice.ie/system/files/file-uploads/2023-10/Budget Response - FINAL.pdf
Budget Choices 2024 Video Podcast
Просмотров 238Год назад
Due to a technical glitch with our webinar, we didn't get the recording of our presentations. So, we decided to make a podcast! Here are our proposals for Budget 2024. For the full document, go to our website: www.socialjustice.ie/publication/budget-choices-2024
SER 2023 Launch
Просмотров 90Год назад
Join us as we launch our Socioeconomic Review, Social Justice Matters: a 2023 guide to a fairer Irish society. First launched on Monday, 8th May 2023.
2023 02 20 Launch of Sustainable Progress Index
Просмотров 98Год назад
On Global Justice Day, 2023, Social Justice Ireland published our Sustainable Progress Index. Watch now as Prof. Charles Clark, Dr. Catherine Kavanagh, and Colette Bennett present this report at a seminar chaired by Dr. Seán Healy.
2022 06 27 Budget Choices 2023 Webinar Video for Website
Просмотров 702 года назад
2022 06 27 Budget Choices 2023 Webinar Video for Website
Sustainable Progress Index 2022 Full Video
Просмотров 1252 года назад
Sustainable Progress Index 2022 Full Video
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 3
Просмотров 333 года назад
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 3
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 2
Просмотров 313 года назад
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 2
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 1
Просмотров 933 года назад
Social Policy Conference 2021 Session 1
SPI Launch 2021 Colette Bennett, Policy Considerations and Q&A
Просмотров 903 года назад
SPI Launch 2021 Colette Bennett, Policy Considerations and Q&A
SPI Launch 2021 Prof Charles MA Clark
Просмотров 1793 года назад
SPI Launch 2021 Prof Charles MA Clark
Johnson Kenneth Clark Margaret Taylor Margaret
Dr Sean Healy. Good day. Social Justice Ireland has been around the table and done the musical chairs. Since February 2023 the Progress Index had 43 views and to date has collected a duck egg of zero comments and has failed to put itself in real politics. This is deliberate which shows the core of the mentality is weak. In Brussels, the figures are massaged for the benefit of placing Ireland in the Center of Europe. I remember the British doing the same with Margaret Thatcher, not for the benefit of Europe but for local consumption which gives the people a highbrow view of themselves. What the British excel at is keeping records, In Europe they may even have invented record keeping as a science. An example of this is the English dictionary composed before the Germans. Immaculate record keeping and the honesty of this was attributed to Michaels Collins's par excellence. Look at where we are going with all the pomp, massaging words placing Ireland 8 from the top down among European nations which is just 20.3% of GDP out of 13 from the bottom. 13 nations really is not much to be even artificially proud of when the omissions of reports and occurrences are not recorded on the record. Call up some of the large organisations that have an impact on ordinary people. Of course, if you introduce yourself as Professor X from UCD, the fiddler will play any tune you want. Call a few of the well-known public resources, DCC, the housing minister's office, health care, the Garde and ambulance service education. Whether your reply is positive or negative the important answer, you want, may I have a reference number for this call, please? As is well known in the Irish advertising sector, "You will be pleasantly surprised". if you receive a reference number for more than one. The remainder is the statistics left out of your Brussels statistical calculations. You can find me on Facebook martin.j.dowling before I become wiped out and forgotten at the hands of a neighbour bunch of foreign invaders impacting my pulmonary system as a result of their habitual toxic habits. (The statistic here is offered to be pulmonary emergency callouts are higher than any other emergency callout in Dublin.) Indeed, I have tried most of whom I recommend you try and retrieve a reference number that accounts for your call being logged.
Budget tax
After months of hard work High quality report brought to us but, it seems no much bother from public. Appreciate your effort. Will Learn from this and demand better future...
Excellent work. Appreciate all of yours efforts. Looking forward for the conference.
Niiiiiiiiiice!! You need to look into P-R-O-M-O-S-M!
The SSI is a need base UBI temporary to reduce homelessness and help transition into high productivity and more automation otherwise we will get back to become either robot, slavery, or backward.
income tax is not good because it is small compare to program the U.S budget and scope ... Sale tax and properties tax would be greatest help to everyone
I think the SSI is the very example of UBI to help the elderly and the people trapped but some states select not to use in correctly
WHERE ARE YOU EMMET? WE NEED STRONG INFORMED PEOPLE LIKE YOU TO LEAD THE IRISH PEOPLE MOVING FORWARD TO GET OVER THIS YEAR OF NONSENSE!!! THERE ARE SO MANY OF US WHO ARE SO FRUSTRATED WITH THE IRISH GOVERNMENT WHO ARE NOT DOING A GOOD JOB AND CAUSING SO MUCH SUFFERING AND SADNESS!!! GOD BLESS YOU WHERE EVER YOU ARE!!!!
Being replaced by people from the third world is a great success to you guys, you must hate yourselves lol.
Try make sure every Irish citizen has a bed to sleep on at night...👍
Blatantly lying to your face and pretending they are keeping up with inflation while actually scamming you and taking even more money off you... I'm not very good at maths but 17 years ago, I was getting 220 pounds Irish. They've been adding fivers and tenners ever since and now I'm on 203 euro. Not to mention cigarettes are costing over fifty euro extra per week than they were back then and due to inflation most other items have trebled or quadrupled in price. How is this possible? By my estimates I should be on roughly three hundred euro or more per week... The social welfare payment was designed originally to be the minimum amount of money required to keep a person fed and watered and clothed and buy essentials it didn't cover any other costs... So it obviously can't do that anymore at all... Which is why I am picking pennies out of my floorboards every week... The rent supplement was originally designed to cover the cost of renting with a small personal contribution (ten or fifteen euro) these days they leave you with a shortfall of four hundred euro which you have to make up for out of your payment and you also have to pay a larger contribution to the government... What's going on? Fake budget...
Yeah how about some social justice... Instead of leaving people to starve in the cold on the streets? Which wouldn't happen if any of these budgets were actually genuine... I'm not very good at maths but 17 years ago, I was getting 220 pounds Irish. They've been adding fivers and tenners ever since and now I'm on 203 euro. Not to mention cigarettes are costing over fifty euro extra per week than they were back then and due to inflation most other items have trebled or quadrupled in price. How is this possible? By my estimates I should be on roughly three hundred euro or more per week... The social welfare payment was designed originally to be the minimum amount of money required to keep a person fed and watered and clothed and buy essentials it didn't cover any other costs... So it obviously can't do that anymore at all... Which is why I am picking pennies out of my floorboards every week... The rent supplement was originally designed to cover the cost of renting with a small personal contribution (ten or fifteen euro) these days they leave you with a shortfall of four hundred euro which you have to make up for out of your payment and you also have to pay a larger contribution to the government... What's going on? Fake budget...
Just did a final project on this man's chapter in Global Ethnography. Interesting work...
This man is a realist and the interview is worth listening to and reflecting on. "Debt makes the citizens... supplicant and less likely to riot" Big <3 from me to Emmet, from a grant supported, NUI graduate now living in the UK.
amazing stuff
awesome video
Uggh this is just cliched, boring, and meaningless. Grow up and get a job
How about the women treat men in society now? You're arguments are very very PC. Also I'm a person of colour (I'm white) from a working class family.
Love Emmett he's the voice of Dublin
How refreshing - a intellectual Presidential presentation on the historical overview of the relationship among the state, capital, and the citizen, with implications and challenges for a better world to come.
Highly informative. I added the link to my online social policy course.
Impressive analysis; uncanny similarities of social problems (especially homelessness and poverty, working poor) and inadequacy of budget responses to those of the US; I appreciated most the alternative "fair" tax alternatives SJI offered. Nice work.
18:50 - applying policies that demonstrably exacerbate poverty and dependence at the level of the individual to the level of nation states will see Europe become a giant slum in 50 years or warring at each others throats in less time.
There is nothing positive about the EU today, Mrs. Unger, so why do you pigeonhole the eurosceptics, by default, as being negative, while they just state what they observe, which is exactly the same negative results that you observe and state, and which everybody with a clear mind can and will observe, then to also conclude that there is nothing positive about the EU as it is now, speaking on a personal level, meaning, from a normal citizen's perspective, because that is a denomination that we all share, or are supposed to share.