Boys will be boys
Max Wind-Cowie writes for Conservative Home on Britain's trouble with boys.
Max Wind-Cowie writes for Conservative Home on Britain's trouble with boys.
Diane Abbott joins the panel of BBC's Daily Politics to discuss masculinity and her lecture to Demos.
Isabel Hardman writes for the Spectator's Coffeehouse blog on Diane Abbott's Demos lecture.
BBC News previews Diane Abbott's speech to Demos on Britain's 'crisis of masculinity'.
Diane Abbott speech to Demos warns of rapid economic change creating a disaffected 'Fight Club' generation, the Guardian reports.
Geoff Dench writes for the Sunday Times on gender roles ahead of Demos's event on Britain's 'crisis of masculinity'. (£)
David Goodhart appears on the influential Dutch Sunday morning politics programme Buitenhof to discuss Ukip and the European Union. (from 18m)
James Park argues for a shift away from the current method of examining school performance on Comment is Free.
Demos associate James Park discusses his latest report on detoxifying school accountability on BBC Radio 4's Today programme. (from 48m)
Guardian Education covers Demos's proposal that parents, teachers and students should have a say in school performance reviews.
The full text of Tessa Jowell's speech to Demos on a radical new open politics for Labour
Demos releases The Liberal Republic and announces new Advisory Council
Make people Britain’s First Emergency Service, says report
Today, Wednesday 4 March, Demos launches 'Knowledge Nomads', the final installment in it's 'Atlas of Ideas' series. 'Knowledge Nomads' argues that migration is important for both Britain and global science and innovation.
Millions of people in the UK who rely on social care risk becoming “second class citizens” unless their rights are protected by an NHS-style Constitution, a Demos report warns today.
Demos is today unveiling a major project to research 'progressive conservative' policies at an event with senior Conservative and Labour figures.
Demos is pleased to announce the appointment of two leading researchers to develop a new programme of research tackling social mobility and inclusion.
Michael Gove, Vince Cable and James Purnell are the most radical politicians in Britain, according to a Demos survey released today.