Let's get something straight —
sometimes state intervention is necessary.
Not exact matches
Labour is meant to be the party that recognises structural inequalities
sometimes have to be overcome by
intervention, from the
state or otherwise.
But amidst the search for a kinder and gentler education politics, research demonstrating the positive effect of these New York City strategies makes the moral case clear for an incoming President and for
states and districts rethinking education policies: The American education system presents intolerably long odds to low - income children attending persistently struggling schools, and
sometimes the most appropriate response to dramatic failure is dramatic
intervention.
This failure to recognise extreme child welfare
interventions as markers of social inequalities (and which may
sometimes compound social inequalities) is not helped when the Secretary of
State, Michael Gove, equates social workers «understanding of the impact of social inequalities with robbing «families of a proper sense of responsibility,....