JohnPeart.org

Ideas. Comment. Critique.

  • Home
  • Politics
    • Education
    • Keynotes
    • Liberation
    • Student Movement
  • University
    • Essays
    • The Beaver
    • The Penguin
RSS

Politics

May 10, 2012

It Gets Better

I’ve taken part in the LSE Students’ Union ‘It Gets Better‘ project this year, and here are the results. Staff and students of the LSE and LSESU share their experiences of coming out to their friends and family, and what it’s like being LGBT at LSE.

Apr 12, 2012

An open letter to the Deputy Mayor of London

Dear Mr. Barnes,

RE: Homophobic advertising on Transport for London bus routes.

I am contacting you in your capacity as Deputy Mayor of London in relation to the following news story that broke today in The Guardian and on Pink News:

Christian group’s anti-gay ads to appear on buses

Religious groups respond to Stonewall with ‘Ex-Gay, Get Over It’ London bus adverts

I also would like to draw your attention to this petition:

See the petition on iPetitions

I am under the impression that Transport for London are not in control of their own advertising and that it is administered by a third party, called Metroline, but I find the fact that TFL are going to be host to such an advertising campaign deeply concerning. More

Dec 7, 2011

The Gender Revolutionaries

The Gender Revolutionaries

Some areas of our society are persecuted every day because of how they choose to live their lives. Racial, gender and sexual discrimination are rife within our society even today. Several countries around the world still outlaw homosexuality, punishing those who are “found out” with the death penalty. Fascist organisations like the British National Party and English Defence League are growing in number and strength, peddling messages of hate and denying those who don’t conform to their nazi-esque vision the right to even exist. The battle for equality and freedom from oppression is far from over.

More

Oct 1, 2011

The Blood Ban

The Blood Ban

For many years “men who sleep with men” (MSM) have been unable to donate blood because of discriminatory rules predicated on the idea that gay men are more likely to carry HIV/AIDS, and that there was therefore too high a risk of transmission to take blood from this group of people for use in the National Blood Service (NBS).

That all changed this month as it was announced that the lifetime ban would be lifted and replaced with a twelve month ban; MSM would be able to donate blood providing they had no sexual contact with a man in the last year.
More

Apr 8, 2011

Electoral Systems

Electoral Systems

This piece assesses the strengths and weaknesses of proportional and majoritarian electoral systems, and was written as part of my degree. This work was a formative assignment for the ‘Introduction to Political Science’ module, GV101.

Are majoritarian or proportional electoral systems better?

Electoral systems – the set of rules that regulate competition between parties and/or candidates during elections, that decide how vote shares map to seats in parliament and indeed, how the electorate express their preferences – have traditionally fallen into two categories; majoritarian – which include Single Member Plurality (or ‘First-Past-The-Post’), the Two-Round System and Alternative Vote – or proportional – like open or closed-list PR and the Single Transferable Vote[1]. More

Jan 20, 2011

The UGM

The UGM

Controversy struck today at the LSE SU’s Union General Meeting (UGM) as students put forward an amendment to the constitutional bye-laws. The motion, which can be found on the Students’ Union’s website, proposes that the UGM change it’s current voting format back to a “voting in person” system, which was removed under a constitutional reform package last year in favour of online voting. More

Dec 15, 2010

Reflecting on the tuition fees vote

Reflecting on the tuition fees vote

Some members of the student movement will likely feeling a sense of deja vu right around now. Not 10 years ago, students were campaigning against the initial introduction of tuition fees. Another generation will be remembering the same circumstance in 2004, when fees were tripled under the then Labour government. They lost that battle then and no doubt told themselves that they hadn’t lost the war.

It’s just under a week since the Coalition government voted to again triple fees, and whilst I vaguely remember what was happening in 2004, as an 13 year old outsider sat in a school classroom at a poor performing school that was within a cat’s whisker from special measures, I didn’t expect to be in the same position as my predecessors just 6 years later.
More

Dec 7, 2010

Demos and NUS

Demos and NUS

There has been some controversy about what NUS’ stance is over demonstrations taking place on Wednesday and Thursday of this week. Most of this is based on a poorly reported article in The Guardian today: Read the Guardian here

This controversy is founded because the NEC haven’t made the decision we have been reported to.
More

Oct 26, 2010

The Dearing Compact is Dead

The Dearing Compact is Dead

Back in 1997, when tuition fees were first on the agenda of the then Labour government, Lord Dearing’s report on higher education funding argued that those who benefit from higher education could reasonably be expected to pay a fraction of the cost of that course. The since cherished ‘Dearing Compact’ saw higher education as a funding coalition of sorts, between the state, the student and the employer, with each expected to pony up their fair share in line with the benefits derived from the system.
More

1 2

↑

JohnPeart.org
© JohnPeart.org 2012
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes