Our news items and blogs share information, opinions and updates on our work. Find items ordered by date below, or use the filters on the right to select a type (topic or format), partner or research theme.
Displaying results 1 to 5 out of 571
The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) is inviting expressions of interest to attend a sandpit aimed at developing projects to transform discovery and access to data provided by ESRC’s social science data service infrastructures. The projects will deliver a step change in how researchers discover, access and use social science data, and will support the transition to technology-enabled data pipelines for data management, curation, discovery and access.
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The new websites cover our work across ADR England, ADR Northern Ireland and ADR Scotland, joining the established ADR Wales website. Alongside these new, more targeted digital spaces, the ADR UK website will remain as our one-stop-shop for what’s happening across the ADR UK partnership.
Applications are open to become a Parliamentary Thematic Research Lead for 2027 to 2029. The UK Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology (POST) is collaborating with UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) to place a cohort of Thematic Research Leads focused on a range of topics, including some relevant to ADR UK data and research.
From helping us draft emails to supporting healthcare diagnostics, AI tools are increasingly becoming part of everyday life. But as these technologies move faster into public services and workplaces, an important question remains: are people being brought along for the journey? In the latest episode of Connecting Society, co-host Mark Green spoke to Eleanor O’Keeffe and Roshni Modhvadia from the Ada Lovelace Institute about how the public understands, experiences and responds to AI.
This blog by the Data First team at the Ministry of Justice explores new analysis on the education and social care backgrounds of children and young people cautioned or sentenced for knife offences, anti-social behaviour (ASB) and acquisitive offences, and violence against women and girls (VAWG) offences. It highlights how linked administrative data can strengthen the evidence base for early intervention and prevention in support of the UK Government’s Safer Streets Mission.