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UKAJI

This category contains 72 posts

Research Roadmap – where have we been and where do we need to go with research on administrative justice?

An overview of UKAJI’s consultation paper Since starting work nearly three years ago, UKAJI’s primary tasks have been to bring together researchers, research users, policy makers, practitioners, and others to encourage more empirically based research into administrative justice and to design an agenda for future research. This blog post summarises our consultation paper, which results … Continue reading

Live research projects – latest update June 2017!

As part of our work to develop a network of researchers working in administrative justice, today we launch an updated version of the UKAJI Live Research Projects database, alongside a number of new profiles of projects listed in the database.  An organic resource The register is an organic resource, and we are well aware that work … Continue reading

Job vacancy: Administrator needed

A vacancy exists for an Administrative Assistant (0.5 FTE) to support the work of the UK Administrative Justice Institute at the School of Law, University of Essex. Ideally we are seeking an experienced administrator to support the work of this national Nuffield Foundation funded institution. This is a half-time, fixed-term post to commence as soon as possible … Continue reading

Using UKAJI’s website as a research resource

    ‘What is administrative justice?’ is one of the pages on our website most viewed by visitors. Does this mean it’s an unfamiliar term, or is it simply difficult to define? We’ve spent a lot of time thinking about the answer to the question ‘What is administrative justice?’ and, more importantly, the question of why it … Continue reading

Data sources for administrative justice research – a toolkit for researchers

In this post, Dr Kakia Chatsiou describes her UKAJI project identifying sources of data held by central government departments. By Kakia Chatsiou One of the main priorities of UKAJI’s work has been to identify and develop strategies to tackle capacity constraints within administrative justice research in the UK. Integral to this is improving the knowledge … Continue reading