Blog author: Renee Luthra
How did levels of UK hate crime change during and after Covid-19?
Renee Luthra & Alita Nandi write for the Economics Observatory
Intergenerational Consequences of Immigrant Selectivity: when does contextual attainment matter?
The value of keeping ethnic ties: why adherence to recommended COVID-19 health behaviours differs among young adults
Professor Renee Luthra writes for the International Public Policy Observatory about our latest ESRC Research Centre on Micro-Social Change study on behaviours during lockdown
Are there ethnic differences in adherence to recommended health behaviours related to Covid-19?
Professor Renee Luthra on new research using a novel data set
Are UK immigrants selected on education, skills, health and social networks?
Professor Renee Luthra writes for LSE
Is hate crime rising during the Covid-19 crisis?
Writing for the ESRC-funded Economics Observatory, MiSoC’s Renee Luthra and Alita Nandi explore whether the Covid-19 crisis is likely to create a more hostile environment for immigrants and ethnic minorities
The impact of Brexit on the EU migrants in UK Higher Education
MiSoC’s Dr Renee Luthra describes her new research into how Brexit was experienced by highly skilled migrants in the UK higher education sector, a sector reliant on EU migration, and the ways that employment in higher education buffered staff against its impact
How ethnic and racial harassment damages mental health
Dr Alita Nandi and Dr Renee Luthra investigate how ethnic and and racial harassment could affect the victims’ mental health
EU students do very well out of studying in the UK – Brexit might scupper that
Dr Renee Luthra and Greta Morando on how British science and innovation could lose the best graduates from UK universities