Hilary Burrage
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2013-01-12-HilaryBurrage6898aa56KB200x250.jpgHilary Burrage is a freelance sociologist and writer. Previously a college Senior Lecturer, Hilary now owns a consultancy focusing on social policy issues. She is also Executive Chair of the Samuel Coleridge-Taylor Foundation.
Community engaged, and with national board-level experience of regeneration, science, health, environmental issues, politics and culture, Hilary has worked in many contexts, from Liverpool via London to Prague. Abandoning a natural science degree, Hilary trained briefly as a coloratura soprano and then turned for the long-term to sociology; she has an M.Sc. in the Sociology of Science and Technology and has been a community health researcher. She is currently campaigning to STOP FGM in Britain.
A former American Field Service Scholar, Hilary is now a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
Hilary tweets primarily as @HilaryBurrage. Her website is here.
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Blog Entries by Hilary Burrage

Needed Right Now: A 'Keep Safe' Phone-Line (KSL) to Stop Female Genital Mutilation in Britain

(15) Comments | Posted May 14, 2013 | 7:00 PM

There is no place anywhere, ever for female genital mutilation (FGM). But somehow Britain has become the 'capital of FGM' in Europe.

Better news is that the UK Government has now pledged up to £35 million towards the global eradication of FGM. Curiously however...

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To Stop Female Genital Mutilation in the UK, Follow (and Invest) the Money

(36) Comments | Posted February 27, 2013 | 6:00 PM

To some it may seem heartless, but surely it's obvious: If we really, seriously want to eradicate female genital mutilation (FGM) we have to move beyond the moralising - essential as it is - and follow the money. And we must understand the market.

Culture change is difficult

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The Sande Society, Sororities and Sex Education: Why PSHE is Important

(2) Comments | Posted February 13, 2013 | 6:47 PM

As a teenager in the 1960s I was thrilled to gain a scholarship to attend American High School for my Senior (final school-age) year. The transition from Birmingham UK to Arizona USA was stark, but everyone did their very best to make me welcome; and thus it was, hardly had...

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The Momentum Increases: Leveson on Human Rights and the UN's FGM Announcement, All Within a Week

(1) Comments | Posted December 4, 2012 | 6:30 PM

It's has been quite a week on the human rights front for big news, both national and - has anyone noticed? - international.

Not often do we see massive steps towards gender equality coming thick and fast; but that's what's happening just now.

Consider: In the UK,

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Cynical Silo Thinking Is Not Policy for the Green Challenges Ahead

(7) Comments | Posted October 28, 2012 | 7:00 PM

This week we learned that the UK Coalition government wants to deregulate farm workers' wages, permit support allowances for only two children in any family, and lower subsidy (?investment) levels for green power plants.

It's commonplace that the Coalition abandoned intentions to be the...

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Female Genital Mutilation Is Child Abuse Too; So Why NO Enquiries About Ignoring It?

(32) Comments | Posted October 25, 2012 | 7:00 PM

In May this year an e-petition demanding an end to female genital mutilation (FGM) in Britain was submitted to the UK Government website. I was lead author of that petition, which can be viewed here.

Well over 20,000, perhaps 25,000, under-age British girls are...

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Cross-Disciplinary, Cross-Purpose: The Muddles of Multi-Agency Working

(0) Comments | Posted September 30, 2012 | 6:48 PM

The political conference season is one point in the year when it's quite reasonable to feel confused. So many claims and so much talk; but with what real effect, for whom?

Perhaps though we can learn more about politicians and their parties than we first imagine, if we ask...

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The Problem Isn't Badgers, It's (Politically Led?) Bad Science

(39) Comments | Posted September 19, 2012 | 7:00 PM

After years of posturing and shadow boxing, it looks like the 'War of the Rurals' has finally begun.

This very week will, extraordinary intervention excepted, see the beginning of a massive badger cull authorised by DEFRA to eradicate Bovine (cattle) TB - aka...

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Female Genital Mutilation: Why Does This 'Holiday' Horror Endure?

(25) Comments | Posted September 16, 2012 | 7:00 PM

'Summer Holidays are for Fun not Pain' declared the (London) Metropolitan Police Force as school broke up for the Summer 2012 break... A strange but necessary message because, horrifically, thousands, of young British girls are forced to undergo female genital mutilation (FGM) whilst school is out;...

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Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912), Britain's Foremost Black Classical Composer: The Centenary Legacy

(0) Comments | Posted August 29, 2012 | 5:49 AM

Just a few days after this year's Slavery Remembrance Day, on 23 August, we will mark also the centenary legacy of the black British music composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, who died one hundred years ago, on 1 September 1912.

Only 37 years old at his...

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Female Genital Mutilation in Britain: The Scandal About to Break...

(111) Comments | Posted June 6, 2012 | 7:00 PM

Every year upwards of 20,000 young girls in Britain are at risk, or already victim, of female genital mutilation (FGM, or 'cutting'). Yet never has there been a successful court case in the UK against the perpetrators of this barbaric child abuse. Nor has there ever been any...

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