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As seven years of public sector pay restraint come slowly – and unevenly – to an end, Suzannah Brecknell meets the Office for Manpower Economics, the team helping pay review bodies and departments navigate new terrain
Cabinet secretary praises work of Open Innovation Team in helping open up policymaking to universities
Existing operations chief to switch to post heading up organisation’s Brexit team
Home secretary Amber Rudd sets out action plan to deal with cases of people facing immigration issues following rule changes
Sean Luke, BT's CIO for the Universities Sector, on the strange parallels between GDPR readiness and grief
Report criticises system that allows ministers and officials to blame each other for mistakes
Shadow chancellor proposes independent board to oversee tax authority which he said could improve decision-making
MPs criticise department for not knowing where to spend £7bn pump-priming cashpot
Vodafone examines the way small adjustments can transform the public sector
It is easy for politicians to blame immigration officers and other civil servants tasked with implementing immigration rules and regulations. But to do so unfairly distracts from the all but inevitable outcome of reducing the number of staff properly employed and trained to enforce immigration law
New appointments in the civil service, UK politics, and public affairs, via our colleagues at Dods People
Former immigration chief insists "checks and balances" would prevent wrongful deportations
Committee berates government’s “lack of commitment to citizenship policies” and short-lived initiatives
Taking up the post as permanent secretary of the Welsh Government was a homecoming for Dame Shan Morgan after a career that has taken her around the world. She talks to Richard Johnstone about devolved taxes, Brexit talks, and Patagonian adventures
Public spending watchdog supports reasoning behind £35-39bn projection but warns "relatively small changes" could push cost outside the range
Tax authority set to be questioned by select committee after investigations reveal political donations were included in background note for telecoms giant Lycamobile
House of Lords motion wins backing from all living ex-Cabinet secretaries and former FCO leaders
Lord Kerslake has called for an inquiry into the Home Office decision to destroy Windrush landing cards
As the Equality and Human Rights Commission marks its tenth anniversary, it is running a series of events to ask: how fair is Britain? Six months on from Theresa May’s Race Disparity Audit, Daniel Bond reports on the challenge of transforming this evidence into real action on racial inequality. Photography by Paul Heartfield
Helen MacNamara returns to the Cabinet Office to enforce rules on propriety and governance
National Audit Office found gaps of 18% across more than 100 critical skills including intelligence and engineering
Government statistics agency appeals from charity and private sector in promoting digital inclusion
Home Office insists that decision was taken by then UK Border Agency and did not provide any reliable evidence relating to residence claims
BT brought together CIOs from well known organisations to identify the key threats and opportunities that new technologies are presenting