Interview with Carey Oppenheim

Carey Oppenheim, Special Adviser to the Prime Minister at Number 10 between 2000 and 2005 explains how the Turner Pensions Commission came into being, why it did not take the form of a Royal Commission and why the specific Commissioners were appointed.

Keywords:
independent commissions, policy advice, special advisers
Subjects:
History
Political science and international studies
Social policy

This dataset is part of a collection:

Cite the collection as:
Pearce, N., Massala, T., 2020. Data from UK Pension Reforms (1997-2015). Bath: University of Bath Research Data Archive. Available from: https://doi.org/10.15125/BATH-00846.

Cite this dataset as:
Pearce, N., Massala, T., 2020. Interview with Carey Oppenheim. Bath: University of Bath Research Data Archive.

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Data

CAREY-OPPENHEIM … 260319.mp4
video/mp4 (2GB)
Creative Commons: Attribution 4.0

Creators

Nick Pearce
University of Bath

Contributors

University of Bath
Rights Holder

Coverage

Collection date(s):

26 March 2019

Temporal coverage:

From 1 May 1997 to 7 May 2015

Geographical coverage:

United Kingdom

Funders

Nest Insight

UK Pension Reforms (1997-2015): Elite and Expert Interviews
PO:0000011508

Pensions Reform in the UK (NEST)

Publication details

Publication date: 31 December 2020
by: University of Bath

Version: 1

URL for this record: https://researchdata.bath.ac.uk/id/eprint/871

Related papers and books

Pearce, N., and Massala, T., 2020. Pension Reforms in the UK: 1997 to 2015. London: Nest Insight. Available from: https://www.nestinsight.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Pension-Reforms-in-the-UK-1997-to-2015.pdf.

Contact information

Please contact the Research Data Service in the first instance for all matters concerning this item.

Contact person: Thomais Massala

Departments:

Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences
Politics, Languages and International Studies
Social & Policy Sciences

Research Centres & Institutes
Institute for Policy Research (IPR)