Image copyright Downing Street Image caption Several new appointments were made to the government whips' office

Theresa May has said her reshuffle makes the government look "more like the country it serves" with a "new generation" of ministers brought in.

The PM has appointed several new faces to her ministerial team.

The mostly junior ministerial appointments come after Monday's cabinet-level changes.

These triggered the resignation of education secretary Justine Greening and were branded a "lacklustre PR exercise" by Labour.

Of Tuesday's appointments, six men and eight women were new additions to government, including five from ethnic minorities and 11 who were elected in 2015.

Six of the women - all elected in 2015 - have been appointed as junior whips, who will be involved with enforcing party discipline.

Downing Street said that following the reshuffle there were more women attending cabinet, more female ministers and more members of the government from ethnic minorities.

The number of women who are full cabinet members has remained the same as before at six.

But the number of other senior female ministers also attending cabinet has risen from two to four, taking the total number of women around the table to 10.

Who really gained?

Image copyright AFP

By the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg

Day two arguably went better for the prime minister than day one. She is able to claim, as planned, to have upped the numbers of women in government and new ministers from ethnic minorities.

The talk in Downing Street is of a new "talent pipeline", the jargon for bringing on a new generation to be ready whenever big jobs available next time round.

But there is a lot of muttering among MPs about the overall logic of the reshuffle. Some individual decisions seem puzzling - moving Rory Stewart from International Development, in which he is regarded as a proper expert - to the prisons brief for instance.

Making the up-and-coming Brexiteer lawyer, Dominic Raab, the new Housing Minister, stirring controversy by promoting Esther McVey to secretary of state in a department she already controversially served in, DWP, where she was near the top of the Labour hit list.

There is real anger too among some members of the government at how Justine Greening was treated on Monday night, compared to her male colleagues.

Read Laura's full blog

Mrs May said it would allow "a new generation of gifted ministers to step up and make life better for people across the whole UK".

The latest changes include Jo Johnson being moved from his universities role to transport, and Suella Fernandes becoming a minister in the Department for Exiting the EU.

Mr Johnson had been in the firing line over the appointment of columnist Toby Young to the board of the government's universities regulator.

The brother of former London mayor Boris Johnson, he will also be the minister for London in his new role.

Among the other ministerial moves announced on Tuesday:

Mr Johnson was replaced by Sam Gyimah as universities minister

Mark Garnier lost his job as trade minister - a source said his departure was not related to recent allegations of improper conduct

John Hayes (transport), Philip Dunne (health) and Robert Goodwill (education) also left their posts

Alok Sharma moved from housing to employment

Dominic Raab replaced Mr Sharma as housing minister

Rory Stewart replaced Mr Raab as justice minister

Margot James, Harriet Baldwin and Caroline Dinenage become ministers of state at Culture, the Foreign Office and Health respectively

John Glen and Robert Jenrick join the Treasury

The most high-profile cabinet ministers all kept their jobs in the reshuffle, in which Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt is believed to have persuaded the PM to keep him in post with a beefed-up role rather than move him to another department.

Image copyright AFP Image caption The reshuffled cabinet met for the first time on Tuesday

Image copyright PA Image caption Rory Stewart move to justice surprised some commentators

Image caption Sam Gyimah is the new universities minister

Speaking on the BBC's Daily Politics, new Conservative deputy chairman James Cleverly said he was not worried about the hostile newspaper headlines generated by the reshuffle.

"Today and yesterday were about reshuffles and that always causes lots of froth and drama in the media," he said.

"Today's headlines are what they are - tomorrow and onwards we will be getting the really important stuff which is about what we are doing, what we are delivering in government."

Image copyright EPA Image caption Esther McVey has been made work and pensions secretary

In some of the key cabinet appointments on Monday:

Ms Greening was replaced as education secretary by Damian Hinds

Esther McVey was promoted to work and pensions secretary

Justice Secretary David Lidington was moved to the Cabinet Office, and will deputise for Mrs May at Prime Minister's Questions

David Gauke replaced Mr Lidington as justice secretary

Matt Hancock is culture secretary and Karen Bradley is the new Northern Ireland secretary

Brandon Lewis was made the Conservative Party chairman

Two departments were renamed - housing was added to the title of the communities department while the title of Mr Hunt's health brief now includes social care.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Justine Greening resigned after being offered the job of work and pensions secretary

Alan Milburn, the former Labour minister who was until recently the government's social mobility tsar, said Ms Greening's departure was "a loss as far as social mobility is concerned", saying she had been "actually getting on and doing something".

Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson also said she was sorry to see Ms Greening leave:

In her resignation statement on Monday evening, Ms Greening said: "Social mobility matters to me and our country more than a ministerial career."

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said: "The government's big plan for the new year is to dodge the real issues and reshuffle the pack in a pointless and lacklustre PR exercise.

"It's simply not good enough. You can't make up for nearly eight years of failure by changing the name of a department."