Has the voluntary sector been colonised by neo-liberal thinking?

Photo 7Back in 2013 Ursula Murray produced an important paper which examined the influences of neo-liberal thinking on developments in the voluntary sector, which we published on this website. Ursula has just sent us a revised version of this paper dated February 2014 which she says is “…still in a late 2013/ very  early 2014 mindset … Continue reading

Cuts, Co-options & Trojan Horses – House of Commons – 30th June 5.30pm

Trojan_Horse‘CUTS, CO-OPTIONS AND TROJAN HORSES:

VOLUNTARY GROUPS AGAINST A CONSERVATIVE GOVERNMENT’

 

HOUSE OF COMMONS ON TUESDAY 30th JUNE 2015

5.30pm – 8.30pm

Under New Labour and Coalition Governments, the role and purpose of those providing voluntary and community services has been co-opted by central and local government. Contract-based commissioning and procurement regimes have replaced grant … Continue reading

NCIA roadshows coming up – Sheffield, Brighton, Durham

Listen to us cartoonNCIA Transition Roadshows – Meet… Discuss… Debate…Act…

The NCIA Transition ‘roadshow’ is about to start. The first three are happening in Sheffield, Durham and Brighton, each organised by a local host in collaboration with NCIA. This is part of NCIA’s transition and goodbye handshake in its current form. Book your place directly with the local … Continue reading

Third Sector and the NHS – The Trojan Horse?

Trojan_HorseSussex is one area of the country lucky enough to have a feisty local Defend our NHS campaign. Lately the group has been taking a look at the role of voluntary agencies in the struggle to stop the break-up of the Health Service. The result is an impressive paper. Whilst voluntary groups can both oppose … Continue reading

Voluntary services face bleak future as ‘servants of the Government’

do-nothing-go-forward-pic-monkey2Launching the final report from their Inquiry into the Future of Voluntary Services, the National Coalition for Independent Action (NCIA) has today called on voluntary and community services to face up to a decisive moment in its history. In a blistering critique of the systemic threats posed to the values, work and freedom of the … Continue reading

What’s happening in the workplace – next 2 Inquiry reports

do-nothing-go-forward-pic-monkey2Today we publish the next two reports from our Inquiry into the Future of Voluntary Services.

The impact of contracting and commissioning on volunteers and volunteering in Voluntary Services Groups by Colin Rochester charts the rise of the ‘workplace model’ and the formalisation of volunteer management that “threatens the untamed and often maverick expression of … Continue reading

What the Labour Party has in store for us

under contractWe thought that Lisa Nandy MP, Labour Shadow Minister for Civil Society, might bring a fresh and enquiring eye to the tired politics we are used to. We were wrong. The message we take from the Labour Party “consultation with the third sector” is that Labour will do just the same as the Tories but … Continue reading

Northern Ireland and Scotland – the same or different?

do-nothing-go-forward-pic-monkey2Two more Inquiry reports are released today. ‘Lenin’s Useful Idiots? Voluntary Action and Public Service Reform in Northern Ireland, from Nick Acheson of the University of Ulster, reviews recent developments in relations between voluntary agencies and the devolved administration. It summarises the main similarities and differences between Northern Ireland and the other jurisdictions in … Continue reading

The Failure of Leadership

do-nothing-go-forward-pic-monkey2‘Leadership’ groups, at both national and local levels, have failed to protect voluntary services groups and their users and communities from the damaging changes of the last decade. This is the broad conclusion of two Inquiry reports released today.

The position and role of national infrastructure bodies concerning the cuts to and privatisation of public Continue reading

Peterborough Prison and Social Impact Bonds – what’s going on?

Kenneth Clarke, then justice secretary, talks to an inmate at Peterborough prison in 2010Recently the Government announced that it was pulling the plug on the Peterborough Prison Social Impact Bond (SIB) pilot, despite an interim evaluation showing “promising results”. This scheme – due to have run for seven years instead of the three now planned – has been dragged round the conference circuit now for several years by … Continue reading