New NCIA/TUC publication takes the lid off ‘localism’

This week sees the publication of a booklet that we have produced in collaboration with the TUC. ‘Localism: Threat or Opportunity?’ is a series of short essays from 12 contributors expressing a range of critical views about the intentions and likely consequences of the Government’s Localism Act.

 Included are articles on:

  • public services privatisation through
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Driven to market: youth work’s sheepish response?

There’s no sheepishness from In Defense of Youth Work! Join them for free events in London on 26 April and Manchester on 27 April to share experiences of how people are dealing with the marketisation of youth and community work and the wider voluntary sector.

 Since the start of its campaign, In Defence of Youth … Continue reading

In Place of Austerity – putting the alternative argument

Here’s a good read that elegantly puts together different pieces of the jigsaw – the state of the economy, private sector influences on it, the undermining of public services and the welfare state, and how we might come together to resist the plans that the neo-liberals have for us.

In Place of Austerity’ is … Continue reading

Money available to work with us!

NCIA has £2,000 available for projects to link us with others (events, training, policy work, other ideas of your own…) Deadline April 16th

NCIA would like to take its arguments about the effects of privatisation on the voluntary sector to as wide an audience as possible. It would also like to create working alliances with … Continue reading

Commissioning is doing us in. True or false?

Image by Dmitry Bogdanov / wikimedia commonsWe have been getting a lot of horror stories lately about the developing pace and rampant damage that commissioning strategies (especially local authority-based) are doing to local voluntary agencies. We are especially concerned about the impact of the national corporate predators and the success that they appear to be having in hoovering up local contracts … Continue reading

5000 fewer managers, 4000 more doctors?

Learn to speak like a fully engaged, customer-facing choice moderniser…

Health Emergency have an entertaining and insightful guide to the language and spurious concepts used by those currently busying themselves with the dismantling of our welfare state. Have a giggle, get cross, pass it on:

http://www.healthemergency.org.uk/pdf/TeachyourselfLansley.pdf… Continue reading

Surviving hard times with integrity: NCIA at Aston-Mansfield conference

Picture of a signpost saying integrityCome along to the Aston-Mansfield conference on Tuesday 27 September if you want to hear NCIA folks and others get to grips with the urgent need for independent action.

Times are undoubtedly tough. Voluntary groups and community organisations are facing the most severe threat to the long-term sustainability of independent voluntary action in recent memory. … Continue reading

Government White Paper shimmies around the disaster that awaits us

Quack surgeon. Image from Wikimedia public domain art.Andy Benson spots fake sincerity and voluntary sector window dressing in the Open Public Services White Paper

Having just read the government’s White Paper ‘Open Public Services’ I am reminded of two maxims. The first – ‘above all else people value sincerity; if you can fake that you’ve got it made’. This document is full … Continue reading

Interviewing the real ‘big society’

Photo of Sarah LambSarah Lamb is a trustee of Adur Voluntary Action. She was one of the people who contributed to qualitative research in 2009 on The local state and voluntary action in West Sussex which showed the damage commissioning does. NCIA caught up with her to find out how things have been going over the last 18 … Continue reading

Voluntary action under threat: what privatisation means for charities and community groups

Our new paper has evidence about the dangers of commissioning, localism and ‘big society’, all part of the government’s privatisation agenda.

• Public service cuts are a political choice, not an inevitability.

• Creating competitive markets in the voluntary sector through commissioning damages services, users and staff and threatens independence.

• ‘Localism’ and ‘big society’ … Continue reading