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ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in ContinuedAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
HOW COUNCILS CAN HELP PEOPLE BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS I’m a big fan of TED Talks. 15 minute injections of interesting ideas by smart people very well delivered. I also like evidence. My two favourite TED Talks are about relationships. One is from Robert Waldinger, the Director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. This study has tracked over 75 years the lives of Continued NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate.ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in ContinuedAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
HOW COUNCILS CAN HELP PEOPLE BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS I’m a big fan of TED Talks. 15 minute injections of interesting ideas by smart people very well delivered. I also like evidence. My two favourite TED Talks are about relationships. One is from Robert Waldinger, the Director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. This study has tracked over 75 years the lives of Continued NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
#NOTWITHOUTME: DIGITAL ACCESS FOR ALL Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
THE WALES WE WANT
To coincide with the 10 year anniversary of the publication of the Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, the Carnegie UK Trust is publishing a series of blogs which outline the approach taken to measuring and improving wellbeing by different governments, organisations and initiativesaround the world.
ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in ContinuedAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
HOW COUNCILS CAN HELP PEOPLE BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS I’m a big fan of TED Talks. 15 minute injections of interesting ideas by smart people very well delivered. I also like evidence. My two favourite TED Talks are about relationships. One is from Robert Waldinger, the Director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. This study has tracked over 75 years the lives of Continued NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate.ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in ContinuedAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
HOW COUNCILS CAN HELP PEOPLE BUILD BETTER RELATIONSHIPS I’m a big fan of TED Talks. 15 minute injections of interesting ideas by smart people very well delivered. I also like evidence. My two favourite TED Talks are about relationships. One is from Robert Waldinger, the Director of the Harvard Study of Adult Development. This study has tracked over 75 years the lives of Continued NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
LOCAL INNOVATIONS TO SOLVE THE PROBLEMS THAT MATTER Local Innovations to solve the problems that matter. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its many challenges has tested our ability to innovate. Many of us associate the idea of innovation with bright, new objects or processes, and this could include the game-changing COVID-19 vaccine created by scientists at Oxford University.THE WALES WE WANT
To coincide with the 10 year anniversary of the publication of the Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, the Carnegie UK Trust is publishing a series of blogs which outline the approach taken to measuring and improving wellbeing by different governments, organisations and initiativesaround the world.
ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate.ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the ScottishAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have establishedONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
LOCAL INNOVATIONS TO SOLVE THE PROBLEMS THAT MATTER Local Innovations to solve the problems that matter. The COVID-19 pandemic, with its many challenges has tested our ability to innovate. Many of us associate the idea of innovation with bright, new objects or processes, and this could include the game-changing COVID-19 vaccine created by scientists at Oxford University.THE WALES WE WANT
To coincide with the 10 year anniversary of the publication of the Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, the Carnegie UK Trust is publishing a series of blogs which outline the approach taken to measuring and improving wellbeing by different governments, organisations and initiativesaround the world.
IMPROVING WELLBEING IN THE UK & IRELAND The trust aims to improve wellbeing by influencing public policy and changing lives through innovative practice and partnerships. OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local FUTURE OF PUBLIC LIBRARY SERVICES Public library services are valued and trusted resources at the heart of communities. They foster learning and social, cultural and economic wellbeing. Making a Difference: Libraries, Lockdown and Looking Ahead is the Trust’s series of reports on the role public library services and their staff played supporting individuals and communities during lockdown; the barriers libraries ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications todayAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. IMPROVING WELLBEING IN THE UK & IRELAND Visitors to our website. Cookies. Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. They are widely used in order to make websites work, or work more efficiently, as well as to provide information to the owners of the site. OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local FUTURE OF PUBLIC LIBRARY SERVICES Public library services are valued and trusted resources at the heart of communities. They foster learning and social, cultural and economic wellbeing. Making a Difference: Libraries, Lockdown and Looking Ahead is the Trust’s series of reports on the role public library services and their staff played supporting individuals and communities during lockdown; the barriers libraries ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications todayAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have established ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayedAFFORDABLE CREDIT
The question of how to make affordable credit available to people across the UK has long been a highly complex and contested public policy issue. Our Affordable Credit project is seeking to bring new solutions to this area with a focus on identifying alternative options to the commercial high cost credit market. We have establishedWORK AND WELLBEING
We believe that work should always improve personal wellbeing rather than undermine it. The challenge for policy makers and employers is to take a holistic view of how work impacts on wellbeing, to understand how we might deliver more fulfilling work for many more people. Work and Wellbeing In Work and Wellbeing: Exploring Data in ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
LOCAL COUNCILS TO REPORT ON PROGRESS OF COMMUNITY PLANNING Representatives from the 11 Community Planning Partnerships will meet in Lisburn on Monday to discuss how Community Planning is making a difference and delivering results across Northern Ireland. The importance of telling the story of Community Planning will be explored as councils get ready to report progress to the Department for Communities by November 2019.ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
WHAT WE KNOW
There are some figures to suggest that this is the case. A 2014 survey by BT found that the productivity of flexible workers increased by 30%. Similarly, a YouGov survey from 2015 suggested that 30% of office workers felt their productivity increased when they worked remotely. And in a study of flexible workers undertaken by Cranfield THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate.ENABLING STATE
Our Enabling State programme of research, practice and advocacy seeks to better understand the paradigm shift that is transforming the UK welfare state into an enabling state. The Trust recognises the profound impact that agency, control and relationships have on our wellbeing and advocates for a more Enabling State that empowers individuals and communities and KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT Kindness, emotions and human relationships: The blind spot in public policy. Share this Publication. Author: Julia Unwin CBE. Year: 2018. ISBN: 978-1-909447-95-0. There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexiconof
ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
WHAT WE KNOW
There are some figures to suggest that this is the case. A 2014 survey by BT found that the productivity of flexible workers increased by 30%. Similarly, a YouGov survey from 2015 suggested that 30% of office workers felt their productivity increased when they worked remotely. And in a study of flexible workers undertaken by Cranfield THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
ONLINE HARMS: THE WAY FORWARD Online Harms: The Way Forward. December 14, 2020. Share this story. By William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust, Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate and Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex. Publication of the UK Government’s final policy is imminent and will hit their promised “end of the year” deadline. We hope that the much-delayed COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND COVID-19 Community planning: a local wellbeing approach Community planning brings the wellbeing outcomes based approach of the current Programme for Government to the local level in Northern Ireland. Like the Programme for Government, the purpose of community planning is to improve the wellbeing of each council area and the quality of life forthose who live
WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the ScottishONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
THE WALES WE WANT
To coincide with the 10 year anniversary of the publication of the Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, the Carnegie UK Trust is publishing a series of blogs which outline the approach taken to measuring and improving wellbeing by different governments, organisations and initiativesaround the world.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications todayWORK AND WELLBEING
We believe that work should always improve personal wellbeing rather than undermine it. The challenge for policy makers and employers is to take a holistic view of how work impacts on wellbeing, to understand how we might deliver more fulfilling work for many more people. Work and Wellbeing In Work and Wellbeing: Exploring Data in ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
#NOTWITHOUTME: DIGITAL ACCESS FOR ALL Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
WHAT WE KNOW
There are some figures to suggest that this is the case. A 2014 survey by BT found that the productivity of flexible workers increased by 30%. Similarly, a YouGov survey from 2015 suggested that 30% of office workers felt their productivity increased when they worked remotely. And in a study of flexible workers undertaken by Cranfield NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications todayWORK AND WELLBEING
We believe that work should always improve personal wellbeing rather than undermine it. The challenge for policy makers and employers is to take a holistic view of how work impacts on wellbeing, to understand how we might deliver more fulfilling work for many more people. Work and Wellbeing In Work and Wellbeing: Exploring Data in ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
#NOTWITHOUTME: DIGITAL ACCESS FOR ALL Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
WHAT WE KNOW
There are some figures to suggest that this is the case. A 2014 survey by BT found that the productivity of flexible workers increased by 30%. Similarly, a YouGov survey from 2015 suggested that 30% of office workers felt their productivity increased when they worked remotely. And in a study of flexible workers undertaken by Cranfield NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September 2019. A former National Trustee on the BBC Trust, She has over 37 years’ local and central government experience in Northern Ireland including CEO in local ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina Bowyer. E: georgina.bowyer@carnegieuk.org. T: 01383 721445. Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connectionsWELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE Power – A Practical Guide for Facilitating Social Change. Share this Publication. Author: Raji Hunjan and Jethro Pettit. Year: 2011. ISBN: 0-900259-83-3. A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL Internet Harm Reduction: a Proposal. This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during2018-2019
THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS Engaging Libraries Phase 2 Projects. Engaging Libraries supports public libraries to run public engagement activities on research within the themes of health, society, and culture. It helps to facilitate partnerships between public libraries and researchers, and spark people's curiosity around topics that are relevant or interesting to them. ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE Online Harms: Initial Response. December 15, 2020. Share this story. We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications todayWORK AND WELLBEING
We believe that work should always improve personal wellbeing rather than undermine it. The challenge for policy makers and employers is to take a holistic view of how work impacts on wellbeing, to understand how we might deliver more fulfilling work for many more people. Work and Wellbeing In Work and Wellbeing: Exploring Data in ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented,ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
#NOTWITHOUTME: DIGITAL ACCESS FOR ALL Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
WHAT WE KNOW
There are some figures to suggest that this is the case. A 2014 survey by BT found that the productivity of flexible workers increased by 30%. Similarly, a YouGov survey from 2015 suggested that 30% of office workers felt their productivity increased when they worked remotely. And in a study of flexible workers undertaken by Cranfield NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Kindness is radical. The word kindness is derived from kin. ‘Kinned-ness’ is, then, about recognising what we share. However fleetingly, it turns ‘others’ into kin (or ‘kin-like’) and is the antithesis of the harsh discourses of othering that have come to dominate popular and political debate. BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen McGinley OBE. Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September2019.
KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS This project focuses on the town of Sowerby Bridge and is engaging the public with research around air quality and health. The project involves a launch event with a guest author, followed by the opportunity to borrow and experiment with 2 types of portable air quality monitor, for measuring indoor and outdoor air quality, and toshare findings.
WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda and what does not; even what information we have, what we know, and how we see ourselves as agents and actors. Continued INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during 2018-2019 which are informed by our KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexicon of public policy. The Trust was delighted that Julia Unwin CBE accepted our invitation to become a Carnegie Fellow; and over the course of the last two years we THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
OUR BOARD - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Aideen McGinley OBE. Aideen is a Carnegie UK Trustee and chair of the Enabling Wellbeing in Northern Ireland advisory group. She was appointed to the National Trust’s Board of Trustees in September2019.
KINDNESS - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Kindness is at the very heart of our wellbeing. The relationships that we have with those around us, and the quality of our interactions with organisations and services, are fundamental to improving wellbeing outcomes across society. Since 2016, we have led a programme of work to explore what can be done to encourage kindness in Continued ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS This project focuses on the town of Sowerby Bridge and is engaging the public with research around air quality and health. The project involves a launch event with a guest author, followed by the opportunity to borrow and experiment with 2 types of portable air quality monitor, for measuring indoor and outdoor air quality, and toshare findings.
WELLBEING IN POLICY
The Carnegie UK Trust has been actively involved in promoting wellbeing in policy since the establishment of the first Carnegie Roundtable on Measuring What Matters in Scotland in 2010. Since 2011 we have published case studies of how governments and civil society organisations measure wellbeing in France, the USA, and Canada; made recommendations on next steps for the Scottish OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
POWER - A PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR FACILITATING SOCIAL CHANGE A lot of people talk about power. But very few really try to understand it. Yet, power affects everything we do – the decisions that control our lives; what emerges in the public agenda and what does not; even what information we have, what we know, and how we see ourselves as agents and actors. Continued INTERNET HARM REDUCTION: A PROPOSAL This proposal was developed by Professor Lorna Woods, University of Essex and William Perrin a Trustee of Carnegie UK Trust. Lorna and William each have over 20 years of experience of regulatory policy and practice across a range of regimes. The following is a summary of our publications during 2018-2019 which are informed by our KINDNESS, EMOTIONS AND HUMAN RELATIONSHIPS: THE BLIND SPOT There is growing recognition of the importance of kindness and relationships for societal wellbeing. But talking about kindness does not fit easily within the rational lexicon of public policy. The Trust was delighted that Julia Unwin CBE accepted our invitation to become a Carnegie Fellow; and over the course of the last two years we THE ONLINE HARMS WHITE PAPER: A SUMMARY RESPONSE FROM THE The Online Harms White Paper published by the UK Government in April is a significant step in attempts to improve the online environment. Given the White Paper’s breadth of scope, the complexity of the issues tackled as well as the challenging political environment within which it was drafted, it is hardly to be expected that the White Paperwould be perfect.
OUR TEAM - CARNEGIE UK TRUST Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
BUILDING FORWARD, FOR THE FUTURE: WHAT CAN A WELLBEING The Carnegie UK Trust works to improve personal, community and societal wellbeing. Many of the issues that we work on, and the partners and groups who we work with, are deeply affected by the impact of the COVID-19 crisis. Over the coming weeks we’ll be sharing a series of blogs with reflections and questions acrossContinued
ENGAGING LIBRARIES PHASE 2 PROJECTS This project focuses on the town of Sowerby Bridge and is engaging the public with research around air quality and health. The project involves a launch event with a guest author, followed by the opportunity to borrow and experiment with 2 types of portable air quality monitor, for measuring indoor and outdoor air quality, and toshare findings.
WORK AND WELLBEING
We believe that work should always improve personal wellbeing rather than undermine it. The challenge for policy makers and employers is to take a holistic view of how work impacts on wellbeing, to understand how we might deliver more fulfilling work for many more people. Work and Wellbeing In Work and Wellbeing: Exploring Data in ONLINE HARMS: INITIAL RESPONSE We welcome the publication of the Online Harms final response: it has been long delayed but there is now a real opportunity to deliver significant improvements to the safety of users of online services in the UK. There is much detail in the government’s publications today – not just the White Paper response, but also Continued ONLINE HARMS AND A STATUTORY DUTY OF CARE Stay in touch with all the latest developments on online harms policy and research with our regular Online Harms newsletter: sign up here to receive future editions direct and view previous editions here. Social media has changed the landscape of communication for millions across the globe. The benefits that social networks can bring are plentiful and well documented, #NOTWITHOUTME: DIGITAL ACCESS FOR ALL Georgina is a Policy and Development Officer in the Digital and Work team, working on projects including Engaging Libraries, Digital Access for All, and research into the connections between mental health, ethnicity and precarious work.Georgina has previously managed projects on towns regeneration, better data for towns, youth enterprise andnurture education.
ONLINE HARMS
The statutory duty of care approach to online harms gives regulators a new route to protect the vulnerable and make markets work better where social media might have caused harm. The statutory duty approach focuses on systemic issues with social media services rather than individual complaints or breaches. Many regulators encounter the useof social
WELLBEING AT THE CENTRE OF SCOTLAND'S PROGRESS To coincide with the 10 year anniversary of the publication of the Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, the Carnegie UK Trust is publishing a series of blogs which outline the approach taken to measuring and improving wellbeing by different governments, organisations and initiativesaround the world.
NOT RANDOM BUT RADICAL? BEYOND BUMPER STICKER VERSIONS OF Julie Brownlie is Senior Lecturer in sociology at Edinburgh University where she researches sociological approaches to emotions and relationships.. Simon Anderson, who co-authored this guest blog, is an independent social research consultant and Honorary Fellow in the School of Social and Political Science at Edinburgh University.Toggle navigation
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SIGN UP TO OUR BI-MONTHLY ENEWSLETTER FEATURE SIGN UP TO OUR BI-MONTHLY ENEWSLETTER FEATURE 2020 Carnegie UK Trust Carnegie United Kingdom Trust Scottish charity RCN: SC 012799 operating in the UK, RCN: 20142957 operating in Ireland. Incorporated by Royal Charter 1917×
TERMS AND CONDITIONS Welcome to our website www.carnegieuktrust.org.uk. If you continue to browse and use this website, you are agreeing to comply with and be bound by the following terms and conditions of use, which together with our privacy policy govern our relationship with you in relation to this website. If you disagree with any part of these terms and conditions, please do not use our website. We are the Carnegie United Kingdom Trust, a Scottish Charity SC 012799 operating in the UK and 20142957 operating in Ireland. We were incorporated by Royal Charter in 1917. Our registered office is Carnegie UK Trust, Andrew Carnegie House, Pittencrieff Street, Dunfermline, Fife, KY12 8AW. Please remember that throughout these terms when we mention “we”, “us” or “our”, we mean Carnegie UK Trust. When we refer to “you” or “your” we mean the user or viewer of our website. Your use of this website is subject to the following terms of use: * The content of the pages of this website is for your general information and use only. It is subject to change without notice. * Neither we nor any third parties connected to us provide any warranty or guarantee as to the accuracy, timeliness, performance, completeness or suitability of the information and materials found or offered on this website for any particular purpose. You acknowledge that such information and materials may contain inaccuracies or errors and we expressly exclude liability for any such inaccuracies or errors to the fullest extent permitted by law. * Your use of any information or materials on this website is entirely at your own risk, for which we and any third parties connected to us shall not be liable. It shall be your own responsibility to ensure that any products, services or information available through this website meet your specific requirements. * Furthermore, to the fullest extent permitted by law (but without prejudice to any liability that we cannot lawfully limit or exclude) we and any third parties connected to us hereby expressly exclude any liability for any direct, indirect or consequential loss or damage incurred by any user in connection with our website or in connection with the use, or inability to use, or results of the use of our website, any websites linked to it and any materials posted on it (including liability for loss of income or revenue, loss of business, loss of profits or contracts, loss of anticipated savings, loss of data or loss of goodwill) and for any other loss or damage of any kind, however arising and whether caused by delict (including negligence), breach of contract or otherwise, even if foreseeable. * Save as set out on this website, we are the owners of all intellectual property rights (including copy rights, trademarks, service marks, data base rights and trading names) in this web site and in the material published on it. Those works are protected by copyright laws and other treaties around the world. All such rights are reserved. Reproduction is prohibited other than with our expresspermission.
* Our status (and that of any identified contributors) as the authors of material on this website must always be acknowledged. * All trademarks reproduced in this website which are not the property of, or licensed to, us are acknowledged on the website. * Unauthorised use by you of this website may give rise to, amongst other things, a claim for damages. * From time to time this website may also include links to other websites. These links are provided for your convenience and for your information only. They do not signify that we endorse the website(s). We have no responsibility for the content of the linked website(s) and accept no responsibility for them or for any loss or damage that may arise from your use of them. * Access to our website is permitted on a temporary basis, and we reserve the right to withdraw or amend the service we provide on our website without notice. We will not be liable if for any reason our website is unavailable at any time or for any period. * You must not misuse our website by knowingly introducing viruses, Trojans, worms, logic bombs, or other material which is malicious or technologically harmful. You must not attempt to gain unauthorised access to our website, the server on which our website is stored or any server, computer or database connected to our website. These terms of use and any dispute or claim arising out or in connection with them or their subject matter or formation (including non-contractual disputes or claims) shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of Scotland and the Scottish courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction over any claims arising from, or related to, a visit to our website.×
PRIVACY
This privacy policy sets out how Carnegie UK Trust use and protect any personal information that you give us when you use this website. Carnegie UK Trust is committed to ensuring that your privacy is protected. Should we ask you to provide certain information by which you can be identified when using this website, then you can be assured that it will only be used in accordance with this privacy policy. Carnegie UK Trust may change this policy from time to time by updating this page. You should check this page from time to time to ensure that you are happy with any changes. This policy is effective from 2nd May2018.
SECURITY
We are committed to ensuring that the information we hold is secure in accordance with the Data Protection Act 1998 and General Data Protection Regulation. In order to prevent unauthorized access or disclosure, we have put in place suitable physical, electronic and managerial procedures to safeguard and secure the information wecollect online.
LINKS TO OTHER WEBSITES Our website may contain links to other websites of interest. However, once you have used these links to leave our website, you should note that we do not have any control over that other website. Therefore, we cannot be responsible for the protection and privacy of any information which you provide whilst visiting such sites and such sites are not governed by this privacy policy. You should exercise caution and look at the privacy statement applicable to the website inquestion.
DISCLOSURE
It is our policy that we do not use or disclose information about your individual visits to the site or information that you may give us when interacting with the services on the website unless required to do so by law or by the exceptions listed in the relevant sections of the privacy notice below.PRIVACY NOTICE
This privacy notice tells you what to expect when we collect personal information. It applies to information we collect about: * Visitors to our website; * Users of our website forms and application systems; * People who email us; * People who call us If you have any questions or requests regarding our use of your personal information, then please use the following contact details.TELEPHONE
+44 (0)1383 721445
info@carnegieuk.org
ADDRESS
Registered company address: Carnegie UK Trust, Andrew Carnegie House, Pittencrieff Street, Dunfermline, Fife, KY128AW
VISITORS TO OUR WEBSITECOOKIES
Cookies are small text files that are placed on your computer by websites that you visit. They are widely used in order to make websites work, or work more efficiently, as well as to provide information to the owners of the site. The table below explains the cookies we use on the Carnegie UK Trust website and why. Please note we only use cookies to enhance the functionality on the website and do not use cookies to attempt to identify you for the purposes of processing your data in any way.COOKIE NAME
PURPOSE
_PHPSESSID_
As you browse around the pages of the website, the session cookie tells the website that you are the same person requesting the webpages, and not a new visitor to each page. This cookie does not identify you personally and is not linked to any other information westore about you.
__ga, _gat, _gid,_
__utma, _utmb, _utmc,___utmz_
These cookies are set and used by Google Analytics to gather information about your visit to our website.__cfduid_
Our website uses “Cloudflare”, a performance and security system. This cookie helps it determine trusted visitors to thewebsite_._
_loc, mus, na_id, na_tc, notice_preferences, ssc, sshs, uid, ups,uvc_
Our website uses “addthis” which helps us keep track of statistics on shares/likes etc on our news section. _wfvt_xxxxxx, wordfence_verifiedHum an_ Our website uses “Wordfence”, a security plugin. These cookies help it distinguish between malicious visitors to the website andgenuine people.
_EU_COOKIE_LAW_CON SENT_ This cookie tracks whether you have consented to the use of cookies on the site. This will change as the cookie consent model is updated. When you visit our website you are presented with a cookie control message. You can disable cookies by clicking the “Learn More” link on this area. Web browsers also offer control over cookies through the browser settings, including how to see what cookies have been set and how to manage and delete them, visit www.aboutcookies.org or www.allaboutcookies.org. ‘ENEWSLETTER FEATURE’ FORM SIGN-UP (LOCATED IN FOOTER) In order to sign-up for our bi-monthly enewsletter we ask for you to fill in this form and provide us with your first name, last name, email address and organisation (optional). In addition we will store the page of the website you submitted the form from and the date that you submitted the form. As this is a sign-up form, by completing the form you are providing us with ‘Consent’ to use your personal data in order to send you our bi-monthly newsletter. We will not use or process your data for anyother reason.
When you submit the form, your data is transmitted to us via email and also stored securely in our web database for a period of 30 days (to ensure the data is not lost in transit). Within the 30 day period our team will transfer your email address to MailChimp where it will be stored for the purposes of sending you our enewsletter. When you receive our enewsletter you will have the option (on every enewsletter) of unsubscribing from our mailing list. After the 30 day period is up we automatically delete your data from the website database and email systems. Your email address will continue to be held in our MailChimp account on our mailing list. We will not share this information with any third party (other than MailChimp) unless required to do so by law.REGISTER FORM
In order to submit applications to us you will have to become a registered user of the website. This will allow you to log in, create and save applications. Our registration form asks you to enter a username, email address and password. By filling in this form you are providing us with ‘Consent’ to store your personal details in order to identify you, let you log onto your account and submit or retrieve savedapplications.
Your data is held securely in the website database (passwords are encrypted) and is not used for any purpose other than authenticating you as a registered user and allowing you access to the applicationsystem.
If you wish your account to be deleted please contact us using the detail provided in this privacy notice. We will not share this information with any third party unless required to do so by law. APPLICATION FORMS FOR FUNDING Periodically our website contains application forms to submit funding applications online. Application forms can only be accessed and submitted by registered users (see registration form section above). Each application form is different and we only ask you to provide information that is required in order to process your application. This information is securely transmitted and stored. By filling in the application form you ‘Consent’ for and ‘Contract’ us to use the data in order to process your application. When you either save or submit the form, your data is securely stored in the web database. On submission, a PDF of your completed application along with any files submitted is created and emailed to us. A copy is sent to you for your records via email. We take the data provided and enter it into our CRM database system for processing. At this point the data will be removed from the website database (within 90 days of application submission). Application PDF’s and files will be securely stored offline for a period of time in order to manage the application process and for record keeping. Your data is only used for the purposes of processing the application.We do not pass your data to third parties unless required to doso by law, in order to verify the detail contained in your application or to share with relevant persons considering your application. Any third party that we do share your data with in this regard will be required to observe strict confidentiality in relation to that data. We review our retention periods for personal information on a regular basis. We will hold your personal information on our systems for as long as is necessary for the relevant activity, or as long as is set out in any relevant contract you hold with us.GOOGLE ANALYTICS
When someone visits our website we use a third-party service, Google Analytics, to collect standard internet log information and details of visitor behaviour patterns. We do this to find out information such as the number and demographic details of visitors to a certain page ofthe website.
This information is anonymised and processed in a way which does not identify you as a user and we do not make any attempt to find out the identities of those visiting our website via Google Analytics. We follow Google’s policy for informing you that we use Google Analytics (see clause 7 at https://www.google.com/analytics/terms/us.html) and advise that if you want specific information about how Google collects and processed data to check it at this link https://policies.google.com/technologies/partner-sites?hl=en-GB&gl=uk . Google will keep this up to date. Cookie control can be used to prevent this (see cookie section above).ADDTHIS
AddThis is provided on our website news pages in order to allow users to quickly and easily share our news on their social networks. AddThis collects information from visitors. This information does not directly identify an individual and is instead designed to identify the devices used by our visitors. Cookie control can be used to prevent this (see cookie section above). PEOPLE WHO ARE APPLYING FOR EMPLOYMENT WITH US If you choose to apply for a job with us you will be required to download an application form from our website and you will then be asked to email your application to lucy@carnegieuk.org. We will use the information provided in your application only for the purposes of considering you for the post for which you have applied. We review our retention periods for personal information on a regular basis. We are legally required to hold some types of information to fulfil our statutory obligations including information relating to our recruitment process. We will hold your personal information on our systems for as long as is necessary for the relevant recruitment and selection activity (normally 12 months after notifying the outcome of the process), or for as long as is set out in any relevant contractyou hold with us.
Your data is only used for the purposes of processing your application. We do not pass your data to third parties unless required to do so by law, in order to verify the detail contained in your application or to share with relevant persons considering your application. Where we do share your data with third parties, it is shared on the basis that strict confidentiality will be observed.PEOPLE WHO EMAIL US
If you choose to send us an email (various email address’ are available throughout the website) the details you include will be held securely by our email provider. Please be aware that you have a responsibility to ensure that any email you send to us is within thebounds of the law.
We may use the information provided in your email for the purposes of responding to your email and any personal information will be deleted once the email has been processed. If we require to store your personal data in order to provide additional services, then we will ask for your consent before doing so.PEOPLE WHO CALL US
When you call Carnegie UK Trust (our phone number is available on the website) we may make notes of your call in order to process the call. This may include taking personal details. The details taken will only be used for the purposes of processing the call and will be deleted once the call has been completed and processed. If we require to store your personal data in order to provide additional services, then we will ask for your consent before doing so.×
ACCESSIBILITY
The Carnegie UK Trust is fully committed to ensuring that its website is accessible and inclusive for all user groups, including people withdisabilities.
The design and build of the website has taken into account the following guidelines: * The W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) * The Disability Discrimination Act 1995, (Part III) The Disability Discrimination Act states unambiguously that private and public sector web sites must be accessible. Guidelines include: * Allowing users to control text sizes * Using an easy to read font type * Ensuring suitable foreground and background colour contrast * Using clear and simple grammar * Providing meaningful text equivalents for pictures * Providing simple and consistent site navigation * Ensuring the target of each link is clearly defined * Providing a full sitemap * Providing navigational short cuts for users of text only browsersand page readers
* Using appropriate structural mark-up to maximise browser support * Ensuring all content and functionality is available to users without content style sheet (CSS), image and script support STANDARDS COMPLIANCE * The pages on our website conform at a minimum to level A compliance as specified by the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines and endorsed by the Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB). The majority of pages meet level AA and AAA requirements. * The pages within the website should validate as HTML5 and use structured semantic markup. HTML5 is a new implementation of the markup language and although all pages are checked against the most current validators the HTML5 syntax is much more relaxed and allows for a combination of HTML4 and XHTML standards. So errors may be wrongly reported until validators and the advisory group finalise and agree upon the draft spec. * All pages on this site use structured semantic markup, eg, H1 tags are used for main titles, H2 tags for subtitles.COLOURS
We have checked the site’s font and background colour combinations against the different colour blindness conditions and ensured that all information is still clear.PDF DOCUMENTS
A number of downloadable PDF documents are available to download from the web site. In order to view these files, you may need to download Adobe Acrobat Reader from the Adobe website.FONT SIZES
You may change the font size of this document to your preference through your browser.STYLE SHEETS
This site uses cascading style sheets for visual layout. If your browser or browsing device does not support style sheets, the use of structured semantic markup ensures that the content of each page is still readable and clearly structured. The site makes use of some advanced features of CSS3, the latest version of the technology, this allows for greater separation between content and visual elements. If you would like to comment on the accessibility of our site pleasecontact us.
BROWSERS
This website has been designed and built to take advantage of the latest versions of HTML and CSS, these are supported in the latest versions of most web browsers including Google Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Opera and Internet Explorer 9. All content is fully accessible regardless of browser or browsing device and suitable fallbacks are in place for less advanced browsers. We use cookies to enhance the functionality on the website and do not use cookies to attempt to identify you for the purposes of processing your data Find out more.Okay, thanks
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