Posted on March 31st, 2010 by Veronique Jochum in Other news
Tagged as: government, statistics
1 Comment
Last December CLG announced that it would be publishing produce a report on the nation’s civic health early 2010. Well, the report is now out and it’s a fantastic source of information on participation.
The main report can be dowloaded in the CLG website. Alongside the main report, a summary and an annex (with measures of civic health for each upper tier and unitary authority in England) have also been prodduced.
Upon first impressions, the report - arguably a riposte to the Centre for Social Justice’s accusations that we live in Broken Britain - pulls together data from big government surveys such as the British Crime Survey, the Citizenship Survey and the National Survey of Third Sector Organisations - the latter two being directly relevant to those working in the voluntary sector. Because the report has to pull together data from such a wide variety of sources it will probably be criticised for being selective or for not having anything new to say. But it would be a great shame if that was the only response, because this sort of digest (which I hasten to add we produce for the voluntary sector in the form of the Almanac) is incredibly useful to get a rounded view of participation and engagement.
Some of the most interesting messages for the voluntary sector relate to issues of trust. At a time when there is an active discussion about the relative roles of the state, the market and the voluntary sector, the main report reminds us that voluntary organisations are trusted by a larger proportion of the population (75%) than institutions such as government (34%) and major companies (37%). Compared to other countries, voluntary organisations are trusted by a larger proportion of the population. I think that’s interesting, particularly in the light of findings from ESRC’s Public Services Programme that the public aren’t necessarily keen for charities to deliver some public services: all of which might reinforce support for voluntary organisations’ campaigning role.
My only quibble is the name of the report. I think much of its content is a discussion of the nation’s civil health, not its civic health (for which I read government). This is something NCVO has discussed in previous analysis of policy around participation and engagement. But for now, as a researcher I think it is a good thing that the debates around these issues are informed by a very useful review of the evidence.