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Archive May 2005

 


A selection of articles from the issue are featured below. To open the pages you will need acrobat reader. If you need to download this, click here

To view the contents page from this issue, click the link below.



 
Full contents of the May 2005 issue.
 


 

The voluntary sector has been more accommodating than most of the increasing regulatory burden - many have even welcomed it. But that's all the more reason for the government to listen to legitimate concerns that red tape has gone too far and is stifling the sector's ability to work, says Stuart Anderson

 


 
In March the government launched its consultation on Compact Plus, designed to bolster the Compact. All well and good, says Nick Aldridge, but charities' solution to poor funding practice lies closer to home.
 

 
Charity Commission investigations such as that into the Kingsway International Christian Centre (KICC) and the debate surrounding the Charities Bill have led some religious charities to argue that the regulator doesn't understand them. Becky Slack finds out if their fears are well founded.
 

 
Recent press stories of cases where funders have rejected applications for failing to adequately target minority ethnic communities have caused considerable anger, but is this really political correctness going mad? The evidence suggest not, say Krishna Sarda (left) and Dr. Christina Julios
 

Supplement: Investment quarterly

 


Second quarter

 

 
the FTSE4Good Index is almost four year's old, but has failed to spark the interest it hoped for from the charity sector. Gail Moss argues that it can, however, boast some modest but important achievements
 

 
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