| Baroness
Helena Kennedy QC is to chair a legal review of the laws governing
charity campaigning.
The review, which will be conducted by a group of representatives
from across the third sector, will examine the legal and
regulatory barriers to campaigning. It will look at four
key issues: charity law and the guidance issued by the Charity
Commission; media restrictions including the Communications
Act 2006; criminal restrictions on campaigning; and freedom
of information.
Members of the group include Tim Hancock, UK campaigns
director at Amnesty International, Association of Charitable
Foundations chief executive David Emerson, Lawrence Simanowitz,
partner at Bates Wells and Braithwaite, and head of campaigning
effectiveness at the NCVO, Chris Stalker.
“I am delighted to be chairing this review into the
legal and regulatory framework in respect of campaigning
by charities – an activity currently hampered by a
considerable amount of trepidation and confusion,”
Baroness Kennedy said. “We shall examine a wide range
of relevant areas and make recommendations we believe will
help clarify existing guidelines.”
Ian Leggett, director of People & Planet and a member
of the advisory group, said: “The group’s diversity
and breadth means that it is in an ideal position to make
recommendations for legal reform. There is a widely shared
view that charity, media and criminal law needs reforming
if the government’s commitment to the voice and empowerment
of the voluntary sector is to bear fruit.”
“For too long the scale and effectiveness of campaigning
has been limited by its uncertain legal status,” Leggett
added. “We want to create a framework that will help
to transform attitudes and practice within the sector.”
The group will report its findings by the end of April.
It is timed to coincide with the government’s review
of campaigning, part of the 10 year third sector review
conducted by the Office of the Third Sector and the Treasury.
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