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Citizens UK

Citizens UK is a grassroots alliance of local communities working together in England and Wales.

The organisation has 18 chapters across England and one in Wales. These are made up of local institutions, including schools, universities, churches, mosques, synagogues, parent groups, health trusts, charities, and unions.[1] They also support a Guild of Community Organisers and the Centre for Civil Society.[2]

They have worked on several campaigns, including building up over £2 billion[3] of wages through the UK Living Wage campaign, winning a legal cap on the cost of credit, and ending the detention of children for immigration purposes. They have previously campaigns in areas including the Living Wage Foundation,[4] Parents and Communities Together (PACT),[5] and Sponsor Refugees.[6] In 2023, campaigns include Climate Change, Homelessness, Housing, anti-Misogyny and school-based counselling.[7]

In September 2018, Matthew Bolton became the new Executive Director of Citizens UK.[8]

History edit

Citizens UK formed in 1989[9] by Neil Jameson and was originally known as the Citizens Organising Foundation (COF).[10] Jameson was the Executive Director of the organisation until 2018.

The first branch of Citizens UK was in East London. This was an alliance of organisations in Dagenham, Hackney, Newham, Redridge and Tower Hamlets. They became known as The East London Communities Organisation (TELCO).[11] Other branches followed throughout London.

In 2001, TELCO launched the real Living Wage campaign.[12] Members from schools, mosques, churches and other local civil society institutions came together to discuss issues in their local community. Low pay was one of the key issues that consistently came up. At the time, the London minimum wage was £3.70 an hour which meant some people were working multiple jobs and still struggling to make ends meet. Leaders organised rallies, charity music gigs and actions calling for employers to pay all staff and contracted staff a real Living Wage. A march down the Mile End road was organised calling for all staff working in East London hospitals to be a paid a Living Wage. These hospitals were among the first employers to join the movement, followed by local schools and big City firms.[citation needed]

The campaign has since won over £2 billion of additional wages, lifting over 430,000 people out of working poverty.[13]

In 2005, organisation opened an office in Birmingham, UK.[14]

The organisation came to national prominence during the 2010 United Kingdom general election[15] when all three leaders of the UK's three largest political parties addressed a large meeting of its members in what it billed as the "fourth debate", in reference to the three TV debates.[16][17] Each candidate for Prime Minister was questioned on stage concerning their willingness to work with Citizens UK if elected. Each undertook to work with Citizens UK and come to future assemblies to give account of work achieved. In particular they agreed to work to introduce the Living Wage and to end the practice of holding children of refugee families in detention.

The youngest branch of Citizens UK is in Peterborough.[18]

Political philosophy edit

Citizens UK works to build permanent alliances of citizens to exercise power in society. It sees its role in the UK's political system as determinant of the distinction between Civil Society from the State and the Market. Community organising and the role of the professional Community Organiser is seen as working out how to take back power from the State and the Market by holding them accountable. In a democratic society there is a need for a genuine public discourse concerning justice and the common good.[citation needed]

London Citizens edit

London Citizens is the largest civil alliance in the Citizens UK network. The oldest of the four London chapters is The East London Communities Organisation, better known as "TELCO", formed in 1996 at a founding assembly gathering over 1,300 people from 30 different institutions.[19] The other London Chapters are South London Citizens (2004), West London Citizens (2005), and North London Citizens (2011).[20][21]

London Citizens' most high-profile campaigns included those to establish a London living wage, an urban Community Land Trust and CitySafe havens in high streets as a way of tackling knife crime and street violence.[citation needed]

London Citizens has in its four chapters over 240 organisations in membership. In local neighbourhoods small actions are undertaken such as those to prevent a factory from contaminating the area with noxious smells, stopping drug dealing in school neighbourhoods and getting safe road crossings established. Over time larger campaigns were undertaken. Before Mayoral elections for the Greater London Authority in 2000, 2004 and 2008 major Accountability Assemblies were held with the main mayoral candidates.[22] They were asked to support London Citizens and work with them on issues such as London Living Wage; an amnesty for undocumented migrants; safer cities initiatives and development of community land trust housing. South London Citizens held a citizens enquiry into the working of the Home Office department at Lunar House and its impact on the lives of refugees and migrants. This resulted in the building of a new visitor centre at Lunar House in Croydon.

Campaigns edit

Strangers into Citizens edit

Strangers into Citizens was a political advocacy campaign by London Citizens which ran from February 2007 to May 2010. The campaign called for undocumented migrants in the United Kingdom to receive a work permit if they had been resident for four years. The campaign became definitively and formally defunct in the year 2013.

The campaign was organised by Austen Ivereigh, a former director of public affairs for the Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor,[23] and as such had strong links with amongst others the Cardinal Archbishop, Westminster Cathedral, the Catholic Bishops' Conference of England and Wales and the Catholic Herald newspaper, all three being enthusiastic supporters of the political advocacy campaign.

The campaign attempted to influence the policies of the political parties and candidates in both the 2008 London mayoral election and in the 2010 general election. During the London mayoral election, the campaign was supportively endorsed by the Liberal Democrats and the Labour and Conservative candidates for the Mayoralty of London in their personal capacity, being Ken Livingstone and Boris Johnson respectively.

Living Wage Foundation edit

Launched in 2001, the Living Wage campaign calls for every worker in the country to earn enough to provide their family with the essentials of life. As a result of the campaign's success, other cities began to adopt the campaign and Citizens UK set up the Living Wage Foundation (LWF)[4] in 2011 to provide companies with intelligence and accreditation.

Rates are independently calculated every year to meet the real cost of living with an hourly London rate and another rate for the UK, outside London. In the capital it is set by the Greater London Authority. The rate outside London is calculated by the Minimum Income Standard team at Loughborough University, supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. Since launching the campaign has accredited 12,000 employers to pay the living wage and has won over £2 billion of additional wages, lifting over 430,000 people out of working poverty.[24]

People's Olympic Legacy edit

When it was announced that London would bid to be the host city for the 2012 Olympic Games, Citizens lobbied to gain a lasting legacy for Londoners from the billions of pound to be spent. Following on from hundreds of one-to-one meetings and a listening campaign across member institutions, in 2004 London Citizens signed an agreement with the London 2012 bid team, which specified what the people of East London could expect in return for their support in hosting the Olympic Games. The People's Promises, as they are known, had the following demands:

  1. Permanently affordable homes for local people.[25]
  2. Money from the Olympic development to be set aside to improve local schools and the health service.
  3. The University of East London to be main higher education beneficiary of the sports legacy and to consider becoming a Sports Centre of Excellence.
  4. At least £2m set aside for a Construction Academy.
  5. At least 30% of jobs set aside for local people.
  6. That the Lower Lea Valley is designated a 'Living Wage Zone' and all jobs guaranteed a living wage.

In 2023, the demands have yet to be met.[26]

Independent Asylum Commission edit

Citizens UK set up the Independent Asylum Commission to investigate widespread concern about the way refugees and asylum seekers were being treated by the UK Borders Agency. The report made a series of over 200 recommendations for change which are still being negotiated. In the lead up to the 2010 General Election a major campaign was mounted over the number of children being held in detention with their families seeking refugee status. Over 1,000 children were being detained annually. Promises to end this practice were made by all three political leaders at the General Election Accountability Assembly held by Citizens UK in May 2010 at Westminster Central Hall. This resulted in the ending of the practice of holding children of refugee families in detention by the Coalition government and a law was passed in 2014 to prohibit this.

edit

At the height of the Syrian refugee crisis in September 2015, Citizens UK called for the introduction of sponsorship of refugees based on the Canadian model[27] of community sponsorship. [28] This was launched in July 2016. Citizens UK Foundation for Community Sponsorship of Refugees (Sponsor Refugees) [6] was established in October 2017.

In 2022, Citizens UK started the Communities for Ukraine scheme in response to the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine.[29] As of February 2023, the scheme had resettled more than 700 Ukrainian refugees in the UK.[30]

Institute for Community Organising edit

Citizens UK set up the Institute for Community Organising (ICO) as part of its Centre for Civil Society (established in 2010) in response to growing demands for its training. The ICO is the first operating division of the Centre and was established to offer a series of training opportunities for those who wish to make community organising a full or part-time career and also for Community Leaders who wish to learn the broad philosophy and skills of community organising and who are in a position to put them into practice in their institutions and neighbourhoods. The Institute provides training and consultancy on a commercial basis to other agencies which wish to employ the skills and techniques of community organising in their institutions. The ICO has an Academic Advisory Board and an International Professional Advisory Body drawn from the global network of Community Organising Institutes in the UK (Citizens UK), USA (Industrial Areas Foundation) and Germany (DICO).[31]

Training edit

In 2013, Citizens UK created a Master's course in Community Organising in affiliation with Queen Mary University.[32]

In 2023, the organisation runs online and in-person training courses. Several of these are in partnership with Newman University, Birmingham.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ https://www.citizensuk.org/chapters/
  2. ^ UK Charity Commission website, Retrieved 2023-05-23
  3. ^ https://www.livingwage.org.uk/media-key-information-and-statistics
  4. ^ a b "Living Wage Foundation". Living Wage Foundation.
  5. ^ "PACT". PACT.
  6. ^ a b "Sponsor Refugees". Sponsor Refugees.
  7. ^ Citizens UK website
  8. ^ Official website
  9. ^ Civil Society website
  10. ^ [1]
  11. ^ Citizens UK website
  12. ^ "People can play their part in the governance of the nation". The Guardian. 24 March 2010. from the original on 17 April 2023.
  13. ^ Citizens UK website
  14. ^ The Guardian Newspaper website ‘’Citizens’s Gain’’
  15. ^ Jameson, Neil (24 March 2010). "People can play their part in the governance of the nation". The Guardian. London.
  16. ^ The Guardian, 4 May 2010, General election 2010
  17. ^ The Guardian, 3 May 2010, General election 2010: Battered Gordon Brown finds his voice
  18. ^ Citizens UK website, Retrieved 2023-05-23
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 April 2012. Retrieved 24 January 2012.
  20. ^ "South London". Citizens UK.
  21. ^ "West London". Citizens UK.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 September 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  23. ^ "[The] Mail pays Church aide libel costs". BBC News, BBC. 30 January 2009. Retrieved 30 October 2013.
  24. ^ https://www.livingwage.org.uk/media-key-information-and-statistics
  25. ^ "London Community Land Trust". London Community Land Trust. Retrieved 7 March 2016.
  26. ^ Citizens UK website, Olympic Legacy
  27. ^ Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (31 March 2007). "Sponsor a refugee". www.canada.ca.
  28. ^ Citizens UK website
  29. ^ https://www.citizensuk.org/campaigns/refugees-and-migrants-welcome/communities-for-ukraine/
  30. ^ https://www.citizensuk.org/about-us/news/citizens-uks-communities-for-ukraine-scheme-celebrates-resettlement-of-over-700-ukrainian-refugees-on-invasion-anniversary/
  31. ^ Tattersall, Amanda; ChangeMakers; Cox, Jonathan (2021). "ChangeMaker Chat with Jonathan Cox: Scale and Organising". Commons Social Change Library. Retrieved 23 June 2022.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  33. ^ Citizens UK training website, Retrieved 2023-05-23

External links edit

  • Official website

citizens, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2017, l. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Citizens UK news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Citizens UK is a grassroots alliance of local communities working together in England and Wales The organisation has 18 chapters across England and one in Wales These are made up of local institutions including schools universities churches mosques synagogues parent groups health trusts charities and unions 1 They also support a Guild of Community Organisers and the Centre for Civil Society 2 They have worked on several campaigns including building up over 2 billion 3 of wages through the UK Living Wage campaign winning a legal cap on the cost of credit and ending the detention of children for immigration purposes They have previously campaigns in areas including the Living Wage Foundation 4 Parents and Communities Together PACT 5 and Sponsor Refugees 6 In 2023 campaigns include Climate Change Homelessness Housing anti Misogyny and school based counselling 7 In September 2018 Matthew Bolton became the new Executive Director of Citizens UK 8 Contents 1 History 2 Political philosophy 3 London Citizens 4 Campaigns 4 1 Strangers into Citizens 4 2 Living Wage Foundation 4 3 People s Olympic Legacy 4 4 Independent Asylum Commission 4 5 Sponsor Refugees amp Community Sponsorship scheme 4 6 Institute for Community Organising 5 Training 6 References 7 External linksHistory editCitizens UK formed in 1989 9 by Neil Jameson and was originally known as the Citizens Organising Foundation COF 10 Jameson was the Executive Director of the organisation until 2018 The first branch of Citizens UK was in East London This was an alliance of organisations in Dagenham Hackney Newham Redridge and Tower Hamlets They became known as The East London Communities Organisation TELCO 11 Other branches followed throughout London In 2001 TELCO launched the real Living Wage campaign 12 Members from schools mosques churches and other local civil society institutions came together to discuss issues in their local community Low pay was one of the key issues that consistently came up At the time the London minimum wage was 3 70 an hour which meant some people were working multiple jobs and still struggling to make ends meet Leaders organised rallies charity music gigs and actions calling for employers to pay all staff and contracted staff a real Living Wage A march down the Mile End road was organised calling for all staff working in East London hospitals to be a paid a Living Wage These hospitals were among the first employers to join the movement followed by local schools and big City firms citation needed The campaign has since won over 2 billion of additional wages lifting over 430 000 people out of working poverty 13 In 2005 organisation opened an office in Birmingham UK 14 The organisation came to national prominence during the 2010 United Kingdom general election 15 when all three leaders of the UK s three largest political parties addressed a large meeting of its members in what it billed as the fourth debate in reference to the three TV debates 16 17 Each candidate for Prime Minister was questioned on stage concerning their willingness to work with Citizens UK if elected Each undertook to work with Citizens UK and come to future assemblies to give account of work achieved In particular they agreed to work to introduce the Living Wage and to end the practice of holding children of refugee families in detention The youngest branch of Citizens UK is in Peterborough 18 Political philosophy editCitizens UK works to build permanent alliances of citizens to exercise power in society It sees its role in the UK s political system as determinant of the distinction between Civil Society from the State and the Market Community organising and the role of the professional Community Organiser is seen as working out how to take back power from the State and the Market by holding them accountable In a democratic society there is a need for a genuine public discourse concerning justice and the common good citation needed London Citizens editLondon Citizens is the largest civil alliance in the Citizens UK network The oldest of the four London chapters is The East London Communities Organisation better known as TELCO formed in 1996 at a founding assembly gathering over 1 300 people from 30 different institutions 19 The other London Chapters are South London Citizens 2004 West London Citizens 2005 and North London Citizens 2011 20 21 London Citizens most high profile campaigns included those to establish a London living wage an urban Community Land Trust and CitySafe havens in high streets as a way of tackling knife crime and street violence citation needed London Citizens has in its four chapters over 240 organisations in membership In local neighbourhoods small actions are undertaken such as those to prevent a factory from contaminating the area with noxious smells stopping drug dealing in school neighbourhoods and getting safe road crossings established Over time larger campaigns were undertaken Before Mayoral elections for the Greater London Authority in 2000 2004 and 2008 major Accountability Assemblies were held with the main mayoral candidates 22 They were asked to support London Citizens and work with them on issues such as London Living Wage an amnesty for undocumented migrants safer cities initiatives and development of community land trust housing South London Citizens held a citizens enquiry into the working of the Home Office department at Lunar House and its impact on the lives of refugees and migrants This resulted in the building of a new visitor centre at Lunar House in Croydon Campaigns editStrangers into Citizens edit Strangers into Citizens was a political advocacy campaign by London Citizens which ran from February 2007 to May 2010 The campaign called for undocumented migrants in the United Kingdom to receive a work permit if they had been resident for four years The campaign became definitively and formally defunct in the year 2013 The campaign was organised by Austen Ivereigh a former director of public affairs for the Archbishop of Westminster Cardinal Cormac Murphy O Connor 23 and as such had strong links with amongst others the Cardinal Archbishop Westminster Cathedral the Catholic Bishops Conference of England and Wales and the Catholic Herald newspaper all three being enthusiastic supporters of the political advocacy campaign The campaign attempted to influence the policies of the political parties and candidates in both the 2008 London mayoral election and in the 2010 general election During the London mayoral election the campaign was supportively endorsed by the Liberal Democrats and the Labour and Conservative candidates for the Mayoralty of London in their personal capacity being Ken Livingstone and Boris Johnson respectively Living Wage Foundation edit Main article Living Wage Foundation Launched in 2001 the Living Wage campaign calls for every worker in the country to earn enough to provide their family with the essentials of life As a result of the campaign s success other cities began to adopt the campaign and Citizens UK set up the Living Wage Foundation LWF 4 in 2011 to provide companies with intelligence and accreditation Rates are independently calculated every year to meet the real cost of living with an hourly London rate and another rate for the UK outside London In the capital it is set by the Greater London Authority The rate outside London is calculated by the Minimum Income Standard team at Loughborough University supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation Since launching the campaign has accredited 12 000 employers to pay the living wage and has won over 2 billion of additional wages lifting over 430 000 people out of working poverty 24 People s Olympic Legacy edit When it was announced that London would bid to be the host city for the 2012 Olympic Games Citizens lobbied to gain a lasting legacy for Londoners from the billions of pound to be spent Following on from hundreds of one to one meetings and a listening campaign across member institutions in 2004 London Citizens signed an agreement with the London 2012 bid team which specified what the people of East London could expect in return for their support in hosting the Olympic Games The People s Promises as they are known had the following demands Permanently affordable homes for local people 25 Money from the Olympic development to be set aside to improve local schools and the health service The University of East London to be main higher education beneficiary of the sports legacy and to consider becoming a Sports Centre of Excellence At least 2m set aside for a Construction Academy At least 30 of jobs set aside for local people That the Lower Lea Valley is designated a Living Wage Zone and all jobs guaranteed a living wage In 2023 the demands have yet to be met 26 Independent Asylum Commission edit Citizens UK set up the Independent Asylum Commission to investigate widespread concern about the way refugees and asylum seekers were being treated by the UK Borders Agency The report made a series of over 200 recommendations for change which are still being negotiated In the lead up to the 2010 General Election a major campaign was mounted over the number of children being held in detention with their families seeking refugee status Over 1 000 children were being detained annually Promises to end this practice were made by all three political leaders at the General Election Accountability Assembly held by Citizens UK in May 2010 at Westminster Central Hall This resulted in the ending of the practice of holding children of refugee families in detention by the Coalition government and a law was passed in 2014 to prohibit this Sponsor Refugees amp Community Sponsorship scheme edit At the height of the Syrian refugee crisis in September 2015 Citizens UK called for the introduction of sponsorship of refugees based on the Canadian model 27 of community sponsorship 28 This was launched in July 2016 Citizens UK Foundation for Community Sponsorship of Refugees Sponsor Refugees 6 was established in October 2017 In 2022 Citizens UK started the Communities for Ukraine scheme in response to the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine 29 As of February 2023 the scheme had resettled more than 700 Ukrainian refugees in the UK 30 Institute for Community Organising edit Citizens UK set up the Institute for Community Organising ICO as part of its Centre for Civil Society established in 2010 in response to growing demands for its training The ICO is the first operating division of the Centre and was established to offer a series of training opportunities for those who wish to make community organising a full or part time career and also for Community Leaders who wish to learn the broad philosophy and skills of community organising and who are in a position to put them into practice in their institutions and neighbourhoods The Institute provides training and consultancy on a commercial basis to other agencies which wish to employ the skills and techniques of community organising in their institutions The ICO has an Academic Advisory Board and an International Professional Advisory Body drawn from the global network of Community Organising Institutes in the UK Citizens UK USA Industrial Areas Foundation and Germany DICO 31 Training editIn 2013 Citizens UK created a Master s course in Community Organising in affiliation with Queen Mary University 32 In 2023 the organisation runs online and in person training courses Several of these are in partnership with Newman University Birmingham 33 References edit https www citizensuk org chapters UK Charity Commission website Retrieved 2023 05 23 https www livingwage org uk media key information and statistics a b Living Wage Foundation Living Wage Foundation PACT PACT a b Sponsor Refugees Sponsor Refugees Citizens UK website Official website Civil Society website 1 Citizens UK website People can play their part in the governance of the nation The Guardian 24 March 2010 Archived from the original on 17 April 2023 Citizens UK website The Guardian Newspaper website Citizens s Gain Jameson Neil 24 March 2010 People can play their part in the governance of the nation The Guardian London The Guardian 4 May 2010 General election 2010 The Guardian 3 May 2010 General election 2010 Battered Gordon Brown finds his voice Citizens UK website Retrieved 2023 05 23 TELCO Citizens UK Archived from the original on 9 April 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2012 South London Citizens UK West London Citizens UK London Mayoral Election 2012 Citizens UK Archived from the original on 6 September 2013 Retrieved 17 September 2013 The Mail pays Church aide libel costs BBC News BBC 30 January 2009 Retrieved 30 October 2013 https www livingwage org uk media key information and statistics London Community Land Trust London Community Land Trust Retrieved 7 March 2016 Citizens UK website Olympic Legacy Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada 31 March 2007 Sponsor a refugee www canada ca Citizens UK website https www citizensuk org campaigns refugees and migrants welcome communities for ukraine https www citizensuk org about us news citizens uks communities for ukraine scheme celebrates resettlement of over 700 ukrainian refugees on invasion anniversary Tattersall Amanda ChangeMakers Cox Jonathan 2021 ChangeMaker Chat with Jonathan Cox Scale and Organising Commons Social Change Library Retrieved 23 June 2022 MA Community Organising Archived from the original on 5 October 2013 Retrieved 17 September 2013 Citizens UK training website Retrieved 2023 05 23External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Citizens UK amp oldid 1188279892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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