

Charities get seat on Iceland bank creditors committee |
Most failures caused by 'weak financial management' |
No 'headline-grabbing support' to come from government |
Dormant accounts bill becomes law, but with pledge to review |
Minister backs legal powers for Compact Commissioner |
Government help for business extended to third sector |
Childcare umbrella body rebrands as Children England |
Blunkett moots 'civil volunteer force' |
LSC appoints Marsh as chair of equality committee |
Good and bad for charities in Darling's report |
Charity Finance's 2008 charity audit survey includes data from 1,148 charities, with total income of £19.8bn paying audit fees of £21.3m.
Against a backdrop of extraordinary turmoil in the global economy and the implementation of the Charities Act 2006 this survey is an essential tool for charities looking to keep abreast of the charity audit market.
Should the government compensate those charities that had money in Icelandic banks?
Poll ArchiveJuggling the finance - Donald Yule's series about the nice people and their nice charity idea continues...
SoFA Gripes - Gareth Jones questions some charities’ attempts at making financial reporting more accessible.
25 February 2009
9/10 March 2009
26 March 2009
Civil Society IT is a new magazine about the effective use of IT in all kinds of not-for-profit organisations.
Technology impacts on all areas of charity operations – from fundraising to awareness-raising, service delivery to financial management, human resources to governance.
Now we’ve brought this all together in one place to highlight innovation, examine new ideas, and share best practice. Civil Society IT is essential reading for anybody who influences, specifies or procures IT equipment or expertise.
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