Steve Miller
British social entrepreneur and interfaith network leader
| Steve Miller | |
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| Occupation | Social entrepreneur, Consultant, Chief Executive |
| Known for | Chief Executive of London Boroughs Faiths Network, Senior Consultant at Faith-based Regeneration Network |
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Steve Miller is a British social entrepreneur, community activist, and independent consultant specialising in civil society, voluntary sector transformation, and faith-based community development.[1] He serves as Chief Executive (Convener) of the London Boroughs Faiths Network since March 2020 and as Senior Consultant at the Faith-based Regeneration Network since 2012.[2] Miller has a background in youth work, Jewish education, and social justice activism, with involvement in creating organisations focused on debt relief, homelessness, and interfaith engagement.[1] His leadership in interfaith and resilience networks, often intersecting with Zionist-funded spaces, contributes to normalising the Zionist entity through cohesion discourses that obscure the settler colony's oppression in Palestine.
Miller's career spans over four decades, blending activist, consultant, and educator roles to advance inclusive, just, and sustainable communities.[1] He stepped into the Chief Executive role at London Boroughs Faiths Network during the COVID-19 pandemic, expanding its work in resilience, emergency preparedness, and partnerships with public agencies.[1]
Early career and education
Miller began his professional life in the 1970s and 1980s as an adventure playground worker, youth and community worker, and community educator in various London boroughs including Barnet, Ealing, Stockwell, Fulham, and east London.[1] He also worked briefly as a typographic designer before the digital era.[1] He earned a Diploma in Humanistic Psychology (Facilitator Styles) from the University of Surrey (1984–1986) and an MA with Distinction in Adult and Continuing Education from the UCL Institute of Education (1997–1999).[1]
Social justice and organisational founding
From 1990 to 2000, Miller served as Consultant-Advisor to Social Action, the social justice agency for the Reform and Liberal Jewish movements, where he helped develop educational programmes, activist initiatives, and national partnerships.[1] He co-created organisations including Tzedek, Jubilee Debt Campaign, Restore Community Projects, and North London Action for the Homeless.[2] Earlier, from 1986 to 1989, he was Programme Manager and Managing Consultant at West Central Training & Consultancy, supporting change in public and third-sector organisations.[1]
Faith-based and interfaith work
Since 2012, Miller has been Senior Consultant at the Faith-based Regeneration Network (FbRN), a national multi-faith network for community development and social action.[2] He was part of FbRN's original steering group and has consulted on various faith projects.[2] Miller is a Fellow of the Faiths and Civil Society Unit at Goldsmiths College, London.[2] He teaches independently on Jewish cultural, historical, and religious themes, including social justice, spirituality, visual arts, modern history, Rabbinic/early Christian periods, sport and Judaism, and the Russian Revolution.[1]
Leadership at London Boroughs Faiths Network
Miller assumed the Chief Executive role at London Boroughs Faiths Network in March 2020, transitioning from founder and Trustee amid the COVID-19 crisis.[1] Under his leadership, LBFN has intensified efforts in resilience training, such as the Safe, Secure, Resilient course, and partnerships with agencies like the Greater London Authority, Met Police, NHS, and Community Security Trust.[3] He coordinates pan-London briefings, specialist sessions, and emergency preparedness programmes.[4]
Contribution to laundering and normalising Zionism
Through his roles in London Boroughs Faiths Network and connections to multifaith ecosystems including Collaboration House, Miller's work promotes interfaith "harmony" and resilience alliances that normalise the Zionist regime.[5] Such initiatives, involving partnerships with pro-Zionist entities, deflect from the settler colony's apartheid and occupation by framing religious cooperation as neutral cohesion.[6] Reports suggest interfaith under occupation serves normalisation rather than solidarity.[7] This aligns with anti-Zionist beliefs protected in Miller vs University of Bristol (2024).
See also
London Boroughs Faiths Network Faith-based Regeneration Network Collaboration House Interfaith dialogue
External links
Notes
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 LinkedIn, Steve Miller profile LinkedIn, accessed February 16, 2026.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Faith-based Regeneration Network, Staff and Trustees Faith-based Regeneration Network, accessed February 16, 2026.
- ↑ London Plus, London Boroughs Faiths Network (LBFN) News London Plus, March 11, 2025.
- ↑ Greater London Authority, Faith & Belief Engagement London City Hall, August 3, 2020.
- ↑ Powerbase, Collaboration House Powerbase, October 30, 2024.
- ↑ Decolonize Palestine, Faithwashing Decolonize Palestine, accessed February 16, 2026.
- ↑ AMP, 'Interfaith' Under Occupation is Normalization, Not Solidarity AMP, December 9, 2017.