Difference between revisions of "British Council"
(→Board of Trustees 2005) |
m (updating from APPC register - add refs) |
||
(12 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{Template:Propaganda badge}} | ||
+ | |||
The [[British Council]] is the British government's cultural propaganda body. The Council even carries a discussion of the its own history on its website which states as much: | The [[British Council]] is the British government's cultural propaganda body. The Council even carries a discussion of the its own history on its website which states as much: | ||
− | :The British Council was founded as an organ of international propaganda. During the late 1920s an influential group of civil servants became convinced that ‘British’ values of parliamentary democracy could be subsumed by the rising tide of fascism. Their response was the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, which became the British Council. Particular Council initiatives included the teaching of English, but political messages always came along with the language tuition. | + | :The British Council was founded as an organ of international propaganda. During the late 1920s an influential group of civil servants became convinced that ‘British’ values of parliamentary democracy could be subsumed by the rising tide of fascism. Their response was the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, which became the British Council. Particular Council initiatives included the teaching of English, but political messages always came along with the language tuition<ref>Nicholas J Cull [http://www.britishcouncil.org/history-why-propaganda.htm Propaganda?] British Council Website. Accessed 29th January 2008</ref> |
− | Its | + | Its chair is [[Neil Kinnock]], the former leader of the [[Labour Party]]. It answers to the [[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]]. |
==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
The British Council aims to build mutually beneficial cultural and educational relationships between people in the United Kingdom and in other countries, and increase appreciation of the United Kingdom's creative ideas and achievements. Its overseas network extends over 110 countries. British Council libraries have however been closed in a number of countries judged of little strategic importance to the Council as it refocussed its activities on China and The Gulf. Council offices were closed in Lesotho, Swaziland, Ecuador and provincial Lander in Germany in 2000/2001 - as well as Belarus - prompting Parliamentary criticism; and there is currently a threat to British Council operations in Peru. Around 65% of its income is self-generated through teaching English, conducting examinations and managing aid and development projects. The remainder of the funding is provided by the [[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]], which is providing a grant of £186.2 million for the year beginning 2005. | The British Council aims to build mutually beneficial cultural and educational relationships between people in the United Kingdom and in other countries, and increase appreciation of the United Kingdom's creative ideas and achievements. Its overseas network extends over 110 countries. British Council libraries have however been closed in a number of countries judged of little strategic importance to the Council as it refocussed its activities on China and The Gulf. Council offices were closed in Lesotho, Swaziland, Ecuador and provincial Lander in Germany in 2000/2001 - as well as Belarus - prompting Parliamentary criticism; and there is currently a threat to British Council operations in Peru. Around 65% of its income is self-generated through teaching English, conducting examinations and managing aid and development projects. The remainder of the funding is provided by the [[Foreign and Commonwealth Office]], which is providing a grant of £186.2 million for the year beginning 2005. | ||
− | Founded in | + | Founded in 1934 as the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, the British Council was inspired by Sir [[Rex Leeper|Reginald ("Rex") Leeper]]'s recognition of the importance of "cultural propaganda" in promoting Britain. |
− | |||
==Board of Trustees 2005== | ==Board of Trustees 2005== | ||
Line 18: | Line 19: | ||
*Professor [[Timothy O'Shea]] BSc Phd, member of the board of trustees, Principal and Vice-chancellor, The University of Edinburgh | *Professor [[Timothy O'Shea]] BSc Phd, member of the board of trustees, Principal and Vice-chancellor, The University of Edinburgh | ||
*[[Charles Grant]], member of the board of trustees, Director, [[Centre for European Reform]] | *[[Charles Grant]], member of the board of trustees, Director, [[Centre for European Reform]] | ||
− | *[[Rick Haythornthwaite]], member of the board of trustees, Chief Executive, | + | *[[Rick Haythornthwaite]], member of the board of trustees, Chief Executive, [[Invensys]] plc. |
*Sir [[Michael Jay]] KCMG, member of the board of trustees, Permanent Under-Secretary of State and Head Diplomatic Service, Foreign and Commonwealth Office | *Sir [[Michael Jay]] KCMG, member of the board of trustees, Permanent Under-Secretary of State and Head Diplomatic Service, Foreign and Commonwealth Office | ||
*[[Jude Kelly]] OBE, member of the board of trustees, Founder and Artistic Director of Metal | *[[Jude Kelly]] OBE, member of the board of trustees, Founder and Artistic Director of Metal | ||
− | *Professor [[ | + | *Professor Lord [[Robert May]] of Oxford OM AC Kt PRS, member of the board of trustees, President, The [[Royal Society]] |
*Rabbi [[Julia Neuberger]] DBE, member of the board of trustees, broadcaster and project consultant | *Rabbi [[Julia Neuberger]] DBE, member of the board of trustees, broadcaster and project consultant | ||
*Dr [[Andrew Cubie]] CBE FRSE, Partner, Fyfe Ireland WS Solicitors | *Dr [[Andrew Cubie]] CBE FRSE, Partner, Fyfe Ireland WS Solicitors | ||
Line 48: | Line 49: | ||
Among the initiatives conceived by the British Council is the [[Connecting Futures]] programme. | Among the initiatives conceived by the British Council is the [[Connecting Futures]] programme. | ||
− | The British Council also has its detractors and is seen in some quarters as being one of the least accountable public bodies in the United Kingdom. The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee is amongst recent critics. | + | The British Council also has its detractors and is seen in some quarters as being one of the least accountable public bodies in the United Kingdom. The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee is amongst recent critics.<ref>See: http://dblackie.blogs.com for details of some recent Council scandals.</ref> |
− | See: http://dblackie.blogs.com for details of some recent Council scandals. | ||
==Elton Awards== | ==Elton Awards== | ||
Line 58: | Line 58: | ||
Referred to as 'clients' on the British council website | Referred to as 'clients' on the British council website | ||
− | Accenture | + | [[Accenture]] | [[Air India]] Ltd | [[Allied Domecq]] plc | [[Anglo American]] plc | Alsop Architects Ltd [[Arup]] | [[AstraZeneca]] plc | [[BAE Systems]] plc | [[Balfour Beatty]] | Barbican Centre | [[Barclays Group]] plc | [[BG]] plc |
− | Alsop Architects Ltd | + | Binnie Black & Veatch Ltd | Bloomberg LP | [[Bovis Lend Lease]] plc | [[BP]] plc | [[British Airways]] plc | [[British Sky Broadcasting]] Group plc | [[BT Group]] plc | [[Cable & Wireless]] plc | [[Cadbury Schweppes]] plc | [[Cambridge University Press]] | Cox & Kings Travel Ltd | [[Daimler Chrysler]] | Davis Langdon & Everest | [[Deutsche Bank]] | DHL International [[Diageo]] plc | [[EMI]] Group | [[Ericsson]] Ltd | [[Ernst and Young]] | Eurostar Group | Foster Wheeler Group | [[GKN]] plc | [[GlaxoSmithKline]] plc | [[Halcrow Group]] | Hilton International Hotels | [[HSBC Holdings]] plc | [[Hyder Consulting]] | [[IBM]] | [[ICI]] plc | J C Bamford Excavators Ltd | Jaguar Ltd (Ford) | KLM | Royal Dutch Airlines | [[KPMG]] | Kvaerner Group plc | [[Lloyds TSB]] | London Stock Exchange | [[MacMillan Publishing Ltd]] | [[Marconi Corporation]] plc | [[Marks and Spencer]] plc | Marriot Hotels and Catering | MG Rover Group Ltd | [[Millennium & Copthorne Hotels Group]] | [[Motorola]] Ltd | [[Mott MacDonald Group Ltd]] | [[NM Rothschild and Sons Ltd]] | Nortel plc | Northern Electric plc | Oberoi Hotels | [[Oxford University Press]] | [[Pearson]] plc | [[Pirelli]] plc | [[PowerGen]] plc | [[Pricewaterhouse Coopers]] | [[Prudential]] plc | [[Renault]] | [[Reuters Holdings]] plc | [[Rio Tinto]] plc | [[Rolls-Royce]] plc | [[Ronald Joyce]] | [[Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Group]] plc | [[Shell]] Group of Companies | [[Sheraton Hotels]] | STA Travel | Standard Chartered plc | [[Thames Water]] plc | [[The Telegraph]] plc | TRW Automotive Systems Ltd | University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate | [[Virgin Group]] | [[Visa International]] | [[Vodafone]] plc | [[Volkswagen]] AG | [[Xerox]]<ref>British Council [http://www.britishcouncil.org/business-our-business-partners-client-list.htm client List]</ref> |
− | Balfour Beatty | ||
− | Binnie Black & Veatch Ltd | ||
− | [[British Airways]] plc | ||
− | [[Cadbury Schweppes]] plc | ||
− | Davis Langdon & Everest | ||
− | EMI Group | ||
− | Foster Wheeler Group | ||
− | Hilton International Hotels | ||
− | [[ICI]] plc | ||
− | KPMG | ||
− | MacMillan Publishing Ltd | ||
− | MG Rover Group Ltd | ||
− | [[NM Rothschild and Sons Ltd]] | ||
− | Oxford University Press | ||
− | [[Pricewaterhouse Coopers]] | ||
− | [[Rio Tinto]] plc | ||
− | [[Shell]] Group of Companies | ||
− | [[Thames Water]] plc | ||
− | [[Virgin Group]] | ||
− | Xerox | ||
− | |||
− | |||
==People== | ==People== | ||
Line 87: | Line 65: | ||
*[[Rex Leeper]] | *[[Rex Leeper]] | ||
*[[Lord Stevenson]] | *[[Lord Stevenson]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Lobbying firms retained== | ||
+ | *[[Positif Politics]] <ref> ref and dates to be added here </ref> | ||
==Affiliations== | ==Affiliations== | ||
*[[Public Diplomacy Partners Group]] | *[[Public Diplomacy Partners Group]] | ||
+ | *[[All Party Parliamentary Group on Climate Change Group]] - Associate Member | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
Line 98: | Line 80: | ||
* [http://www.camdencollege.com/ British Council innovation awards winner] | * [http://www.camdencollege.com/ British Council innovation awards winner] | ||
− | == | + | ==References== |
− | + | <references/> | |
− | |||
[[Category:British Propaganda]] | [[Category:British Propaganda]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Propaganda]] |
Latest revision as of 01:41, 28 April 2016
This article is part of the Propaganda Portal project of Spinwatch. |
The British Council is the British government's cultural propaganda body. The Council even carries a discussion of the its own history on its website which states as much:
- The British Council was founded as an organ of international propaganda. During the late 1920s an influential group of civil servants became convinced that ‘British’ values of parliamentary democracy could be subsumed by the rising tide of fascism. Their response was the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, which became the British Council. Particular Council initiatives included the teaching of English, but political messages always came along with the language tuition[1]
Its chair is Neil Kinnock, the former leader of the Labour Party. It answers to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Contents
Overview
The British Council aims to build mutually beneficial cultural and educational relationships between people in the United Kingdom and in other countries, and increase appreciation of the United Kingdom's creative ideas and achievements. Its overseas network extends over 110 countries. British Council libraries have however been closed in a number of countries judged of little strategic importance to the Council as it refocussed its activities on China and The Gulf. Council offices were closed in Lesotho, Swaziland, Ecuador and provincial Lander in Germany in 2000/2001 - as well as Belarus - prompting Parliamentary criticism; and there is currently a threat to British Council operations in Peru. Around 65% of its income is self-generated through teaching English, conducting examinations and managing aid and development projects. The remainder of the funding is provided by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, which is providing a grant of £186.2 million for the year beginning 2005.
Founded in 1934 as the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, the British Council was inspired by Sir Reginald ("Rex") Leeper's recognition of the importance of "cultural propaganda" in promoting Britain.
Board of Trustees 2005
- Neil Kinnock The Rt Hon Lord (Neil) Kinnock of Bedwellty Chair of the British Council
- Gerard Lemos CMG, deputy chair of the board of trustees, Lemos and Crane Consultancy training, research and publishing Generalist Member of Audit Commission
- Zeinab Badawi, member of the board of trustees, Broadcaster and journalist
- Professor Timothy O'Shea BSc Phd, member of the board of trustees, Principal and Vice-chancellor, The University of Edinburgh
- Charles Grant, member of the board of trustees, Director, Centre for European Reform
- Rick Haythornthwaite, member of the board of trustees, Chief Executive, Invensys plc.
- Sir Michael Jay KCMG, member of the board of trustees, Permanent Under-Secretary of State and Head Diplomatic Service, Foreign and Commonwealth Office
- Jude Kelly OBE, member of the board of trustees, Founder and Artistic Director of Metal
- Professor Lord Robert May of Oxford OM AC Kt PRS, member of the board of trustees, President, The Royal Society
- Rabbi Julia Neuberger DBE, member of the board of trustees, broadcaster and project consultant
- Dr Andrew Cubie CBE FRSE, Partner, Fyfe Ireland WS Solicitors
Past Chairs
Past Chairs of the British Council have been:
- 1934 – 1937 Lord Tyrrell
- 1937 – 1941 Lord Lloyd
- 1941 – 1945 Sir Malcolm Robertson
- 1946 – 1955 Sir Ronald Adam
- 1955 – 1959 Sir David Kelly
- 1959 – 1967 Lord Bridges
- 1968 – 1971 Lord Fulton
- 1971 – 1972 Sir Leslie Rowan
- 1972 – 1976 Lord Ballantrae
- 1977 – 1984 Sir Charles Troughton
- 1985 – 1992 Sir David Orr
- 1992 – 1998 Sir Martin Jacomb
- 1998 – 2004 Helena Kennedy
- 2004 – Lord Kinnock
Recognition
In 2005, along with the Alliance française, the Società Dante Alighieri, the Goethe-Institut, the Instituto Cervantes and the Instituto Camões, the British Council was awarded the Prince of Asturias Award for outstanding achievements in communications and the humanities.
Initiatives
Among the initiatives conceived by the British Council is the Connecting Futures programme.
The British Council also has its detractors and is seen in some quarters as being one of the least accountable public bodies in the United Kingdom. The House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee is amongst recent critics.[2]
Elton Awards
Since 2003 the British Council has awarded the "English Language Teaching Innovation Awards" ("Eltons"). These awards tend to be presented to academics and publishers for their latest ELT-related work. In 2006, a school was presented with this prize for the first time. Camden College of English was awarded an ELTON for English Language Cultural Experience, a course where all the lessons take place in London's museums and galleries.
Business partners
Referred to as 'clients' on the British council website
Accenture | Air India Ltd | Allied Domecq plc | Anglo American plc | Alsop Architects Ltd Arup | AstraZeneca plc | BAE Systems plc | Balfour Beatty | Barbican Centre | Barclays Group plc | BG plc Binnie Black & Veatch Ltd | Bloomberg LP | Bovis Lend Lease plc | BP plc | British Airways plc | British Sky Broadcasting Group plc | BT Group plc | Cable & Wireless plc | Cadbury Schweppes plc | Cambridge University Press | Cox & Kings Travel Ltd | Daimler Chrysler | Davis Langdon & Everest | Deutsche Bank | DHL International Diageo plc | EMI Group | Ericsson Ltd | Ernst and Young | Eurostar Group | Foster Wheeler Group | GKN plc | GlaxoSmithKline plc | Halcrow Group | Hilton International Hotels | HSBC Holdings plc | Hyder Consulting | IBM | ICI plc | J C Bamford Excavators Ltd | Jaguar Ltd (Ford) | KLM | Royal Dutch Airlines | KPMG | Kvaerner Group plc | Lloyds TSB | London Stock Exchange | MacMillan Publishing Ltd | Marconi Corporation plc | Marks and Spencer plc | Marriot Hotels and Catering | MG Rover Group Ltd | Millennium & Copthorne Hotels Group | Motorola Ltd | Mott MacDonald Group Ltd | NM Rothschild and Sons Ltd | Nortel plc | Northern Electric plc | Oberoi Hotels | Oxford University Press | Pearson plc | Pirelli plc | PowerGen plc | Pricewaterhouse Coopers | Prudential plc | Renault | Reuters Holdings plc | Rio Tinto plc | Rolls-Royce plc | Ronald Joyce | Royal & Sun Alliance Insurance Group plc | Shell Group of Companies | Sheraton Hotels | STA Travel | Standard Chartered plc | Thames Water plc | The Telegraph plc | TRW Automotive Systems Ltd | University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate | Virgin Group | Visa International | Vodafone plc | Volkswagen AG | Xerox[3]
People
Lobbying firms retained
Affiliations
- Public Diplomacy Partners Group
- All Party Parliamentary Group on Climate Change Group - Associate Member
External links
- Official site of the British Council
- British Council Arts group
- History of the British Council
- British Council innovation awards
- British Council innovation awards winner
References
- ↑ Nicholas J Cull Propaganda? British Council Website. Accessed 29th January 2008
- ↑ See: http://dblackie.blogs.com for details of some recent Council scandals.
- ↑ British Council client List
- ↑ ref and dates to be added here