Difference between revisions of "Lanesborough Luncheons"

From Powerbase
Jump to: navigation, search
(Speakers)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Lanesborough Lunches]] were a series of informal lunch events starting in 1999 and organised by the [[Institute for United States Studies]] ([[School of Advanced Study]], [[University of London]]), but funded by [[Japan Tobacco International]].<ref>School of Advanced Study, University of London [https://web.archive.org/web/20060622185941/http://www.sas.ac.uk/fileadmin/documents/about/00-01_AnnualReport.pdf Annual Report 2000/01]. Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 22 June 2006 on 4 October 2014. </ref>
 
[[Lanesborough Lunches]] were a series of informal lunch events starting in 1999 and organised by the [[Institute for United States Studies]] ([[School of Advanced Study]], [[University of London]]), but funded by [[Japan Tobacco International]].<ref>School of Advanced Study, University of London [https://web.archive.org/web/20060622185941/http://www.sas.ac.uk/fileadmin/documents/about/00-01_AnnualReport.pdf Annual Report 2000/01]. Retrieved from the Internet Archive of 22 June 2006 on 4 October 2014. </ref>
  
Extracts from the speeches given at successive [[Lanesborough Lunches]] were published in the [[Risk of Freedom Briefing]], also funded by [[Japan Tobacco International]]. The first [[Lanesborough Lunch]] (20/5/99) was addressed by [[Frank Furedi]] of the [[LM network]].<ref name="Furedi">Frank Furedi 'Litigious Britain: Consolation and the  compensation culture' [http://replay.waybackmachine.org/20071019084156/http://www.riskoffreedom.com/pdf_archive/01briefing.pdf The Risk of Freedom Briefing], Issue No. 1 October 1999, p. 3.</ref> The lunches<ref>Along with other events such as the [[Centre for the New Europe]] / [[Liberty Lunch]] Series and the [[Friedrich Naumann Stiftung]] / [[Berliner Mittagsdebatte]]</ref> were cited by lobbyists [[Edouard Peter]] and [[Michael McKay]] of [[Advisio International]] as an example of a 'platform and follow-through series' which can help in 'conditioning public debate'.<ref name="Lobby">Edouard Peter and Michael McKay [http://www.advisio-intl.com/thought/doc/CorporatepositioningPA.pdf Proactive Positioning – a Public Affairs approach] A White Paper Jedco Conseil, posted 15 August 2005
+
Extracts from the speeches given at successive [[Lanesborough Lunches]] were published in the [[Risk of Freedom Briefing]], edited by [[roger Scruton]] and also funded by [[Japan Tobacco International]]. The first [[Lanesborough Lunch]] (20/5/99) was addressed by [[Frank Furedi]] of the [[LM network]].<ref name="Furedi">Frank Furedi 'Litigious Britain: Consolation and the  compensation culture' [http://replay.waybackmachine.org/20071019084156/http://www.riskoffreedom.com/pdf_archive/01briefing.pdf The Risk of Freedom Briefing], Issue No. 1 October 1999, p. 3.</ref> The lunches<ref>Along with other events such as the [[Centre for the New Europe]] / [[Liberty Lunch]] Series and the [[Friedrich Naumann Stiftung]] / [[Berliner Mittagsdebatte]]</ref> were cited by lobbyists [[Edouard Peter]] and [[Michael McKay]] of [[Advisio International]] as an example of a 'platform and follow-through series' which can help in 'conditioning public debate'.<ref name="Lobby">Edouard Peter and Michael McKay [http://www.advisio-intl.com/thought/doc/CorporatepositioningPA.pdf Proactive Positioning – a Public Affairs approach] A White Paper Jedco Conseil, posted 15 August 2005
 
</ref>  The strategy recommended is
 
</ref>  The strategy recommended is
  

Revision as of 15:52, 20 October 2014

Lanesborough Lunches were a series of informal lunch events starting in 1999 and organised by the Institute for United States Studies (School of Advanced Study, University of London), but funded by Japan Tobacco International.[1]

Extracts from the speeches given at successive Lanesborough Lunches were published in the Risk of Freedom Briefing, edited by roger Scruton and also funded by Japan Tobacco International. The first Lanesborough Lunch (20/5/99) was addressed by Frank Furedi of the LM network.[2] The lunches[3] were cited by lobbyists Edouard Peter and Michael McKay of Advisio International as an example of a 'platform and follow-through series' which can help in 'conditioning public debate'.[4] The strategy recommended is

First, elevate the issue as high up the scale of logic, objectivity and social relevance as possible: It is not about this or that product, it is the boundaries to freedom of commerce... For example, practically all products may have negative health consequences, yet there is the broader issue of personal choice that needs to be balanced with an inclination to regulate. The freedom for adults to make their good or bad choices attracts influential audiences who otherwise may have no particular interest in the particular products.
Second, have a prestigious and credible third party assume the public debate on your behalf. The corporation doesn’t hide, yet its spokespersons never take the front of the stage in the public debate. Wherever possible, the third party is an independent institution, a recognized platform for objective debate among experts.
Bringing these two conditions together requires enormous tact, long-standing networks of relations at the highest levels and the ability to behave in a neutral fashion as a bridge between academic, political, media and commercial thought processes. The latter often disqualifies large, well-known consultancies. That is why this approach is not applied more often. Or if it is, can’t attract attention to itself and risk self-defeat.[4]

Speakers

Notes