Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts August 10, 2020 Can COVID-19 help accelerate Northern Ireland into an Enabling State? by Hannah Ormston, Policy and Development Officer and Lauren Pennycook, Senior Policy and Development Officer
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts July 17, 2020 Out with the old, in with the bold: six propositions for building back better by Sarah Davidson, CEO, Carnegie UK Trust
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts June 11, 2020 Putting our money where our children’s mouths are: Understanding public spending on children’s wellbeing by Jackie Brock, Sophie Flemig, Katherine Trebeck and Jen Wallace.
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts June 5, 2020 Building Forward, for the Future: what can a wellbeing approach achieve for young people and generations to come? by Hannah Ormston, Policy and Development Officer, Carnegie UK Trust
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts May 22, 2020 From Community Empowerment to Community Power – what COVID-19 is teaching us about the relationship between citizens, communities and the state by Pippa Coutts, Policy and Development Manager, Carnegie UK Trust
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts April 30, 2020 Regulation, misinformation and COVID19 by William Perrin, Trustee, Carnegie UK Trust
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts April 29, 2020 The importance of wellbeing by Sarah Davidson, CEO, Carnegie UK Trust
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts April 14, 2020 Wellbeing at the centre of Scotland’s progress by Kate Forbes, Cabinet Secretary for Finance, Scottish Government
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts March 10, 2020 The future of democracy and a duty of care by Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts March 4, 2020 Carnegie UK Trust joins joint action on online harms and a thriving democracy by Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts February 10, 2020 We need regulation as well as education to make the Internet safer for children by Maeve Walsh, Carnegie Associate
Blog Posts Read More Blog Posts December 10, 2019 The Statutory Duty of Care and Fundamental Freedoms by Professor Lorna Woods (University of Essex, Professor of Internet Law)