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Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ACEVO (Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations) is a membership body for the leaders of third sector organisations in England and Wales. ACEVO has sister organisations in Scotland (ACOSVO)[1] and Northern Ireland (CO3 Chief Officers 3rd Sector).[2]

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Aims

ACEVO's vision is to see civil society leaders making the biggest possible difference. Its stated aims are to connect, develop and represent civil society leaders. In turn, these aims are met by offering professional development and peer learning opportunities; providing informal networking events and tailored advice to all members; and lobbying the UK government on behalf of its members. These three aims are all intended to make the sector more effective and impactful. ACEVO is a registered charity [number 1114591].

History

ACEVO was started in 1987 by three charity chief executives who felt isolated in their positions, and wanted to establish a networking group of third sector leaders. Its original name was ACENVO – Association of Chief Executives of National Voluntary Organisations – but its membership now encompasses the leaders of charities and not-for-profits from small, community-based groups, ambitious medium-sized organisations, and well known national and international not-for-profits. Current chief executive Vicky Browning took over in 2017 following previous CEOs Sir Stephen Bubb (2000–2016) and Dororthy Dalton (1987–2000). ACEVO celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2017.

Membership

ACEVO's membership is primarily drawn from England and Wales, (third sector leaders in Scotland or Northern Ireland can join ACOSVO or CO3 respectively). Full members are CEOs (or equivalent) at charities and social enterprises. Associate membership is offered to anyone with an interest in sector leadership, including chairs and trustees (but excluding for-profit organisations), and aspiring CEOs join as senior leader members. Private organisations wishing to support and work with the sector may become part of the network as commercial partners. It has over 1,100 members and a staff of 11 FTE. ACOSVO has over 750 members.[1]

Membership fees are graduated by the turnover of the organisation the CEO represents.

Members join primarily for peer support and professional development through networking, training and events. Members also benefit from information services, and from legal and emotional support in the event that their job is put at risk. ACEVO also represents the voice and views of civil society leaders to influencers including the government and the media.

Influencing

ACEVO has been influential within the UK in campaigning on behalf of third sector leaders, most notably on issues of governance, leadership and funding. ACEVO is a strategic partner of the Cabinet Office's Office for Civil Society, and has been involved in the government's numerous task forces and working groups.

Together with New Philanthropy Capital, ACEVO developed and pioneered the case for Full Cost Recovery, which states that third sector organisations should cost their work robustly, including a relevant share of overheads and "core costs", and that the funding they receive from government should be sustainable.[3] The principle of full cost recovery, "ensuring [that] publicly-funded services are not subsidised by charitable donations or volunteers", was accepted by HM Treasury in 2002 and embraced by the Gershon Report of 2004.[4] Full cost recovery is endorsed by the UK's National Lottery for calculating payments for Community Fund projects, and by the Arts Council England: both of these organisations signpost funding applicants to make use of ACEVO guidance.[5][6]

Criticism

ACEVO has been criticised by other voluntary sector organisations for taking a political stance in favour of charities assisting with the privatisation of public services such as healthcare and prisons. The National Council for Voluntary Organisations criticised a 2005 ACEVO report warning it could "warp public perception of the role of the sector".[7]

References

  1. ^ a b "About ACOSVO". www.acosvo.org.uk. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  2. ^ "CO3 |". Co3.bz. Retrieved 2017-01-10.
  3. ^ "Full Cost Recovery". ACEVO. Archived from the original on 2008-06-24. Retrieved 2023-12-20.
  4. ^ H M Treasury, Gershon Review, archived by The National Archives on 2 April 2010, section 3.30, accessed 20 December 2023
  5. ^ The National Lottery Community Fund (2019), Applying for your project overheads: Guidance for The National Lottery Community Fund applicants, accessed 19 January 2024
  6. ^ Arts Council England, Arts Council National Lottery Project Grants: Repeat projects, ongoing overheads and salaries, published September 2023, accessed 19 January 2024
  7. ^ "NCVO attacks Acevo's service delivery plans | Third Sector". www.thirdsector.co.uk. Archived from the original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved 26 January 2022.

External links

This page was last edited on 13 February 2024, at 12:32
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