A major new report on the Third Sector in North West England has been published by Policy&Practice. The study, funded by IPPR North and Garfield
Weston Foundation, includes responses from 1,462 third sector organisations in the North West of England.
The work forms part of IPPR North’s ‘The Future of Civil Society in the North’ programme. The first report on the programme was published by IPPR earlier in 2017 by Tony Chapman and Jack Hunter and is available here: Third Sector Trends in the North: a summary of key findings.
The work runs alongside t
wo other major studies in North East England, funded by Community Foundation Tyne & Wear and Northumberland (who are now responsible for the legacy of the Northern Rock Foundation Third Sector Trends study and for the development of future iterations of the project) and Yorkshire and the Humber funded by Joseph Rowntree Foundation.
Jack Hunter, Senior Researcher at IPPR North has reviewed the key points from the report in a blog which can be found here: https://www.ippr.org/blog/state-of-the-third-sector-in-the-north-west
The North West England report is available here THIRD SECTOR TRENDS IN NORTH WEST ENGLAND 2016.
Reports from Yorkshire and the Humber and North East England are also available at these web addresses:
Yorkshire and the Humber:THIRD SECTOR TRENDS IN YORKSHIRE AND THE HUMBER 2016
North East England: http://www.communityfoundation.org.uk/post/ten-years-of-third-sector-trends/


ents in Durham University Business School.
This is the first time in the project that public-sector organisations involved in the project have come together with other funding organisations, infrastructure bodies and practicing third sector organisations.
This report presents key findings from the Third Sector Trends study in 2016 from across Northern England and specifically in North East England and for each of its four sub-regions: Northumberland, Tyne and Wear, County Durham and Tees Valley. Key findings can be found in the 
A seminar organised by the Institute for Local Governance. It will take place at Teesside University, Vicarage Road, Darlington DL1 1DR on 23rd June 2017, 9.30 – 1.00
s is right for graduates as well as for the region. The seminar will also focus on the quality of graduate employment in the region by identifying the extent of ‘under-employment’ of graduates and debating it’s consequences for the incumbents of such jobs and for the region more generally.


Two teams of experts and personalities drawn from across the Commonwealth will provide a reflective and entertaining debate on the motion: ‘Corruption in elite sport undermines the potential to promote development and peace through community sports’.