Runnymede Trust
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Founders | Anthony Lester, Baron Lester of Herne Hill |
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Founded | 1968 |
Headquarters location | London, United Kingdom |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2480076 |
About Runnymede Trust
The Runnymede Trust is a race equality think tank founded in 1968 by Jim Rose and Anthony Lester, with the aim of acting as an independent source for generating intelligence for a multi-ethnic Britain through research, network building, leading debate and policy engagement.
Lloyds of London to invest £40m over 'significant' slavery links
... The Runnymede Trust, a race equality think tank, welcomed Lloyd s work to acknowledge past mistakes...
Met Police overhaul plan disappointing, think tank says
... The Runnymede Trust and other organisations wrote an open letter to Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley about the plan, which was announced last week...
Children as young as eight strip-searched by police
... The Runnymede Trust, a race equality charity, said: " Our children are being failed by the state institutions there to protect them...
Police defend big jump in officers in UK schools
... The Runnymede Trust race equality think tank found 979 Safer Schools Officers (SSOs) in schools last spring, compared with 683 in 2021...
'I change how I look and talk to fit in at work'
... Ms Kwoffie s experience mirrors the findings of a survey by the race equality think tank the Runnymede Trust and gender equality organisation the Fawcett Society...
Long-term plan to tackle racial disparity in UK
... And Halima Begum, chief executive of the Runnymede Trust, says the proposed changes don t go far enough...
Coronavirus: Sundays safety plan not published
... meanwhile, the Runnymede Trust, interim managing Director, Dr Zubaida Haque has health Minister, Matt Hancock wrote, along with a coalition of 15 other race equality organisations, with the most important recommendations for the protection of ethnic minority workers...
Fear over plans for the next year, the tests, MPs said
... Dr Zubaida Haque of the Runnymede Trust, said it is not needed to have an urgent look at what could be done for students back to school this summer...
Met Police overhaul plan disappointing, think tank says
By Jess Warren & PA MediaBBC News
A racial justice Think Tank has called the £366m plan to overhaul The Met Police " wholly disappointing".
The Runnymede Trust and other organisations wrote an open letter to Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley about The Plan , which was announced last week.
The Trust said " very little feels new" about the scheme, while The Letter called on The Force to address " the issue of Institutional Racism head on".
The Force said it was " determined to make The Met anti-racist".
The overhaul follows Baroness Louise Casey 's review in March, which.
The planned overhaul, called a New Met for London,
It included an increased emphasis on neighbourhood policing in a bid to rebuild Public Trust , moving 240 officers from central to local teams, and using terrorist-style tactics to catch The 100 worst predators targeting women in London.
The Letter , co-ordinated by the Runnymede Trust and signed by groups and individuals including Inquest, Stopwatch, The Black Equity Organisation and Lord Woolley, called for " a more comprehensive plan".
They said while they " welcome efforts to acknowledge and address recent and historic failures of The Met , including how harmfully black and minority ethnic Londoners are policed" they found it " regrettable that you have persisted in offering an apology to our communities without accepting (Baroness) Casey's core finding that the Metropolitan Police Service is institutionally racist".
Following the Casey report, Sir Mark said and told reporters he needed to use language " that's unambiguous and is apolitical".
In their letter, the groups said The Met had missed an opportunity " to signal that it intends to do things differently, and acknowledge where the wrongdoing is rooted".
They added that refusing to use the " institutionally racist" phrase " highlights The Disconnect with The Levels of hurt, anger and intergenerational trauma felt by our communities, and black and minority ethnic Met officers".
Dr Shabna Begum , interim co-chief executive of the Runnymede Trust , said The Plan does not " set out how The Met can be Held Accountable in any defined way".
" This plan is wholly disappointing, very little feels new, even less feels like a concrete plan, and all our communities in London deserve better. "
She called for " sustained investment" in community-based solutions that tackle " the root causes of crime".
'We must transform the organisation'A spokesperson for The Met said the overhaul plan had been informed by 10,000 interactions with Londoners, staff and partners.
" We're determined to make The Met anti-racist, and indeed anti-discrimination in any form, " the spokesperson said.
" We must transform the organisation, its systems, processes and culture, to achieve this. We must bring Londoners into The Heart of The Way The Met is run. Without building new and honest relationships with those we serve, and developing an organisation which truly reflects what The Public want, trust will never be restored. "
The spokesperson added that The Force welcomed the prospect of further engagement with the Runnymede Trust .
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Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com