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The Cabinet last week said that it was “pleased to endorse” the findings of David Boyle’s independent review of barriers to choice in public services.
Just along from the Houses of Parliament there used to stand an old slum, described in The Times as “a reproach to Westminster”.
Aeronautics are a good example of a new form of partnership between government and industry. Suzannah Brecknell looks at the levers which can enable Whitehall and business to effectively work togeth
George Catlin American Indian Portraits National Portrait Gallery Until 23 June
The Behavioural Insights Team, or ‘nudge unit’, will become a profit-making joint-venture mutual, Cabinet Office minister Francis Maude announced last week.
The Treasury’s Infrastructure Plan, prioritising for 40 key infrastructure projects, has been criticised by the Public Accounts Committee (PAC).
The United States government is concerned about Ministry of Defence (MOD) plans to outsource the procurement of military equipment to the private sector.
Departments must fully evaluate cloud-based products when buying new or renewing existing IT services, and will only be able to purchase non-cloud-based alternatives if they can demonstrate that this offers better value for money, under a ‘Cloud First’ policy announced by the Cabinet Office last week.
The Food Standards Agency (FSA) should retain its current structure because it responded swiftly and retained public trust after the discovery in January that horsemeat was appearing in frozen food products sold as beef, the organisation’s chief executive, Catherine Brown, has told Civil Service World.
Alex Ellis has just left his post as the FCO’s director of strategy to become ambassador to Brazil. On his last day in the job, Winnie Agbonlahor learns how he’s tried to encourage greater self-criticism in a department not known for its self-lacerating humility.
A tenant support worker employed by a charity says benefit reforms are causing unnecessary suffering.
To envisage my best handwriting, imagine an enthusiastic but pigeon-toed spider that has, after falling into the proverbial inkwell, attempted to combine a Cossack dance, ballet and the 100m sprint.
The Department of Energy and Climate Change is set to become the second Whitehall body to buy in policy development work from outside government, its permanent secretary Stephen Lovegrove has revealed in an interview with CSW.
New DECC chief Stephen Lovegrove has, to his evident relief, missed all the big battles over the direction of our energy policies – but he does face huge challenges in putting those policies into practice. Matt Ross meets him
The Cabinet Office has created a joint venture company to commercialise government’s portfolio of ‘Best Management Practice’ training tools and services.
The British Library’s vast collection is about to get much bigger. Suzannah Brecknell meets its new chief executive, Roly Keating, to find out how the world’s second largest library is reinventing itself for the digital age
All government departments will be required to deliver the goals outlined in the civil service Capabilities Plan released last week, Bob Kerslake, head of the civil service, has told CSW.
The Cabinet Office has established a new structure, chaired by cabinet secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood, to improve government’s long term planning, Civil Service World can reveal.
Government must plan ahead for long-term social, economic and environmental change, so it employs ‘horizon scanners’ to predict likely scenarios. Joshua Chambers looks at what the future holds for this unusual profession.
Companies run by two lead departmental non-executive directors (Neds) have been publicly accused of serious wrongdoing.
The government needs a chief financial officer (CFO) “who is clearly and visibly responsible for ensuring that spending decisions are made on the basis of financial analysis and for measuring the outcomes in terms of value for money and performance management,” Rebecca McCaffry, innovation specialist at the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants (CIMA), has told CSW.
“Only one or two companies” owned by the government will never be privatised, Mark Russell, the new head of the Shareholder Executive, told the Financial Times on Monday. The government owns stakes in 21 businesses, including trading funds such as Ordnance Survey and the Land Registry.
The Postcode Address File – a database containing details of over 28m UK addresses – is to be sold off along with the Royal Mail in the coalition’s privatisation plans, prompting criticism from the government-backed Open Data Institute (ODI).