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Pinsent Masons lawyer and former Stonewall chair David Isaac to become chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) after promising to step back from decisions around government contracts
Cabinet Office minister says distributed ledgers could offer a "better way" of monitoring the distribution of government cash
Former chief of defence materiel, who left the civil service at the end of 2015, to carry out progress review for the MoD on equipment buying
Foreign Affairs Committee report says challenges of vote to leave would not be "insurmountable" for the Foreign Office – but makes clear the department would need a big boost in resources to cope with the fall-out
Open data organisation co-founded by Sir Tim Berners-Lee says proposed model for the privately-owned Land Registry "appears very similar to historic examples of long-term outsourcing deals and risks repeating the same mistakes"
Department of Health says “military level” contingency planning in place to ensure emergency care will continue
Two new proposed tenders aim to simplify mobile working through use of the cloud
Online payments firm Stripe – which handles payments for Kickstarter – among those chosen in revamped approach to government merchant services
Andrew Johnston, who spent 30 years at the Government Actuary’s Department, reflects on the parallels between his career in Whitehall and his current role as chair of CS Healthcare in our Q&A with people who’ve crossed organisational and sectoral boundaries to join a new working world
Union's deputy general secretary says 1% average pay rise cap is "not sustainable", after government gives departments more freedom to reward "outstanding" senior officials
What values should guide officials at a time of deep scepticism with democratic institutions? David Faulkner was a civil servant at the Home Office for over 30 years before joining Oxford University's Centre for Criminology – here he shares his thoughts on how public officials can secure the confidence of the citizens they serve
Best performing councils could be allowed to run their own academy chains, in a bid to mollify Tory MPs concerned about full academisation
Donnelly says department is spending £168,000 a year on putting Sheffield and London staff up in hotels – but local MP Paul Blomfield says the BIS perm sec's latest answers give only a "half truth"
Public Accounts Committee warns departments still "do not know their future resource needs and will have to resort more often to using consultants and temporary staff"
Government sets out response as Senior Salaries Review Body warns some managers earning less than their juniors – but FDA blasts "sticking plaster" approach
Dawes chairs first meeting of the cross-departmental Civil Service People Board – and vows "more strategic look at reward and pay" and focus on making sure staff have accurate pension info
Microsoft reviews the technology that can help police officers perform their jobs more effectively
Meg Hillier and Iain Wright demand detail on BIS restructuring – after permanent secretary Martin Donnelly says the department cannot give figures while redundancy talks continue
Department points out that shift to include spending on war pensions and intelligence gathering falls within Nato guidelines
Unions welcomed Court of Appeal decision backing 2015 ruling that amendments to DfT's staff handbook were unlawful
Mismatch between school year used by academies and DfE's own accounting period means parliament cannot properly hold the department to account, says the NAO
Current head of the Economic and Domestic Affairs Secretariat Jonathan Slater heading to the DfE when Chris Wormald moves to Health
Border Force resource budget will be £558.1m for 2016/17 – a cut of 0.4% on last year – but the agency gets a capital spending boost
Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Select Committee asks whether civil service in its current form is "appropriate for the twenty-first century" – and whether Whitehall's pay policy for officials is up to scratch