Nick  Cater

Nick Cater

Over a 35-year career in the media and third sector that has taken him to 45 countries, Nick Cater has acted as a consultant to non-profits big and small, from the Red Cross, World Bank and UN agencies to Oxfam, Medecins Sans Frontieres and the Royal National Institute of Blind People. Among his present roles, he is senior editor of the ambassadorforphilanthropy.com site.

He also contributed to local, national and international press, radio, TV and internet outlets, from the Guardian and Sunday Times to the BBC, Channel 4 and the AlertNet portal on subjects as diverse as war in Africa, disasters in Asia, environmental conservation in Latin America and the global role of migrant remittances in driving development.

As an often acerbic commentator, Cater has championed unpopular causes, from opt-out organ donations and votes for prisoners to the legalisation - and taxation - of all drugs. In examining civil society, Cater has urged far more charity consolidations, worried about the retreating state, favoured greater scrutiny of volunteering's costs and benefits, and suggested that "if the National Lottery is the answer to charity funding, it must have been a bloody funny question".

Cater is based in the West Country and can be contacted on catercharity@yahoo.co.uk.

 

 

 

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A priority too far for NPC?

Nick Cater examines New Philanthropy Capital's Charities Data Act idea.

Don't rush to regulate

Nick Cater urges caution about legal controls for philanthropic advice.

Gambling on the future of charities - the National Lottery sale

Nick Cater queues to find mixed news from the National Lottery sale to the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.

Liberty, equality, philanthropy

Nick Cater is delighted by one announcement in the 2010 budget report.

Displaying 1 to 4 (of 4)

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When ignorance is far from bliss

20 May 2013

A shifting political atmosphere is putting power in the hands of the inexperienced, warns Robert Ashton.

Pointless ministers?

9 May 2013

Ian Allsop muses on the unattractive political career prospects of a charities minister.

Tablets: the end of an era?

9 May 2013

John Tate asks whether the inexorable rise of the tablet will spell the end for the humble PC.

When ignorance is far from bliss

20 May 2013

A shifting political atmosphere is putting power in the hands of the inexperienced, warns Robert Ashton.

Pointless ministers?

9 May 2013

Ian Allsop muses on the unattractive political career prospects of a charities minister.

App-solutely challenging

9 May 2013

As one of a team of eight corporate graduate volunteers partnered with a small charity to develop a mobile...