Daniel Phelan
Daniel Phelan is editor-in-chief of Civil Society Media Ltd.
He began a media career in 1987 with the magazine Assembly & Association, a title drawn from the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which provided a forum for representative and membership bodies throughout the not-for-profit sector. In 1988, in collaboration with what was then the Institute of Charity Fundraising Managers (now the Institute of Fundraising), Phelan founded Fundraising, the UK’s first ever magazine for fundraisers.
In 1990, Phelan founded the company which is now Civil Society Media and remains as its editor-in-chief. He started Charity Finance magazine that year and was editor for its first nine years. In 1999, Phelan founded The Charity Awards, the annual UK-wide programme recognising excellence in charity management. In 2006, he founded Governance, the UK’s foremost magazine for charity trustees.
He is a trustee of the Consumer Credit Counselling Services (CCCS), Britain’s largest debt counselling charity, and Alliance Publishing Trust which publishes Alliance, the leading magazine for philanthropy and social investment worldwide.
Email address: daniel.phelan@civilsociety.co.uk
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Accountants haysmacintyre, Kingston Smith and Sayer Vincent took the top slots in the annual auditor awards as voted by the readers of Charity Finance.
Civil Society Media is to host a live question time-style debate with Nick Hurd, Gareth Thomas and Sir Stuart Etherington as the coalition government reaches the end of its first two years in power.
“Undreamt-of sums of capital” will create a transformation in the social investment market over the next five years, Sir Ronald Cohen predicted yesterday.
Smaller charities were praised for their constant innovation in presenting their accounts on the web, at this year’s ICAEW’s online accounts awards ceremony last week.
In 2010 CSV’s Volunteers in Child Protection project won the Overall Award at the Charity Awards. Sue Gwaspari, CSV’s director of part-time volunteering, outlines the impact that winning the Award has had on the organisation and the people it helps.
The Charity Commission must continue to resist Catholic Care's efforts to circumvent the law, says Daniel Phelan
Charity Award-winning CSV project has grown five-fold since it won
Winning the Overall Award at the Charity Awards last year has helped CSV to increase by nearly five times the number of families helped by its winning Volunteers in Child Protection programme.
Phillip Blond, director of think-tank ResPublica, has called for more philanthropic support to influence the political agenda.






