non-profit name | British Council |
---|---|
non-profit logo | |
non-profit type | Cultural institution |
founded date | 1934 |
founder | United Kingdom Government |
location | |
key people | Vernon Ellis (Chair)Martin Davidson (Chief Executive) |
area served | Worldwide |
product | British cultural and language education |
revenue | £982 million (2007/6) |
homepage | www.britishcouncil.org |
footnotes | }} |
The British Council is a United Kingdom-based organisation specialising in international educational and cultural opportunities. It is registered as a charity both in England and Wales, and in Scotland. Founded in 1934 as the British Committee for Relations with Other Countries, and granted a royal charter by King George VI in 1940,the British Council was inspired by Sir Reginald (''Rex'') Leeper's recognition of the importance of "cultural propaganda" in promoting British interests. Its "sponsoring department" within the United Kingdom Government is the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, although it has day-to-day operational independence. Martin Davidson is its chief executive, appointed in April 2007.
On 19 August 2011, suicide attackers stormed the British Council office in the Afghanistan capital, Kabul, killing at least 12 people – none of them British – and taking over the compound. Prior to the attack British Council's Director in Kabul confirmed that "programmes of military English are core to the work of the British Council in Afghanistan."
Of its total income of £551m in 2006/07, the British Council received £195m of grants from the British government. The rest was earned through charging for teaching English to individuals and organisations, examinations and consultancy. Its main areas of activity are 'Learning/Teaching, the Arts, Science and Society'.
In June 2009 it was announced that 400-500 jobs at the British Council would be shed as part of wider restructuring of the organisation which was reported to involve outsourcing back-office jobs overseas and a further centralisation of its regional operation across the United Kingdom.
In September 2009 British Council Director of Arts Rebecca Walton told ''Monocle'' magazine: "We've really been striving to put the arts back alongside the main purpose of the British Council which is cultural relations. The arts are the most powerful tool you have to build a dialogue discussion across boundaries. It was only very recently that I heard a member of the Foreign Office say for the first time that arts are now as important as sanctions in the toolkit. We want people to become more inclined towards the UK and more sensitive to the positive benefits of the UK in the world. We want to focus on the BRIC countries. Russia is a difficult area politically. Also, in the Gulf we're just growing our presence. We're extending playwriting development work down there, which is about writing about areas of interest for younger people, seeing what can capture their interests. We've had this going on at the Royal Court with readings from the Near East and North Africa and we want this to go down the Gulf as well. As a country we do the longer-term stuff; there are occasions when I think the UK needs to do more of the big bucks projects, when it can change the atmosphere of a city quite viscerally, like France's Louvre in Abu Dhabi." . In February 2011 Rebecca Walton was replaced as Director of Arts by Graham Sheffield whose abrupt resignation a few weeks earlier 'on health grounds' from an arts post in Hong Kong had raised eyebrows in East Asia.
In its December 2009 survey of ''Soft Power'' ''Monocle'' magazine mentioned France's network of 'Alliances Francaises' as 'second to none'. It omitted to make any specific reference whatsoever to the activities of the British Council while ranking UK's 'soft power' a first equal with France. The same issue of ''Monocle'' pointed out in a separate feature the leading role played by a Swedish private company EF (English First) in promoting English language teaching. It also included the key role of the BBC World Service in its list of 'soft power' metrics for the UK.
British Council-run initiatives such as the Peacekeeping English Project in Libya are funded by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, the Department for International Development and the Ministry of Defence - and continue to raise eyebrows amongst some British Council private sector critics.
In May 2011 The International Criminal Court in The Hague issued an arrest warrant for Saif Ghaddafi who British Council had dealings with in Libya - including the provision of a free place in one of their schools benefitting a senior member of the Ghaddafi Foundation which Saif Ghaddafi controls. In reporting on this indictment for war crimes, The Guardian correspondent observed: "Saif Gaddafi's indictment for committing atrocities against civilians will profoundly embarrass the wealthy and influential circle of friends he cultivated over eight years studying at the London School of Economics and living a playboy's life in Hampstead. According to prosecution documents, his image in the west as a moderniser and reformer, often at odds with his autocratic father, was a carefully crafted sham" ('Court accuses Gaddafis of war crimes: [International Criminal Court] Prosecutor sets precedent by indicting son with links to west, says expert" Julian Borger, Diplomatic Editor, The Guardian (Thursday 17 May 2011)) Pressed to justify this link - which British Council attempted to deny for many years - Freedom of Information campaigners eventually extracted this admission from The British Council:
" Student X is the son of one of the British Council’s most important contacts in Libya - the [title given] of the Gaddafi Development Foundation and one of the right-hand men of [name given], the possible future leader of Libya. The Foundation is highly influential in change programmes across all sectors, including the energy sector and engendering positive relations with their top decision-makers is therefore very useful to us in furthering our objective to assist Libya in oil sector reform. The on-the-spot justification for the sponsorship was therefore that it would help us pursue our capacity building work in the oil sector and BC registration staff pragmatically summarised all of this as ‘NOC’ ['National Oil Corporation'] on our records."
The British Council's statement also conceded that 'Student X' was too young to be a staff member of NOC and were thus forced to issue this apology: " I have checked back on the information we originally provided for you and discovered – I can only apologise – that whereas we correctly listed him as one of our sponsored students, we erroneously described him as a NOC ‘staff member’. [name given] is perfectly right to point out that he is too young to be a staff member. Student X is actually less directly connected with NOC but was categorised in this way because the relationships involved are quite complex and it would be impossible for registration staff to summarise them in one line on our records."
In seeking to justify such 'pragmatism' the British Council statement on this matter concluded:
" As long as modest numbers of English course sponsorships continue to help us meet our principal objective of generating mutual understanding and respect between Libya and the UK, it makes perfect sense to continue with the practice."
During the war most offices in Europe and the Middle east were closed, except in neutral Sweden, Portugal and Spain. Instead, educational opportunities were provided in the refugee camps within Britain, and for Allied servicemen stationed there. In 1939 the "Resident Foreigners Division" was established to manage those services. By the end of the war there were British Council assistance centres in London, Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham, Oxford, Stratford-on-Avon, and Wilton in England, Edinburgh and Leith in Scotland, and Cardiff in Wales, as well as a centre for the Society for Visiting Scientists and an Allied Lawyers' Foyer. In 1940 a Royal Charter was granted to the British Council by King George VI. After the war, the British Council focused on Europe, but due to lack of funds, closed its offices in many other places. In August 1944, after the liberation of Paris, Austin Gill was sent by the council to reestablish the Paris office, which soon had tours by the Old Vic company, Julian Huxley and T. S. Eliot. As refugees returned home, about half of the inland centres were closed, but the rest undertook the new mission of providing support for foreign students and short-term visitors.
After the reconstruction efforts, funding from the Foreign Office declined, and the British Council was forced to pull out of a number of countries for political reasons, including most of Eastern Europe, China, and Persia. Overall the world-wide network deteriorated. The ''raison d'etre'' for the British Council came under attack in a series of four government review commissions which produced the Drogheda, Hill, Vosper and Duncan Reports, respectively. The British Council survived, but with a lower profile. In 1943-4, the Bland Report that emerged from a Foreign Office review of postwar intelligence needs and organisation concluded the best prospects of 'cover' for intelligence activity "would come from 'the creation of small businesses which would in fact be solely run in the interests of the SIS'; the recruitment of estabished British businessmen who ran their own private concerns and would 'have no-one to fear in the shape of a board of directors in London'; and 'the obtaining of cover from semi-national and often non-profit making British institutions with offices in foreign countries.' These could include British railway companies or the British Overseas Airways Corporation. Another possibility was the British Council, though it was somewhat grumpily noted that the Council had 'never been ready in the past to lend the smallest assistance to the SIS.'.
In June 2010 British Council Chief Executive Martin Davidson faced press criticism for expenses claimed in apparent breach of British Council's own internal rules for overnight stays in London.
In its examination centres, the British Council administers 1.5 million UK examinations to over one million candidates each year. It is also working with the UK's award bodies to extend the range of professional qualifications available overseas. The Council also oversees British schools operating internationally through bodies such as COBIS, NABSS, and the European Council of International Schools.
The Council jointly runs the global IELTS English language standardised test with University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations and IDP Education Australia. In 2011 the West Australia Corruption and Crime Commission held hearings into a scam at Curtin University in West Australia where an employee admitted taking money to change multiple test results. The Commission was told that the IELTS software often crashed causing log-in problems that in turn led Curtin University's staff to share passwords - with a resulting collapse in IELTS security. http://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/curtin-university-may-decide-ielts-is-too-risky/story-e6frgcjx-1226030293003
In schools in England, the British Council is working with the Department for Education to help three million children gain an International School Award to increase their "understanding and appreciation of other cultures". There are now 2,700 UK schools working towards an award. In the Middle East, the British Council runs a school links programme bringing children in the UK together with those in the region in order to break down negative perceptions of Britain and foster "inter-cultural dialogue". To date, 153 schools in the Middle East are involved in 53 collaborative projects.
Military English
In recent years The British Council has been awarded a number of closed contracts to run courses in what they describe as 'military English'. In November 2010 – nine months before a Taleban attack on the British Council in Kabul resulted in fatalities – British Council Director in Afghanistan Paul Smith explained publicly on his blog the extent of the shift by the Council in recent years from a strict emphasis on culture and education into politics, religion and involvement in language training for the armed forces. Expanding on this theme, he added in April 2011: "I’m always keen to emphasise the cultural relations significance and liberating power of teaching military cadres English, particularly these soldiers and officers who, by learning the international language, are better able to join the conversation about the rights and values for which they are fighting." and offers students, studying in the UK, the opportunity to take an internship as part of an international placement working abroad.
The programme accepts highly motivated undergraduates studying a technical degree i.e. engineering, science, architecture or pharmacy, and are in their second year or above and have a strong desire to work abroad in a paid, course-related internship. Placements typically occur for 8–12 weeks during the summer months, however opportunities exist for positions lasting up to a year, suitable for anyone interested in working abroad during their placement or gap year.
The programme also offers employers the opportunity to hire high calibre foreign undergraduates. For many companies in industries which are currently experiencing a shortage of graduate’s e.g. electronic engineering, this can provide an important source of labour.
The British Council has entered Second Life Teen Grid to create an educational island for learners of English as of 2007.
After a successful Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs youth campaign in 2006, the British Council began the "Climate Change Champions" scheme to select young champions from 13 countries (three from each), representing the G8+5.[2] The project's aim is to allow youth ambassadors to spread awareness about climate change's effects and mitigation solutions in their own communities.
The YCE award programme is divided into two strands: one for international creative entrepreneurs from emerging economies, and another one for UK creative entrepreneurs.
In late 2007 the British Council announced that it would cease carrying out all ESOL and other English Language examinations in Russia with effect from 1 January 2008. It cited "circumstances beyond our control" as being the cause and it appeared that some examinations that had already been booked have been cancelled. In addition, the British Council stated that all offices in Russia, with the exception of Moscow, St Petersburg and Ekaterinburg would close before the end of 2007. Subsequent confirmation of closures is reported here.
A further development occurred on 12 December 2007, when it was reported that the British Council had been ordered by the Russian Foreign Ministry to close its two remaining offices outside of Moscow before the beginning of January 2008. The Ministry maintained that the British Council was "operating illegally" within Russia and that "the Council had violated tax regulations, among other laws". The Russian position was summarised in an article published on the Moscow News website.
After the Council's offices in St Petersburg and Ekaterinburg reopened in mid-January after the New Year break, the Russian authorities accused Britain of intentional provocation, because this action was illegal. However, British Ambassador Sir Tony Brenton said he had informed Vladimir Titov, the deputy foreign minister, that the offices would remain open as "the British Council is working entirely legally, that it will continue therefore to work, that any Russian action against it would be a breach of international law". On 15 January 2008, the head of the St Petersburg office Stephen Kinnock, son of Neil Kinnock the then Chair of The British Council, was detained for alleged traffic offences and drunken driving; but declined to take an alcohol-level breath test, claiming diplomatic status, which was confirmed as valid when the British Consul-General arrived at the scene about one hour later. He was then released. Stephen Kinnock left Russia the following day and was posted elsewhere.
Following the reopening, FSB officials interviewed British Council staff at both St Petersburg and Ekaterinburg, apparently informing them that they were working for an illegal organisation. This resulted in the closure of both offices, owing to lack of staff, and they remained shut on 17 January 2008. While the British saw little possibility of reopening the offices given the problems with their staff, Yury Fedotov, Russia's ambassador to London, told journalists that a solution to the dispute could be reached if Britain showed more respect for Moscow's position: "A resolution is possible, but we need to gain more respect and avoid further public discussions which under the current circumstances are unhelpful," he explained. Allegations of being an "intelligence front" were levied by the FSB.
In June 2008 it was announced that the British Council was being further investigated by the Russian tax authorities for non-payment of tax. This hinged on a disputed tax bill with respect to a tax assessment which was issued in May 2008, but which relates to 2007.
In an emailed statement the British Council said, “The British Council is registered with the tax authorities, it regularly pays taxes ... and carries out all the demands of the Russian tax authorities.”
Should the full amount remain unpaid , then possible actions by the Russian tax authorities include the seizure of property, including books, furniture, poetry (sic) and computers, from the British Council’s now sole-remaining Russian office in Moscow. Such action has been described by an official as being the "standard procedure in cases where tax authorities believe that there is still an outstanding sum".
In December 2008 a Russian court reinstituted the tax case against the British Council for £2.3m, overturning a decision by a lower court which UK diplomats had hoped had resolved this matter. The Council also parted company with Stephen Kinnock, who took up a new post with The World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland from January 2009.
In March 2007, the British Council announced its 'intention to increase its investment in the Middle East, North Africa and Central and Southern Asia. This will largely be funded by cuts in other services, libraries and office closures across Europe. In June 2007, MPs were told of further closures in Tel Aviv and Jerusalem (where there had been a British Council Library since 1946). The British Council libraries in Athens and in Belgrade are also to close. Similarly in India, the British Council Libraries at Bhopal and Trivandrum were closed despite protests from library users . as part of the Council's policy to "reduce its physical presence" in the country and to divert funds to mega projects in the fields of culture, education, science and research.
At the end of December 2009 the British Council Library in Mumbai closed its doors to its members for the last time. Indian commentators were unimpressed by promises of online alternatives.
British Council libraries and offices have also been closed in a number of other countries judged by the British Council to be of little strategic or commercial importance as it refocused its activities on China and The Gulf. Council offices were closed in Lesotho, Swaziland, Ecuador and provincial Länder in Germany in 2000–2001 — as well as Belarus — prompting Parliamentary criticism. Subsequent promises by British Council Chair Neil Kinnock to a conference in Edinburgh that the Belarus closure would hopefully prove to be just a "temporary" withdrawal proved illusory. The British Council office in Peru also closed in September 2006 as part of a rethink of its strategy in Latin America.
Charles Arnold-Baker, author of the Companion to British History said of the British Council's shift in priorities: 'This whole policy is misconstrued from top to bottom. We are going somewhere where we can't succeed and neglecting our friends in Europe who wish us well. The only people who are going to read our books in Beirut or Baghdad are converts already.
The article also points out that the Alliance française and the Goethe-Institut, unlike the British Council, are both expanding and replenishing libraries Europe-wide. France opened its new library in Tel Aviv in 2007 — just a few months after the British Council closed there and shut down the British Council library in West Jerusalem. In Gaza, the Institut Francais supports the Gaza municipal library in partnership with the local authority and a municipal twinning link between Gaza City and the French port of Dunkerque. In Oslo British Council informs Norwegian callers that 'our office is not open to the public and we do not have an enquiry service'. Goethe Institute also has a more visible presence in Glasgow than the British Council. There is now, in contrast, only one British Council office left in Germany - and that is in East Berlin.
While Members of Parliament and others have criticised the lack of strong parliamentary accountability for the British Council, the organisation does have close lobbying links to individual parliamentarians. These included the Conservative Party Shadow Culture spokesman Jeremy Hunt MP whose Hotcourses company has close links to the British Council through Sheffield Data Services.
Formally it is to its sponsoring department, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, that the UK Parliamentary Table Office refers any parliamentary questions about the British Council.
The effectiveness of British Council efforts to promote higher education in China was examined in England by The House of Commons Select Committee on Education and Skills in a report issued in August 2007. It expressed concern that in terms of joint educational programmes involving Chinese universities, UK lagged behind Australia, USA, Hong Kong China, Canada and France. In its evidence to this committee, the British Council had argued that "UK degrees are highly valued by international students for their global recognition. International students adopt an essentially utilitarian view of higher education which is likely to increasingly involve consideration of value for money, including opting for programmes at least partly delivered offshore". As their preferred marketing 'model', the British Council gave the example of India where their UK India Education and Research Initiative is being 'championed' by British multinational oil companies such as BP and Shell, the pharmaceutical giant GSK and arms company BAE Systems.
Criticism of British Council marketing efforts in this area have also come from Scotland where ''The Sunday Herald'' obtained documents under the Freedom of Information Act showing that the British Council's Marketing Co-ordinator in the USA had been referring to the University of Stirling as 'The University of Sterling' (sic) and also documenting 'tensions' between Scottish Executive civil servants and British Council in India and China over overseas promotion of universities in Scotland where education is a devolved responsibility. ''The Sunday Herald'' reported that these turf wars were undermining the Scottish Executive's key Fresh Talent policy.
After 1998 education and culture in Scotland were devolved to the Scottish Parliament. Since February 2007, charities registered in England (like the British Council) which now wish to operate in Scotland are required to register as cross-border charities in Scotland.
Some of the activities of the British Council were examined in 2007/08 by the National Audit Office (NAO). The NAO's report, ''The British Council: Achieving Impact'', concluded ‘that the British Council’s performance is strong and valued by its customers and stakeholders’. It also concluded, however, that its English classes are elitist and have unfair advantages over commercial providers, as well as questioning thousands of unanswered phone-calls and e-mails to British Council offices.
The NAO report had a footnote on page 5 which excluded the British Council's contract work from scrutiny and evaluation: 'The main exclusion from the scope of the study was the Council's work under contract for a range of UK and international agencies, mainly in support of international development programmes." It went on to suggest that examination of this is unnecessary because: "Such work is won under competition and at least covers its costs overall. Primary responsibility for the value for money of the work lies with the agencies procuring it".
As part of its examination of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Annual Report, the Foreign Affairs Committee spends an hour each year examining witnesses from the British Council but even this level of scrutiny is undermined by a Commons ruling exempting MPs from the requirement to declare overseas trips paid for by The British Council.
Two members of the Public Accounts Committee (Nigel Griffiths MP and Ian Davidson MP) were office-bearers in the British Council Associate Parliamentary Group. Nigel Griffiths MP was Vice-Chair of this British Council lobby group until stepping down as an MP following a sex scandal on House of Commons premises being exposed by a Sunday newspaper.
In 2008 the British Council was called before the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) following earlier publication of a National Audit Office report. The subsequent PAC report confirmed that Nigel Griffiths MP - Vice Chair of The British Council Associate Parliamentary Group - was part of the small number of PAC members who approved this report on the British Council despite not having been recorded as being present during the evidence session - in June 2008 - where the British Council's Chief Executive was cross-examined. Mr Griffiths had earlier travelled to Russia and spoke favourably of British Council activities there in January 1998 around the time that their man in St Petersburg (Stephen Kinnock) was expelled.
In April 2009 the British Council was told to clean up its act by the Information Commissioner after losing staff data that included details of their trade union affiliations and lying about the encryption status of the computer disc lost.
Following the accusations made against the British Council in Russia (see above) Trevor Royle, the experienced Diplomatic Editor of ''The Sunday Herald'' quoted a 'British diplomatic source' admitting: "There is a widespread assumption that The British Council is a wing of our Secret Intelligence Services, however minor. Officially it is no such thing but there are connections. Why should it be otherwise because all information is invaluable? After all, the British Council also deals with trade missions and inevitably that involves low-grade intelligence-gathering."
Eyebrows were raised down under when the British Council awarded a scholarship for the LSE to the daughter of Australia's Foreign Minister.
It is also featured in one of the scenes in Graham Greene's ''The Third Man'' — the character Crabbin, played by Wilfrid Hyde-White in the film, worked for The British Council. In 1946, the writer George Orwell advised serious authors not to work for it as a day-job arguing that "the effort [of writing] is too much to make if one has already squandered one's energies on semi-creative work such as teaching, broadcasting or composing propaganda for bodies such as the British Council". In her autobiography, Dame Stella Rimington, the first woman head of MI5, mentions working for British Council in India prior to joining the British Intelligence Services.
The British Council has been referred to (and its man on-station, ''Goole'') - frequently in a humorous way by Lawrence Durrell in his collection of anecdotes about a diplomat's life on foreign postings for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office - ''Antrobus Complete''.
In the authorised history of ''MI6: The History of The Secret Intelligence Service 1909-1949'' by Keith Jeffery, the role of 'The British Council, as potential cover' is mentioned in the index along with references to The Bland Commission of 1944 - and correspondence with Rex Leeper, British Council's founder.
Category:Organizations established in 1934 Category:British culture Category:International cultural organizations Category:English-language education Category:Funding bodies in the United Kingdom Category:Foreign and Commonwealth Office Category:Non-departmental public bodies of the United Kingdom government Category:1934 establishments in the United Kingdom
ar:المجلس الثقافي البريطاني bn:ব্রিটিশ কাউন্সিল ca:British Council da:British Council de:British Council es:British Council eo:British Council fr:British Council hi:ब्रिटिश काउंसिल id:British Council it:British Council kn:ಬ್ರಿಟಿಶ್ ಕೌನ್ಸಿಲ್ nl:British Council no:British Council pl:British Council pt:British Council ro:British Council ru:Британский совет simple:British Council fi:British Council te:బ్రిటిష్ కౌన్సిల్ uk:Британська рада zh:英國文化協會This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
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