Chris Church
Biographical overview
Chris
Church works independently on sustainable development issues and
is a co-founder of Community
Environment Associates. He is an advisor to the UK Community
Development Foundation (CDF) and to a wide range of other
organisations on sustainable development. He specialises in work
at the local and community level, and on work linking social development,
poverty and environmental issues. He works in the UK and Europe,
lives in Hackney in east London and chairs the Board of London
21, a cross-London network of organisations working on sustainable
development.
Chris
worked for Friends of the Earth UK from 1984-1990 before starting
to work freelance. He has since worked for many NGOs and other organisations
including the National Trust, Charter 88, UNED UK, the Community
Architecture Group, British Trust for Conservation Volunteers, Groundwork,
Global Action Plan, ENCAMS, the Environment Council, Surfers Against
Sewage, English Nature, the local government Improvement and Development
Agency (IDeA) and the EU TACIS programme. He has also been extensively
employed by the UK Government Department for Environment, Food and
Rural Affairs (Defra) on issues relating to sustainable development.
Chris
works on policy issues, on infrastructure and project development,
and on community engagement and participation and sees the linking
of these three work areas as central to making sustainable development
work. He has worked with many local authorities in the UK on their
Local Agenda 21 programmes, on long-term projects, one-off events
and training programmes and is now involved in helping several councils
link this to their work on Community Planning. In 2005 he (with
CEA) completed a review of how London Local Strategic Partnerships
(LSPs) are dealing with sustainable development.
In 2005 and 2006 Chris
concentrated on how non-environmental Voluntary and Community Sector
(VCS) organisations can be enabled to play an effective part in
work on environmental issues. He developed extensive links with
most of the large UK VCS networks and is happy to advise or suggest
contacts for new projects in this area. Much of this work was done
as part of the Defra-funded “Every Action Counts” programme
which aims to recruit up to 14,000 community groups to do work on
the environment and to embed sustainable development in the work
of the VCS. More on Every Action Counts can be found here.
An older (2005) paper
on the engagement of the VCS in work on climate change can be downloaded
here.
In 2003 Chris wrote a 'plain language' guide to sustainable development
for community groups, available from CDF publications here
Current work focuses on climate change (see here).
This includes research and training with a special focus on the
engagement of VCS groups in this work.
In 2008 Chris has written a new 'plain language'
guide to climate change and sustainable development for community
groups, available from CDF publications here.
He has also co-authored Co-writing "Changing the way we
work" - a guide to green office practices for the Voluntary
and Community Sector for the Every Action Counts
programme
Chris is doing further VSC related work with Bassac,
the British Association of Settlements and Social Action Centres,
on the "Community Impact Programme". Chris has also been
developing a methodology to enable community organisations to assess
their own impacts. This work is still being trialled: a summary
pamphlet is available (see Publications below).
A
major focus of Chris's work is the links between environmental issues,
poverty and health. Publications include a book on Environment and
Health issues and (with Maria Adebowale of Capacity
Global) a 2004 report on 'Environmental Justice in London' for
London Sustainability Exchange.
He has recently worked with Carolyn Stephens of the London School
of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine on a report on Environment, Poverty
and Health links for WHO and the World Bank.
Chris works extensively
in Eastern Europe. He co-chairs the Board of ANPED,
the Northern Alliance for Sustainability, a network of NGOs in all
regions of Europe, which is based in Amsterdam. He has worked with
projects in Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine and Russia, has run workshops
in several other countries, and was lead advisor on NGO involvement
to the EU TACIS programme on Environmental awareness from 1997 -
1999.
Chris
is also involved in research and evaluation work. He has led two
research projects, one ("Seven Sides to every question")
funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation on the links between different
disciplines working on local sustainability issues, the other on
the value of local action (see Publications
below). He has also worked with the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine on how community groups deal with technical information.
He also evaluated a six nation programme on NGO development in Albania,
Macedonia, Kazakhstan and other nations for the Dutch agency MilieuKontakt.
You
can download a full CV (PDF) here,
using Adobe
Acrobat Reader. Click on any of the thumbnails below to access
downloadable photos of Chris Church:
Publications
Various current
papers are available from the Suscom
documents page. Other publications that are generally available
include:
-
Better
Place, Better Planet
(June 2008) a plain language guide to sustainable development.
Available from CDF
-
Environments for All (January
2005) a book for BTCV
on environmental work with minorities and excluded communities
-
Changing places, changing lives
- a guide for community organisations on assessing their own
impacts. Available free from Bassac (tel: 0845 241 0375) as
a hard copy or download it direct here
-
Sustainable development and UK
faith groups: Two sides of the same coin? A survey of UK
faith communities' sustainable development activities and next
steps for the future. This report (done with Jan McHarry) was
for WWF and the Sustainable Development Commission and can be
down-loaded at here
-
Seven Sides to every question?
Towards effective inter-disciplinary action on sustainable development.
A summary and full copy of this report, done for CDF and the
Jospeh Rowntree foundation is available here
-
Healthy People, Healthy Planet
- a review of work on Health and the Environment in the
UK for the Chartered Institute
of Environmental Health
-
Streets in the Sky, (with
Toby Gale) - the first report of the National Sustainable Tower
Blocks Initiative, available on the web here.
For more information on this see the page on Sustainable Tower
Blocks here.
-
High Life - a new guide
on how communities can play a lead role in improving the tower
blocks they live in, available from CDF.
-
A traveller's guide to Ullapool
and the north-west of Scotland. Self published (up to 3
editions!) - email
for details.
Chris is always happy
to discuss new projects or ideas. Email
him now
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