APPG for Future Generations Impact Report 2020 - 2021

By weeatquince @ 2021-10-26T14:40 (+59)

Introduction for the Effective Altruism forum

I have copied below the impact report for the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Future Generations secretariat. The APPG for Future Generations has in part been funded by this community, via the Long-Term Future Fund, so we felt it would be appropriate to share here the story of what has happened with that funding.

Overall view

When I started on this project just over 2.5 years ago I was expecting any impact reports in our first few years to say something like: “Well people are talking about our ideas more but nothing significant has changed yet because policy change is difficult and slow – but that’s OK let's give it time.” This is not what has happened.  I am  proud and also somewhat surprised to be writing that the APPG, working through UK Parliamentarians, appears to be consistently having identifiable impacts on UK policy in ways that we believe will positively affect the world for future generations. Full details below.

I hope this report provides a reasonable yardstick to think about the impact of policy influencing, that you find it an interesting tale and that it gives a sense of what working in policy is like.

Advice

This year, if there was one piece of advice I would give to others in the policy space working on similar projects it is:

I am sure there are situations where this does not apply but it is the advice I would have given myself of 2.5 years ago for working in this area.

Previous documents

A previous impact report is available here on the EA Forum or here as a pdf.

Readers might also be interested to see our 2020-21 strategy document

Pdf version

For ease of reading I recommend downloading the pdf version available here. The EA Forum has not  fully captured the formatting of content in tables or coloured text.


______________________________________________

APPG for Future Generations
Impact report 

01 June 2020  –  30 June 2021

 

October 2021
Public document
Authors: Natasha Brian, Sam Hilton
Review: Caroline Baylon

Contents

Introduction
Executive summary
1. Background
2. Inputs and action
3. KPI evaluation
4. Impact
 Growth of the APPG
 Direct impact caused
 Evidence of momentum and traction
5. Conclusion
Contact us

 

 

Introduction

Thank you for taking the time to read our latest impact report. This report is aimed at assessing the work of the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Future Generations secretariat and the impact that the APPG has had from 1st June 2020 to 31st June 2021. 

The APPG for Future Generations was established in 2017 with a view to represent and to safeguard the rights of future generations and to push back against political short termism. The APPG supports Parliamentarians to fairly consider the interests of all future generations and ensure that our Members have the resources to work and plan for the long-term. 

The APPG secretariat will use this report as a tool for improving our work going forward. By measuring our impact we (the secretariat) can develop more detailed, effective future plans and ensure that we are providing useful support to Parliamentarians. We also hope that it will guide others who are doing similar work in this space as to lessons learned, and methodologies that we found to be more or less effective. 

Like many APPGs we are funded by charitable grants. Our funders are the Long Term Future Fund and the Survival and Flourishing Fund. (As well as supporting the APPG a small amount of donors’ funds were also used to support additional research by the APPG secretariat, also discussed in this report). A secondary purpose of this report is to demonstrate to our funders how an active APPG can play a role in moving debate forward, and can facilitate conversations and non-partisan actions on a topic. 

Despite tracking policy change, the APPG (including the secretariat to the APPG) is not a lobby group, rather, we provide non-partisan support to all UK Parliamentarians who care about the future. The impact we have on the world is through Parliamentarians.

As such we would like to express gratitude for those MPs, across the political spectrum, who have been our officers for this last year and a half. Particular thanks go to our Chair Bambos Charalambous MP, our Co-Chair Lord John Bird and all of our Vice-Chairs and Officers. Thanks are also due to Lord Martin Rees and the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk for providing support to the secretariat of this APPG. 

 

 

Executive Summary

Dates – this impact report covers: 01 June 2020 until 30 June 2021 which is 13 months.

Costs – running the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Future Generations over these dates cost £63,500 funding roughly 1.7 full time equivalent staff.

Inputs – in this time we carried out research, held events and supported specific projects:

KPIs – we achieved 59% of our target KPIs. 

Policy changes – we have seen two areas of significant impact:

Other evidence impact  additional evidence of impact comes from:

Key conclusions – there is clear evidence that the work we are doing is having an impact, and that this impact can be attributed to the APPG. We are seeing 1 key policy win and significant other evidence of impact achieved per ~£35,000 spent. 

 

 

1. Background 

What is the APPG for Future Generations?

What are APPGs?

An All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) is a group of UK Parliamentarians (MPs and Peers) that meet to discuss a particular topic. They are formally recognised, but have no formal powers or formal funding, so many of the more active ones are funded by charities or companies. APPG secretariats run events for Parliamentarians and manage the list of members. APPGs can take actions to build awareness of their issue or carry out research inquiries on key topics. 

History

The APPG for Future Generations was set up by Cambridge students in October 2017 with support from the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), following a recommendation in this paper (pre-print). The APPG was run by students and volunteers for 1.5 years until March 2019. Since then it has been run by a full time secretariat initially consisting of Sam Hilton and Caroline Bayon from March 2019 and including Natasha Brian from May 2020.

The APPG’s impact last year

Our previous year’s impact report is here, it covers the dates March 2019 to May 2020. Over that year the APPG built its profile in Parliament, ran 11 events and increased membership from 23 to 75+ members. The APPG worked to raise some cross-party support for a Future Generations Bill and lead to the creation of a new Select Committee.

 

The APPG in 2020

The APPG’s situation in June 2020

On 1 June 2020 the APPG had 80 Parliamentarians on their member list. Events were typically monthly and the Inquiry into Long-Term Thinking in Policy Making was in full swing. Natasha had just been hired and was learning the ropes.

The political situation in 2020-21

Following the 2019 December general election, the composition of Parliament became one which had a large conservative majority. In 2020-21 the key political issue was COVID-19. This also meant that all APPG events had to take place virtually. 

The APPG’s 2020-21 strategy

Our 2020-21 strategy is available here (working document). The mission was:

To provide impartial education, support and advice to Parliamentarians to assist them in ensuring that the UK Government takes into account the rights of future generations and is effectively addressing existential and catastrophic risks.

The theory of change was:

Research policy  + Grow the APPG  +  Campaign →  Policy changes via Parliamentarians

 

How We Measure Impact

To measure the success of a policy intervention we would ideally identify:

However such changes may be few and far between and may take years to manifest. As such we also measure the success by looking for: 

The policy space is incredibly crowded. There are many groups calling for change on even the most niche issues. Measuring attribution is therefore incredibly difficult. We estimate this as well as we can.


 

2. Inputs and actions

Input resources

Since May 2020, the situation has been as follows:

Sam: 4 days a week until 31 Dec 2020 then 0.5-1 day a week, at £35,000 per annum pro rata.

Natasha: 5 days a week at £32,000 per annum.

Caroline: Input varies from 1 to 5 days a week, paid £10,700.00 for the period

Office and Communication costs: ~£3,100.00 (travel, events, etc)

Total cost: ~ £63,500.00

On average this was a total of 1.72 full time staff over the year. Sam and Caroline could have been earning higher salaries with Caroline in particular being significantly underpaid compared to her usual consulting costs. We are funding constrained and this is a key reason for Sam no longer working full time from the end of December 2020.

 

Staff time breakdown.

Time breakdown estimates: 

(Rough estimates made post hoc)

 

Research:        Inquiry (not the events)           –         10%
Research:        Risk Management Paper          –         12.5%
Research:        Future Check Development     –           2.5%
TOTAL Research: 25%

Core task:       Running events                             –          15%
Core task:       Growing the APPG                       –            5%
TOTAL core tasks: 20%

Campaigns:     Today for Tomorrow (T4T)   –         25%
Campaigns:     Other campaigns & support  –          10%
TOTAL campaigns: 35%

Background:    Ops, admin & volunteers       –          10%
Background:    Other Networking                     –          10%
TOTAL Background: 20%

 

The rest of this section sets out in detail what these actions were.

 

Research 

Research: The inquiry into long-termism

We have received evidence from former heads of the Civil Service, the head of the National Cyber Security Centre, the Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University, a former UK Ambassador to NATO, former secretaries of state and ministers, Nobel laureate in economics Prof. Angus Deaton, Professor Michael Marmot (Chair of the Marmot Review), and others. Caroline has led the selection of speakers and drafting of the final report, which will be circulated to Parliamentarians for their review and further input.

Research: Risk Management

Sam with support from Caroline researched and produced a policy paper targeted at UK government actors on: Risk management in the UK:  What can we learn from COVID-19 and are we prepared for the next disaster?. Evidence is partially drawn from the work done for the APPG’s inquiry. It has evidence from current and former civil servants who have worked across relevant departments, including the Cabinet Office, the Ministry of Defence and Public Health England. The paper has forewords written by senior members of the main political parties: Graham Stuart MP (Con) and Bambos Charalambous MP (Lab). 

The funds for this research came from additional funding provided by the Survival and Flourishing Fund and was carried out by Sam and Caroline in their capacity as research affiliates at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge.

In February 2021, the APPG launched this paper at a virtual event for Parliamentarians which was attended by a BBC journalist, over 32 cross-party Parliamentarians and senior civil servants from Cabinet Office and Civil Contingency Secretariat.

The paper appears to have had an impact on government policy (see Impact section below).

Research: Future Check

Together the School of International Futures and the UK All Party Parliamentary Group for Future Generations have piloted the use of citizen policy assessments, FutureCheck, to scan proposed legislation for potential positive and negative impact on the long-term and propose questions and amendments for parliamentarians to consider in the interest of future generations. Initial feedback from parliamentarians and citizens has been mostly positive.

 

Growth and events

The APPG has run a number of events over the last year (see timeline below). As well as running our own events we also invite APPG members to attend other events and to speak in relevant debates in Parliament. We have also been gradually growing the APPG’s Members list and developing closer relationships with MPs and their staff.

 

Campaigns

Today For Tomorrow campaign for a Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill

The APPG has been advocating for a UK Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill. This campaign has been primarily led by Lord Bird (co-chair of the APPG) and his team at The Big Issue, under the heading of the Today For Tomorrow campaign.

In March 2020 the official response to an earlier draft of the bill had been that “The Government will not be able to support the Bill as it stands”. Whilst not positive, this did leave the door open to working out if the government would support an amended version of the bill. In May 2021 Lord Bird laid a redrafted House of Lords private members bill, which came first in the bill ballot so is receiving priority attention this Parliamentary session. (Note: private members' bills are mostly campaigning devices and they rarely become law.) 

Significant ways in which the APPG has built support for this bill include: 

Wellbeing Week

Redrafting

Facing our Future Report

Ongoing Support 

 

Wellbeing of Future Generations in Scotland

We have worked alongside our Vice-Chair, Dr. Philippa Whitford MP to help her draft a resolution for a ‘Wellbeing of Current and Future Generations’ Bill to be introduced in Scotland. 

Resolution Drafting

Conference

Third Sector Support

This work was successful (discussed more in the impact section below).

Other campaigns and parliamentary engagement

Global Human Security Debate and Early Day Motion 

Queens’ Speech Debate: A Brighter Future for the Next Generation

If the Government were serious about a brighter future for the next generation, they would support a Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill. From climate change to nuclear proliferation, from risks from future technologies to future pandemics, we need to foresee and plan for growing risks so that we are properly equipped to tackle them. That would ensure that future Governments publish a long-term vision for a better UK, as well as a national risk assessment looking forward over the next 25 years, after every general election. An Act dedicated to safe- guarding the wellbeing of future generations would set a gold standard for ensuring that preventive safeguards are in place before it is too late. After all, the experience of the covid pandemic has taught us that crisis prevention is even more important than crisis management.

– Wera Hobhouse MP, speech to Parliament, May 2021

Letter on the Rights of Future Generations

National Strategy for the Next Generations Campaign (alongside the School of International Futures) 

 

Other: Networking and Support

Other projects: Other work on future generations policy and risk policy

We have given policy advice to and provided connections and support to various people and groups in the policy space. This includes UK civil servants, CSER staff, the Centre for Long-Term Resilience (CLTR), and the UN. We have maintained and built a strong network, meeting with Lords, MPs, academics (at CSER and the Future of Humanity Institute (FHI)), other APPG coordinators, civil servants, think tanks and other similar groups globally.

Mentoring students
We supported the Stanford Existential Risks Initiative (SERI)’s push to mentor students. Caroline supervised the research of two undergraduate students working on existential risk topics, and presented the APPG’s work at their big event of the year.

Additional writing and Submission of evidence
Individual secretariat members have, in a personal capacity, contributed to policy papers, spoken to the media or submitted evidence to parliamentary Select Committees where questions raised match the research work done by the secretariat members. This includes Sam providing evidence to:

As well as being a contributing author to:

Background work: admin, operations, networking and hiring.

We have worked on maintaining APPG status, fundraising, accounting, website design and other operations tasks.

 

 

Parliamentarians and members of the APPG’s secretariat at the APPG’s virtual Annual General Meeting and Launch of Risk Management in the UK Paper (February, 2021)

 

3. Key Performance Indicators Evaluation

In our 2020 strategy document, we set out the following key performance indicators (KPIs). Since then, we have used a traffic light system to assess how well we met our KPIs.

[This section is colour coded and in a table and we recommend viewing the version on p12 on the pdf here

Admin: Pay taxes etc, file accounts, provide reports to funders, and so forth – ongoing.

Admin: Fundraising, raise funds to expand Caroline’s capacity – by 31 Jan 2020.

Admin: Fundraising, raise funds to extend contracts or hire new staff – by 1 Sept 2021.

Admin: The required meetings, attendance, AGM & admin to stay listed – by 28 Feb 2021.

Done
 

Done
 

Done
 

Done

Comms: Update website with members, write-ups & call for evidence – by 1 Sept 2020

Comms: Improve website appearance – by end of 2020

Comms: Start YouTube Channel to publish content – by end of year 2020

Comms: Increase Twitter presence and following to c.2,000 - by September 2021

Done
 

Improvements made but could still be more polished

Started but low on content
 

Gone from 456 in June 2020 to 829 in July 2021

Research: Publish inquiry – sometime in Q1 2021

Research: Publish report on risks – by 30 Sept 2020.

Research: Inequality / Poverty Seminar Series output document – by December 2020

Not done – ongoing
 

Published and launched.
 

Not done – 3 events held, no plans to produce a report

Grow: Reach 10% of all MPs and Peers are on our members list – by summer recess 2021.

Grow: At least 25% of our members are Conservative – at summer recess 2021

Grow: Median monthly attendance of 10+ Parliamentarians – in 2021.

Grow: Raise the use of “future generations” to 4x 2013 levels – by summer recess 2021.

Grow: Have 5 core Members willing to submit PQs for us - by summer recess 2021 

Grow: Increase attendance of MPs at events - aim for 33% MPs for events in Q3 2021.

Grow: More public facing media - continuous

Gone from 5.5% to 7.5%.
 

Currently 28%
 

Median attendance is 13.
 

Currently 3.6x 2013 baseline (target was too ambitious).

Yes, 7 keen MP members (although we rarely submit PQs).

MPs make up 40% of attendees. Inquiry events had fewer MPs.

Written op-eds for Simon Fell MP and Lord Bird in: Evening Standard, The Telegraph, House Magazine, Politics Home

Campaign: T4T _ Bill is passed in the Lords – by end of Parliamentary session (in 2021).

Campaign: T4T _ Future Generations Bill considered for adoption by SNP (in 2021)

Campaign: Inquiry _ a commons Backbench business debate – by summer recess 2021.

Campaign: Inquiry _ picked up on by National Press – sometime in Q1-Q2 2021.

Campaign: Inquiry _ meeting with Cabinet Office to discuss inquiry – sometime in Q2 2021.

Campaign: Inquiry _ one idea in inquiry is adopted by government – anytime.

Campaign: Other _ at least 4 other campaign project attempts – by Nov 2021.

Ongoing. At Committee stage now.

Done.
 

Not done. But did backbench debate on human security

Not done – inquiry not finished.
 

Not done – inquiry not finished.
 

Not done – inquiry not finished.
 

NsNG, Human Security, Future Check, Wellbeing week

Policy: 1+ direct attributable changes (amendment, new committee etc) – by 25 Nov 2021.

Policy: 1+ policies raised (in inquiry, in bill, etc) adopted by government – by 25 Nov 2021.

Scotland committed to a law to protect future generations
 

Gov committed to review of the national risk assessment 

Meta: Achieve 80% of the above goals59% – 13 great, 2 done, 6 partial, 5 failed

 

KPI Review

Overall, we are satisfied with this level of success. We think not having achieved 80% of our KPIs is largely a result of taking a slightly different focus. Two key factors are that the inquiry was extended to allow for additional speakers and that we brought on a new staff (Natasha) this year and adapted plans to play to her strengths. The membership has not grown as much as expected but engagement has deepened and there are now more key members (7 MPs and 4+ Lords) who are more willing to actively champion Future Generations issues. 

We are very pleased that we achieved our 2 policy change KPIs.

 

 

4. Impact

Growth of the APPG

Membership has continued to grow, albeit fairly slowly, over the course of this year. We went from 80 members (01 June 2020) to 108 members (31 June 2021):

We remain fairly balanced with members from all key parties (data as at 30 June 2021):

Conservative:

Labour:

SNP:

Lib Dem:

Green:

Plaid Cymru:

DUP:

Cross bench:

Non- affiliated:

Bishop:

29

38

6

6

3

1

2

19

2

1

 

We have seen an uptake in engagement with significantly more Parliamentarians attending our events as the year progressed (chart shows this year and previous year):

Overall we feel that whilst we have not grown our membership a significant amount, we have developed deeper engagement and have built good relationships with key APPG members. We believe there are 7 MPs who we consider to be highly engaged with the APPG.

 

Direct impact caused

This year we appear to have had two significant policy change impacts:

 

A Future Generations policy in Scotland

As mentioned above we worked with Philippa Whitford MP (SNP) to draft and propose a resolution for a Future Generations policy in Scotland and have it voted on at the SNP conference. The resolution was passed at the conference in November 2020. 

In April 2020 the SNP manifesto was published. The title of the bill had been amended, yet the content of Philippa’s resolution remained, committing to the SNP to:

Bring forward a Wellbeing and Sustainable Development (Scotland) Bill to make it a statutory requirement for all public bodies and local authorities in Scotland to consider the longterm consequences of their policy decisions on the wellbeing of the people they serve and take full account of the short and long term sustainable development impact of their decisions.

 

Since then, the SNP has appointed 2 Green MSPs to their Government. One is Patrick Harvie MSP who has a specific responsibility to ‘appoint a Future Generations Commissioner’.

We are now working with cross-party groups to try and ensure that there is cross-party take up on this, including with Scotland’s Futures Forum, and that the policy is well designed.

Impact: Medium. Assuming this goes ahead, then Wales, Scotland and Gibraltar would all have Future Generations Commissioners. This strengthens the case and evidence base for England to follow suit. We believe that the long run effects of increasing representation for Future Generation will be positive, however the impact of specific approaches to achieve this are uncertain and may depend on the exact details of the policies put in place.

Attribution estimate: 95%. We believe that the APPG, especially Philipa Whitford MP, were responsible for driving this policy change. We know third sector organisations raising the issue of sustainable development but none with a representation of future generations angle. We acknowledge that support from Sophie Howe (Welsh Future Generation Commissioner) was very useful here.

Counterfactual impact estimate: 95%. We think there is minimal chance this would have happened anyway.

Challenges: We note that this policy change did not happen entirely as we would have preferred. We had hoped for manifesto commitments for a “Wellbeing of Current and Future Generations bill”, as per the resolution. However, the title of the proposed bill was amended to the “Wellbeing and Sustainable Development (Scotland) Bill”. We believe this was largely due to the other third sector actors who preferred the language of a “Sustainable Development”. Despite the title change the body of the resolution remained unchanged. We are pleased to see the “Future Generations” language being used again more recently.

 

A government commitment review the approach to risk identification 

As mentioned above the APPG secretariat produced a report on Risk management in the UK.

Following the writing of the report there was:

Impact: High. We believe that better enabling governments to identify and manage extreme risks makes the world a more stable and resilient place for future generations.

Attribution estimate: 85%. The attendance at the launch event, email commitments and formal thank you letter show a significant level of government interest. We know of one other piece suggesting a review of government risk assessments, but have no reason to suspect it had significant government interest. We acknowledge that support from CLTR was useful here.

Counterfactual impact estimate: 67%. We think there is a decent chance this change would have happened anyway. Prior to writing this paper we would have put this chance at <10%, however the ease of success here might imply that we were suggesting things in line with internal government plans.

 

Evidence of momentum and traction

Not all of our impact comes from clearly identifiable policy changes. We believe that we also have an impact by generally promoting concern for Future Generations. We track evidence of our ideas spreading into the broader world.

 

Baseline changes

The graph below shows how the use of the term “future generations” has increased in debates in Parliament from July 2017 to July 2021. This will be in part due to our briefings and in part independent from us. 

 

Momentum

Policy actions that are a direct result of steps we have taken are mostly covered in the Inputs and actions section above. In particular we have been able to build up significant momentum around the Today for Tomorrow campaign, such as:

There has also been some momentum built up by our research work

 

Independent indicators

The following policy changes are not a direct result of any steps we have taken, yet we hope that we, by broadly promoting Future Generations issues, may have played some small part in driving these changes and think it is useful to track these indicators. 

 

Future Generations in UK local authorities

The idea of the Wellbeing of Future Generations caught traction in local authorities over the past year.

The motion demonstrates the council’s support for a Wellbeing of Future Generations Act and associated impact locally. It is to ask the Chief Executive to write to the Government to request that local authorities are given the funding and powers needed to take action on the wellbeing of future generations, by implementing climate and ecological emergency action by 2030, further to the meeting of COP 26 in the UK this year. The council will also call on the Policy and Resources Committee to address the wellbeing of future generations in the city,

Our role: Small. Tracy Brabin was an MP and engaged with the Today for Tomorrow campaign whilst in Parliament.

 

UN (September 2021)

In September 2021, the UN published their ‘Common Agenda’ Report which detailed multiple commitments to future generations including:

The report also recognises that the flip-side of global public goods are global catastrophic risks. The report discusses “existential risk”. It proposes:

Our role: Negligible. We spoke to the UN on this (in June 2021) but believe this would have happened without us. 

 

UK National Resilience Strategy (September 2021)

Our role: Unclear (likely small but non-zero). This National Resilience Strategy Call for Evidence echoes many of the ideas discussed at the APPG (and in the risk paper) and may have drawn on our work. We do not have evidence that this is a result of our work so remain sceptical.

 

A note on the risks of policy work:

Whilst we believe that our work is influencing others to pursue indepently future generations' work separate from us, we are aware that this opens up the risk of losing control of the messaging. There is the possibility that others claim the ‘future generations’ idea and amend it to something which we do not endorse or that a political party could claim these ideas, undermining our cross-party approach. On balance, we think the broad promotion of the ‘future generations’ idea is positive. We take steps to minimise the risks.

 

Feedback

Alongside conducting our independent impact report, we also approached our non-Parliamentary networks for feedback regarding our usefulness over the past year. 

We infer from this that the APPG has overall had a positive influence on stakeholders’ work. We could do more to understand how we support and influence other non-Parliament actors in future years impact reports.

 

Independent assessment

We have also been independently compared to other similar organisations by a member of the Effective Altruism community. The review was generally positive and said: ‘The APPGFG spent roughly $40k for one full-time employee during 2020. This seems very inexpensive. If the APPG wanted to expand and thought they had someone they wanted to hire, it would be at the top of my list. It also seems likely that APPGFG's two existing employees could be paid better.’ We are open to other independent assessments.

 

 

5. Conclusion

We believe this year has been a success for the APPG for Future Generations.

The APPGs current areas of focus are long-term policy making that fairly incideres future generations and the prevention of catastrophic risks that threaten future generations. The core ideas of the APPG in these areas appear to be spreading throughout Parliament, government, the UK and the world. This can be seen in the rising interest of the Future Generations narrative both in local UK politics and at the UN or in the proposed direction of the UK government’s National Resilience Strategy.

This type of traction of ideas is the way many policy groups measure impact. It is mostly imprecise and messy but it is how advocacy works. But on top of this we appear to have been able to consistently produce policy wins attributable to our work. Including the APPG’s previous year’s success of setting up a new Select Committee and the two policy wins this year we seem to be able to create a major policy success for each £35,000 spent, on top of seeing the spread of our ideas.

Overall we have been significantly more impactful than expected. (So much so that It is possible we will see a regression  to the mean effect in future years).

 

Lessons for the future

Going forward to have more impact the APPG might want to:

 

 

Contact us

Thank you for reading

If you have feedback on this document, or have a strong view on the value of this work, then get in touch. If you are interested in inputting into or funding our future plans then please do get in touch. If you are starting a similar project and want feedback, also get in touch.

You can email us at: secretariat@appgfuturegenerations.com


Sean_o_h @ 2021-10-26T14:50 (+15)

We have given policy advice to and provided connections and support to various people and groups in the policy space. This includes UK civil servants, CSER staff, the Centre for Long-Term Resilience (CLTR), and the UN.

I'd like to confirm that the APPGFG's advice/connections/support has been very helpful to various of us at CSER. I also think that the APPG has done really good work this year - to Sam, Caroline and Natasha's great credit. Moreover, I think there is a lot to be learned from the very successful and effective policy engagement network that has grown up in the UK in recent years; which includes the APPGFG, the Centre for Long-Term Resilience, and (often with the support and guidance of the former two) input from various of the academic orgs. I think all this is likely to have played a significant role in the UK government's present level of active engagement with issues around GCR/Xrisk and long-term issues.

NunoSempere @ 2021-10-27T15:54 (+8)

I don't have anything particularly insightful to say, but I'm excited that the APPGFG seems to be doing well.

Aaron Gertler @ 2021-10-28T05:43 (+6)

Thanks for sharing this summary!

The full text of the Wellbeing of Future Generations bill is long and dense, and the op-eds and articles I found on it were generally quite vague.

How would you summarize the practical impact you would expect the bill to have, if it were to be implemented?

Also, have there been bills with similar implications (requiring the government to publish impact assessments or companies to "consider" their impact) that seem to have made a difference in how the UK government operated?

Khorton @ 2021-10-28T15:32 (+8)

The House of Lords Library has published an overview: https://lordslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/lln-2020-0070/

The Wellbeing of Future Generations Bill [HL] is a private member’s bill introduced by Lord Bird (Crossbench). It aims to ensure UK policymaking takes into account the interests of future generations. It sets out a series of steps to achieve this, including:

Defining the concepts of “sustainable development”, a “future generations principle” and “wellbeing goals”.

Requiring the Government to devise, publish and report on a set of indicators on progress towards the wellbeing goals.

That any proposed change in public expenditure, taxation or policy should be accompanied by a “future generations impact assessment”.

Establishing a “future generations commissioner” for the UK to act as a guardian of the interests of future generations.

Setting up a parliamentary joint committee on future generations.

Requiring certain companies to include in their directors’ reports a statement of the impact of their activities on the wellbeing goals.

Requiring public bodies to consider the wellbeing goals in their procurement exercises.