OPINION: Resignations are the easy way out
29 Nov 2007 | by Luke Blair
By the time you read this, we may well have had a few more very public resignations, or at least calls for them.
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The Government has laun-ched a £40m campaign to encourage singing in primary schools, with the help of Seventy Seven PR.
By the time you read this, we may well have had a few more very public resignations, or at least calls for them.
The BBC’s international charity, the BBC World Service Trust, has brought in Kirsty Cockburn as director of comms.
A PR student has grouped public sector PR practitioners into five categories as part of his MA dissertation.
The Ministry of Defence (MoD) is to spend £400, 000 a year on ‘simulated’ training to help the armed forces develop their media skills.
The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) has enlisted Band & Brown Communications to raise awareness of a new framework for vocational training.
Government-funded body the Design Council has snared Greenpeace International’s chief media officer as its new head of comms as it puts sustainability at the top of its agenda.
North Tyneside Council is expanding its PR team as it overhauls its comms department.
I feel strongly that the Home Office press office has not 'covered up' news or offered its seniors 'ill-conceived' advice (News, 16 November). But following last week's news on Jacqui Smith being advised not to disclose the number of illegal immigrants working in the security industry, I do believe...
The East Midlands Development Agency (Emda) wants a roster of five PR agencies to offer support to its in-house team.