The Jargon Buster Directory is your central resource for locating
an explanation to typical terms found for within all industries , professions
and governments.
Use our directory to locate and decipher jargon that you would like an
explanation for.
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is used is a never ending task for us. We have started with what we can locate
but but it is a vast subject and can be very niche specific.
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Need we say more - yet another example of government let lose with the verbal
bullshit & spin. Does something as simple as regeneration (rebuilding)
need its own regeneration jargon?
I suspect that each government department competes with each other and a
measure of a departments success is how much verbal garbage they can create
for themselves in a year in order to maintain their funding.
A lot of regenerations jargon is based upon things called
'initiatives' that don't actually achieve anything and simply end up being
yet another failed target.
Just look at the crap below - even the explanations need another jargon buster
to decipher it all - Regeneration jargon - who would have thought
it necessary?
Regeneration Jargon
A
Active Community Unit (ACU) - a unit in the Home Office which aims to promote
the development of the voluntary and community sector and encourage people
to become actively involved in their communities, particularly in deprived
areas. www.homeoffice.gov.uk/inside/org/dob/direct/acomu.html
Additionality - a way of measuring the benefits of a project which highlights
the changes brought about which wouldnt have occurred if the project
hadnt taken place. Aims and objectives: the result a project is intended
to achieve, eg to create additional jobs for local people.
Anti Poverty Strategies (APS) - an attempt at a co-ordinated approach to
tackling poverty including programmes to help people claim benefits, manage
debt, have access to low interest small loans and better access to social
work and housing services.
Area Based Regeneration - In some areas, problems of economic, social and
environmental dereliction combine to lock local communities into a vicious
cycle of exclusion. Area based initiatives encourage a range of partners
to work together, targeting their resources to improve the quality of life
in these areas.
Area Investment Frameworks (AIF) - Set out the regeneration priorities for
an area with the aim of targeting funding from regional development agencies
(see RDAs). AIFs are developed by partnerships of local and regional agencies.
B
Baseline - A measurement of the starting conditions, for example numbers
unemployed, before a programme is undertaken. The benefits of a programme
can be assessed over time by comparing the baseline with more up to date
figures.
Beacon Councils - A government scheme which identifies excellence and innovation
in local government. www.idea.gov.uk/beacons/
Bending Main Programmes - Tackling deprivation by focusing local agency and
government department spending more specifically on the most deprived areas
- see Mainstreaming.
Best Value - A framework, based on a set of nationally determined indicators
to help local authorities measure, manage and improve their performance.
www.local-regions.odpm.gov.uk/bestvalue/bvindex.htm
Brownfield Land - Land that has been previously developed.
Building Communities Initiative - An initiative, managed by Free Form Arts
Trust, which encourages local communities to participate in housing regeneration
projects. It is facilitated by Free Form Design and Technical Services with
the help of government funding. www.freeform.org.uk
Business Improvement Districts - A part of an urban area where local businesses
pay additional rates to create improvements in services such as street cleaning,
landscaping or crime reduction.
Business Involvement - Local Strategic Partnerships are being invited to
bid for these to assist businesses in maximising their contribution to
Neighbourhood Renewal. Business in the Community and the British Chambers
of Commerce are co-ordinating the project.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=514
C
Capacity building - Shorthand for a wide range of support, techniques and
initiatives which aim build the capacity of individuals or organisations
within communities to contribute effectively to regeneration projects.
Capital Funding - Money spent on the purchase or improvement of fixed assets
such as buildings, roads and equipment.
City Challenge - A five year Government initiative, now completed, aimed
at transforming specific rundown inner city areas and significantly improving
the quality of life for local residents within its policy area
City Growth Strategy Initiative - A scheme, piloted by the Small Business
Service in four areas to encourage towns and cities to develop and implement
inner city strategies which put enterprise and business at the heart of
regeneration, focusing on the competitive advantages of inner city areas
City Pride - Citywide partnerships launched in 1993 to enhance the cities
of Birmingham, London and Manchester.
Closed-Circuit Television Initiative - Jointly managed by the Home Office,
the ODPM and the National Assembly for Wales, the Closed-Circuit Television
Initiative aims to help local crime and disorder reduction partnerships deploy
closed-circuit television (CCTV) in areas with significant crime and disorder
problems.
Common Era (CE) - The time period beginning with the year of Jesus Christ's
birth. Also called Christian Era.
Communities First - A new Welsh Assembly programme to establish 100 partnerships
in areas of deprivation across Wales to tackle deprivation using a comprehensive
approach and the involvement of the local community.
Communities Scotland - An executive agency of the Scottish Executive, directly
accountable to the Scottish Parliament which carries out three functions
Regeneration, regulation and inspection of social landlords, and investment
and performance in housing. www.communitiesscotland.gov.uk
Community Businesses - Organisations which are established to provide services
and/or employment in a local community. Their focus is about building the
community and the local economy, but doing so in a business-like way as
independent and self-supporting organisations.
Community Chest - Neighbourhood Renewal Community Chests was administered
by voluntary sector lead organisations and offer small grants
of up to £5,000 to community groups for projects to help them renew
their own neighbourhoods. It has now become part of the Single Community
Programme
Community Empowerment Fund (CEF) - This fund aimed to help community and
voluntary groups to become empowered in order to participate in Local Strategic
Partnerships and neighbourhood renewal. Government Offices for the Regions
are responsible for distributing CEF resources and there will be £36m
over three years. It has now been amalgamated into the Single Community
Programme.
Community Forum - The Community Forum was launched on 23 January 2002. Its
purpose is to act as a sounding board for Ministers and the Neighbourhood
Renewal Unit and provide a grass-roots perspective on neighbourhood
renewal strategies. www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=521
Community Fund - The operating name of the National Lottery Charities Board,
the independent organisation set up by Parliament in 1994 to distribute money
raised by the National Lottery to support charities and voluntary and community
groups throughout the UK and to UK agencies working abroad.
www.community-fund.org.uk
Community Legal Service Partnerships - Local networks of providers of legal
services, supported by co-ordinated funding and delivering services to local
communities based on identified priority need.
Community Planning - The process where a local authority and partner
organisations come together to plan, provide and promote the well-being of
their communities. It promotes the active involvement of communities in the
decisions on local services which affect peoples lives including for
example health, education, transport, the economy, safety and the environment.
Community Strategies - The plans which local authorities are now required
to prepare for improving the economic, environmental and social well being
of local areas and by which the councils are expected to co-ordinate the
actions of the public, private voluntary and community organisations that
operate locally.
Creative Partnerships - Organisations that provide a bridge between schools
and cultural organisations, enabling every pupil to have the chance to work
with creative professional and organisations to develop creative skills.
Creative Spaces Initiative - A programme run by The Architectural Foundation.
www.creativespaces.org.uk
Crime Concern - A national crime reduction organisation and registered charity
which provides advice and help to a wide range of professional and voluntary
agencies to support their work in reducing crime and the fear of crime within
local communities and runs over 60 projects across England and Wales.
www.crimeconcern.org.uk
Crime Reduction Partnerships - Statutory partnerships formed as a consequence
of the Crime and Disorder Act 1998 which required the Police and local
authorities and others to work together to tackle crime and disorder within
a local authority area. www.crimereduction.gov.uk
Crime Reduction Programme - A Government funded programme which consists
of a series of diverse initiatives which have been shown to be effective
at reducing crime or the fear of crime.
D
DCA (DCA) - Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) www.dca.gov.uk
DCMS (DCMS) - Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) www.culture.gov.uk
Deadweight - A way of measuring the benefits of a programme which identifies
the things that would have occurred anyway without the intervention of the
programme (see additionality)
DEFRA (DEFRA) - Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA)
www.defra.gov.uk
Delegation levels - The levels which determine who within an organisation
is authorised to make certain decisions.
Delivery Plan - A plan which sets out what a project or programme intends
to achieve, when, where and at what cost.
Development Trusts - A network of independent, not-for-profit, community-based
organisations which are engaged in the economic, environmental & social
regeneration of a defined area or community. www.dta.org.uk
DfES (DfES) - Department for Education and Skills (DfES) www.dfes.gov.uk
DfT (DfT) - Department for Transport (DfT) DfT (DfT) - Department for Transport
(DfT) www.dft.gov.uk
DH (DH) - Department of Health (DH) www.dh.gov.uk
Discount rate - The annual percentage rate at which the value of money reduces
over time to give a present day value.
Displacement - The extent to which the effects of a project impact - positively
or negatively - on surrounding areas
DTI (DTI) - Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) www.dti.gov.uk
DWP (DWP) - Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) www.dwp.gov.uk
E
Early Excellence Centres - Local centres which offer models of good practice
in early years education in deprived areas
Education Action Zones - Local clusters of schools in deprived areas receiving
special government grants to work together with others to raise education
standards. www.standards.dfee.gov.uk/eaz/
Employment Zones - Areas where additional money is available to help the
long term unemployed into work. www.dfee.gov.uk/employmentzones
English Cities Fund (ECF) - A scheme aimed at attracting private sector funds
into neglected cities. ECF is a partnership between English Partnerships,
developer AMEC and investors Legal & General. www.englishcitiesfund.co.uk
English Partnerships - The national regeneration agency, helping to support
high quality sustainable growth in England. www.englishpartnerships.co.uk
Enterprise Zones - Sites for industrial development within older urban areas
across GB with relief from paying business rates and relaxed planning
restrictions the last EZs will expire in 2006.
European Objective 1 funding - Objective 1 targets EU Structural Funds on
areas which have an economy falling well behind the European average for
wealth creation. europa.eu.int/comm/regional_policy/objective1/index_en.htm
European Objective 2 funding - Objective 2 targets EU structural funds on
areas that have suffered through the decline of a major industry.
europa.eu.int/comm/regional_policy/objective2/index_en.htm
European Objective 3 funding - Objective 3 targets EU structural funds towards
developing lifelong learning, supporting those at risk from exclusion in
the workplace, promoting the role of women in the workforce and promoting
adaptability and entrepreneurship.
European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) - An EC structural fund which aims
to reduce inequalities in socio-economic development between the regions
in the Community, by supporting infrastructure projects, job-creation
investments, local development and aid for SMEs.
europa.eu.int/comm/regional_policy/funds/prord/prord_en.htm
European Social Fund (ESF) - Supports activities that develop employability
and human resources in five key areas - active labour market policies; -
equal opportunities - improving training and education and promoting lifelong
learning; - adaptability and entrepreneurship - improving the participation
of women in the labour market.
europa.eu.int/comm/employment_social/esf2000/index-en.htm
Evaluation - An assessment, after a project or programme has started, of
the extent to which objectives have been achieved, how efficiently they have
been achieved, and whether there are any lessons to be gained for the future
Excellence in Cities - A programme to drive up standards in schools in 47
areas of England. www.standards.dfes.gov.uk/excellence
#
F
Family Service Units - A charity working with families in need with 19 family
service units in inner cities in England and Scotland. www.fsu.org.uk
Floor targets - Deprivation will be tackled through the bending of main
Departmental programmes such as the police and health services, to focus
more specifically on the most deprived areas. Departments now have minimum
targets to meet, which means that, for the first time, they will be judged
on the areas where they are doing worst, and not just on averages.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=585
Forward strategy - Arrangements that will continue the process of renewal
and development after funding from the renewal programme stops. It is sometimes
called an exit, continuation or succession strategy.
Foyer - A place that provides homes, training and work opportunities for
homeless young people. www.foyer.net
G
Gap funding - The main vehicle by which the government hopes to encourage
developers to build on brownfield sites by providing aid for private companies
to help them redevelop contaminated, derelict and disused sites that might
not otherwise be profitable.
Government Offices for the Regions - There are nine Government Offices, each
working with regional partners and local people to help deliver the governments
key aims at regional level. www.rcu.gov.uk
Groundwork - A charity supporting regeneration through practical environmental
work in deprived areas. www.groundwork.org.uk
H
Health Action Zones - Partnerships between the NHS, local authorities, the
voluntary and private sectors and local communities which represent a new
approach to public health, linking health, regeneration, employment, education,
housing and anti-poverty initiatives to respond to the needs of vulnerable
groups and deprived communities. www.haznet.org.uk
Healthy Living Centres - The Healthy Living Centre initiative is managed
by the New Opportunities Fund (NOF). The programme targets areas and groups
that represent the most disadvantaged sectors of the population. HLCs are
expected to seek to influence the wider determinants of health, such as social
exclusion, poor access to services, and social and economic aspects of
deprivation which can contribute to inequalities in health.
www.doh.gov.uk/hlc/index.ht
Highland and Islands Enterprise - The main economic development agency for
the highlands and islands of Scotland. www.hie.co.uk
Home Zones - Residential streets in which the road space is shared between
drivers and other road users, with the wider needs of residents being
accommodated. They are about promoting quality of life and neighbourliness.
www.local-transport.dft.gov.uk/hzone
Housing Action Trusts - Six Government agencies set up to regenerate some
of the most deprived local authority estates in England.
www.housing.odpm.gov.uk/local/hat/index.htm
Housing Corporation - The Government body that regulates and funds housing
associations in England. Housing Management Renewal Areas bring together
local authorities and other agencies in areas where the housing market is
thought to be failing. www.housingcorp.gov.uk
Housing Pathfinder Partnerships - These were announced in May 2002 and are
being formed in Manchester, Salford, Burnley, Rochdale, Stoke, Birmingham,
Sheffield, Liverpool and Hull. They involve private sector partners and funding
of £2.66m is available for each Pathfinder.
Human Neighbourhood Project - Run by the Human City Institute. Project workers
support local groups in planning, creating and acting to get their own project
underway.
I
Initiative for a Competitive Inner City (ICIC) - A US not-for-profit organisation
founded in 1994 by Harvard Business School Professor Michael Porter. It is
helping the government in England develop inner city growth strategies.
www.icic.org
L
Leakage - The extent to which the activity proposed benefits people outside
the target area or group.
Learning and Skills Council - The Government agency now responsible for adult
training in England. www.lsc.gov.uk
Leverage - The additional money that a programme causes others to contribute.
Life long learning - The continuous development of skills and knowledge to
enhance quality of life and employment prospects. www.lifelonglearning.co.uk
Local Agenda 21 - Strategies prepared by local authorities to promote sustainable
development. More information
Local Public Service Agreement - Agreements between individual local authorities
and the Government setting out the authoritys commitment to deliver
specific improvements in performance, and the Governments commitment
to reward these improvements. The agreement also records what the Government
will do to help the authority achieve the improved performance.
www.local-regions.odpm.gov.uk/lpsa/index.htm
Local Strategic Partnerships - New overarching partnerships of stakeholders
who will develop ways to involve local people in shaping the future of their
neighbourhood in how services are provided.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=531
Locality Budgeting - The process of developing and co-ordinating budgets
between all government organisations relevant to community and neighbourhood
needs in a particular area.
London Development Agency - The economic development arm of the Greater London
Authority. www.lda.gov.uk
M
Mainstreaming - Realigning the allocation of mainstream resources - such
as the police and health services - to better target the most deprived areas.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=11
Market failure - A situation where barriers prevent the normal and efficient
operation of a local economy. These may be information barriers, where local
people don't know about job vacancies nearby, or the negative impact which
high crime levels have on firms and workers locating to a particular area.
Milestones - Key events with dates, marking stages in the progress of a project
or programme.
Monitoring - Regular collection and analysis of input, output and outcome
data, along with information concerning the problems being tackled.
Multipliers - The additional or second level effects of a programme.
N
Neighbourhood Management Programme - A way of encouraging stakeholders to
work with service providers to help improve the quality of services delivered
in deprived neighbourhoods. www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=577
Neighbourhood Renewal Fund (NRF) - Provides public services and communities
in the 88 poorest local authority districts with extra funds to tackle
deprivation. The original £900 million pot has been extended for a further
3 years and has been increased by a further £975 million.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=611
Neighbourhood Support Fund - Government grants of £10,000 upwards to
community groups to enable them to re-engage disaffected young people.
www.dfes.gov.uk/nsf
Neighbourhood Wardens - A Neighbourhood Warden provides a uniformed,
semi-official presence in residential areas with the aim of improving quality
of life. Wardens can promote community safety, assist with environmental
improvements and housing management, and also contribute to community
development. They may patrol, provide concierge duties or act as super caretakers
and support vulnerable residents. www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=567
New Commitment to Neighbourhood Renewal - The Governments action plan
for neighbourhood renewal in England, produced by the Social Exclusion Unit
in 2001. www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/publications.asp?did=85
New Deal for Communities - A Government programme to regenerate 39 very deprived
areas across England over a ten-year period.
www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/page.asp?id=617
New Opportunities Fund (NOF) - One of the National Lottery funds granting
awards to health, education and the environment projects. www.nof.org.uk
O
ODPM (ODPM) - Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) www.odpm.gov.uk
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) - The Government department
responsible for neighbourhood renewal, housing and urban policy. The ODPM
includes the Neighbourhood Renewal Unit, the Regional Coordination Unit and
the Social Exclusion. www.odpm.gov.uk
Option appraisal - The process of narrowing down a range of options to identify
the particular projects to be undertaken.
Outputs and Outcomes - Outputs measure what was directly produced by the
regeneration programme, such as additional training places or more houses.
Outcomes measure the longer term changes in an area that were brought about
by the regeneration programme.
P
Partnership Investment Programme - A scheme of public sector support for
reclamation of brownfield land.
Partnerships - Partnerships vary greatly in how they are established and
resourced and how they operate. There are no defining features for partnerships
but they should bring together representatives from different sectors and
different communities of interest to agree and work towards common goals.
Organisations which bring together representatives of those who have an interest
in the local area such as local authorities, health trusts, businesses, voluntary
organisations, and residents groups.
Project appraisal - The assessment of particular projects to make sure that
they provide value for money and that they will tackle the problem to be
addressed.
Projects - The individual components or elements of an overall programme
or scheme.
Public Service Agreements (PSA) - Deprivation will be tackled through the
bending of main Departmental programmes such as the police and health services,
to focus more specifically on the most deprived areas. Departments now have
minimum targets to meet, which means that, for the first time, they will
be judged on the areas where they are doing worst, and not just on averages.(See
Floor targets )
R
Regional Chambers - Regional chambers have been established in each of the
eight English regions (outside London), consisting of representatives from
local authorities and other sectors. Their role is to support RDAs
regional economic strategies. www.regions.odpm.gov.uk/chambers
Regional Development Agencies - These are the nine Government agencies set
up in 1999. To co-ordinate regional economic development and regeneration,
enable the English regions to improve their relative competitiveness and
reduce the imbalances that exists within and between regions.
www.local-regions.odpm.gov.uk/rda/info
Registered Social Landlords - Landlords of social housing that are registered
with the Housing Corporation. Most are housing associations but they also
include trusts, co-operatives and companies.
S
Scottish Enterprise - The main Government agency for economic development
in Scotland. www.scottish-enterprise.com/
Scottish Executive - The devolved government for Scotland. It is responsible
for most of the issues of day-to-day concern to the people of Scotland, including
health, education, justice, rural affairs, and transport and manages an annual
budget of around £20 billion. www.scotland.gov.uk
Section 106 agreements (s.75 in Scotland) - Negotiated agreements to provide,
for example, low cost housing or community facilities in return for the granting
of planning permission.
Sensitivity analysis - An analysis of the effects of varying the projected
values of variables, eg different values might be given for unemployment
rates to project the effect of the differences on a local economy
Single Pot - The regeneration funds available for distribution by the Regional
Development Agencies.
Single Regeneration Budget (SRB) - The Single Regeneration Budget programme
aims to enhance the employment prospects, education and skills of local people
and to tackle the needs of communities in the most deprived areas.
www.urban.odpm.gov.uk/programmes/srb/index.htm
SME - Short for small and medium sized enterprises ie companies employing
fewer than 250 employees.
Social Entrepreneurs - The equivalent of business entrepreneurs, but operating
in the social, not-for profit sector. They aim to seek new and innovative
solutions to social problems.
Social Exclusion - The Government has defined social exclusion as being a
shorthand label for what can happen when individuals or areas suffer from
a combination of linked problems such as unemployment, poor skills, low incomes,
poor housing, high crime environments, bad health and family breakdown. It
can also have a wider meaning which encompasses the exclusion of people from
the normal exchanges, practices and rights of society. www.socialexclusion
Social Inclusion Partnerships (SIP) - Government supported partnership
organisations in deprived areas of Scotland.
Sport Action Zones - A series of areas in which sport is used to reduce social
exclusion and promote community development and regeneration.
www.sportengland.org
Street Warden Scheme - Scheme to provide highly visible uniformed patrols
in town and village centres, public areas and neighbourhoods. Street Wardens
are similar to Neighbourhood Wardens, but their emphasis will be on caring
for the physical appearance of the area, tackling environmental problems
such as litter, graffiti and dog fouling and helping to deter anti-social
behaviour; reduce the fear of crime; and foster social inclusion.
Substitution - This happens where a firm substitutes one activity for a similar
activity, eg recruiting a different job applicant, in order to take advantage
of public sector assistance.
Sure Start - A government scheme which aims to improve the health and well-being
of families and children before and from birth, so children are ready to
flourish when they go to school by setting up local Sure Start programmes
to improve services for families with children under four and spreading good
practice learned from local programmes to everyone involved in providing
services for young children. www.surestart.gov.uk
Sustainable Communities Programme - A three year partnership between EnCams,
Forward Scotland and the Sustainable Northern Ireland Programme which is
testing ways in which communities can be supported to improve the quality
of life in their neighbourhood. The programme aims to increase understanding
of how people can become more involved in sustainable development at a local
level, including how to balance social, economic and environmental demands.
www.encams.org
Sustainable Development - Activity which achieves mutually reinforcing economic,
social and environmental benefits without compromising the needs of future
generations.
Synergy - Added value arising from the working together of two or more
organisations.
T
Town Centre Managers - Manage the public realm of town centres so that they
are attractive, safe and accessible to all. They work towards improving the
competitiveness and image of towns and cities and organise partnerships between
businesses, local authorities and the community.
Towns and Cities - Partners in Urban Renaissance - A scheme involving 24
partner towns in England, organised by the ODPMs Urban Policy Unit
and URBED which aims to identify ways to bring about positive change in inner
city areas (sometimes called the Working with Towns and Cities Initiative).
www.urban.odpm.gov.uk/whitepaper/towncity
Training and Enterprise Councils - Government agencies, now disbanded, set
up in England and Wales in 1990 to take primary responsibility for training
provision. The local Learning and Skills Councils have taken on some of their
roles.
U
Urban Forum - An umbrella body for community and voluntary groups with interests
in urban and regional policy, especially regeneration. www.urbanforum.org.uk
Urban Regeneration Companies - Not-for-profit companies being set up by local
authorities, Regional Development Agencies English Partnerships and other
partners to promote development in less prosperous area of English cities
by engaging businesses in agreed physical and economic regeneration strategies
Urban Village - Part of an urban area which is has an attractive mix of homes,
shops, restaurants, employers and which attracts people to live and work
there.