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Self-Regulation of Fundraising

An introduction

2007 saw the launch of self-regulation for charitable fundraising in the UK. The principle behind its introduction is to allow fundraising organisations to demonstrate best practice, eliminate poor practice and increase public trust and confidence in the voluntary and community sector.

There are two key parts to self-regulation. Firstly, the Codes of Fundraising Practice, which are the best practice standards that the fundraising community set through the work of the Institute of Fundraising’s Standards Committee.

Secondly, the Fundraising Standards Board (FRSB) and the self-regulatory scheme. Members of the FRSB scheme are required to adhere to the Codes of Fundraising Practice and a Fundraising Promise.

Self-regulation provides one platform from which charities can consistently demonstrate high standards, across the UK. In addition, it will enable charities to visibly demonstrate their commitment to best practice by using the FRSB tick logo and sustain and build upon public trust and confidence in the charities that they currently enjoy.

Roadmap
Origins of the Scheme
How the FRSB scheme was developed
 
Details of the Scheme
Details of the Scheme
Answers to questions pertinent for fundraisers
 
What is the Fundraising Standards Board?
About the Fundraising Standards Board
Explanation of the FRSB's role
 
The Fundraising Promise
The Fundraising Promise
Issued by the Fundraising Standards Board
 
Contact the Fundraising Standards Board
Contact the Fundraising Standards Board
By post, by phone, or online