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The Prince's Charities
King Charles' charitable organisations
King Charles' charitable organisations
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | The Prince's Charities |
| logo | The Prince's Charities logo.png |
| key_people | Charles III, President of The Prince's Charities |
| industry | Charity Sector |
| homepage |
The Prince's Charities is a non-profit organisation that has associations with King Charles III. The Prince's Charities, supported by King Charles III Charitable Fund, is based in the United Kingdom and comprises 19 organisations of which Charles is patron or president, 18 of which were founded personally by him. The name derives from Charles's status as the Prince of Wales before his accession on 8 September 2022.
The Prince's Charities
Structure
Most of the charities are independent of each other and all are each run by their own boards. King Charles is president of all the charities and founded 17 of them; however, as president, he is a figurehead and public face for the charities involved and has no legal responsibility.
In autumn 2010, Prince Charles published a book, Harmony: A New Way of Looking at Our World, and produced a film, both articulating the principles and underlying philosophies of many of these charities.
Development
Through 2003 and 2004, a small office was established within the Office of the Prince of Wales to deal specifically with Prince Charles' charitable work. Sir Tom Shebbeare took up the new position of Director of Charities, with particular responsibility for the development and good governance of the 16 operational charities in which Charles had a particular interest. By the following year, the group had been given a new identity, The Prince's Charities, and the Charities Office had developed new policies and procedures for the group. The Charities Office, set up at Clarence House, employed by 2008 some eight full-time staff. The charities form the largest multi-cause charitable enterprise in the UK and collectively work in 38 countries. They together raise approximately £150 million each year.
In addition to independent charities, Charles established a number of separate charitable initiatives, which include Mosaic, a Muslim youth mentoring campaign; The Prince's Wool Project, to support the UK wool industry; START, to help promote sustainable living; The Cambrian Mountain Initiative, to support the economy in that area of Wales; and The Prince's Rainforest Project, to protect rainforests. In 2011, the Pakistan Recovery Fund was developed, which is intended to support the recovery from the floods seen in that country in 2010.
Charities in The Prince's Charities group
The charities in The Prince's Charities group are often grouped according to the areas of charitable activity that they are involved with.
; Opportunity and enterprise
- The King's Trust
- The King's Trust International
- The King's Trust Australia
- The King's Trust Canada
- The King's Trust New Zealand
- The King's Trust USA
- Youth Business Scotland
- PRIME
- PRIME Cymru
- The Prince's Youth Business International
- The British Asian Trust
- Youth Business Scotland
; Education
- Royal Drawing School
- The King's Foundation School of Traditional Arts
- The Prince's Teaching Institute
- Children & the Arts
; The built environment
- The Great Steward of Scotland's Dumfries House Trust (renamed The Prince's Foundation in 2018 and then The King's Foundation in 2023)
- The Prince's Foundation for the Built Environment (merged into The Prince's Foundation in 2018)
- The Prince's Regeneration Trust (merged into The Prince's Foundation in 2018)
- The Turquoise Mountain Foundation
; Responsible business and the natural environment
- The Royal Countryside Fund
- Business in the Community
- Scottish Business in the Community
- The Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership
- Arts & Business
- In Kind Direct
; Closed charities
- The Prince's Foundation for Integrated Health
King Charles III Charitable Fund
Main article: King Charles III Charitable Fund
King Charles III Charitable Fund also has a number of wholly owned subsidiary companies: Duchy Originals Ltd, the Prince's Charities Events, and Traditional Arts Ltd. The Highgrove Shop is part of the A.G. Carrick company.
References
References
- "The Prince's Charities". Office of the Prince of Wales.
- "The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall Annual Review 2008".
- "Harmony: A New Way of Looking at Our World". The Prince of Wales.
- "StratREAL Foundation".
- "The Prince of Wales Annual Review 2005".
- ''Guardian Society Jobs Vacancies The Prince's Charities'', "[[The Guardian]]", 9 July 2008
- "About Highgrove". highgroveshop.com.
- (7 September 2018). "The Prince Of Wales speaks at the GQ Awards: 'Thank you to GQ magazine for doing this. I am hugely grateful'". GQ.
- "About Us". The Prince's Charities Canada.
- "The Prince's Charities". The Prince of Wales.
- Quinn, Ben. (29 August 2021). "Prince of Wales charity launches inquiry into 'cash for access' claims". The Guardian.
- "The Prince's Charities Foundation Accounts 2006/7".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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