Difference between revisions of "Prospect"

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|founders=David Goodhart
 
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|start=October 1995
 
|start=October 1995
 
|constitutes=magazine
 
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|description=Gives out annual Think Tank Awards in collaboration with [[Royal Dutch Shell]]
 
|source_URL=http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/
 
|source_URL=http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/
 
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'''''Prospect''''' is a monthly British general-interest magazine, specializing in politics, economics, and current affairs. Topics covered include British, European, and US politics, social issues, art, literature, cinema, science, the media, history, philosophy, and psychology. ''Prospect'' features a mixture of lengthy analytic articles, first-person reportage, one-page columns, and shorter, quirky items.
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The magazine was launched in October 1995 by [[David Goodhart]], then a senior correspondent for the ''[[Financial Times]]'' ''(FT)'', and chairman [[Derek Coombs]]. Goodhart came up with the idea of producing an essay-based monthly general-interest magazine—a form at that time unknown in Britain—while covering German reunification as [[Bonn]] correspondent for the ''FT''.
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== The Think Tank Awards ==
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''Prospect'' holds the annual [https://web.archive.org/web/20120626180350/http://www.thinktankawards.com/ Think Tank Awards], "which celebrate and reward the work of [[think tank]]s on a national and global scale".
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Lending its name to an award to the US Air Force's [[RAND Corporation]], the [[Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies]] or the deep state [[Brookings Institution]] is a strange thing to do for an independent magazine.
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The awards are sponsored by [[Royal Dutch Shell|Shell]].
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Categories include "Global Think Tank of the Year", "Publication of the Year", "North American Think Tank of the Year", "European Think Tank of the Year" (excluding Britain), 'UK Think Tank of the Year', and many sub-categories for the UK.
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According to the official website, "The awards are judged by a cross-party panel looking for evidence of influence on public policy and on the public discourse. The judges will also consider the quality of research and potential of younger and smaller organisations."
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The awards have been running since 2001, and have been expanding exponentially to include more global awards for international Think Tanks.
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Previous winners:
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'''2017<ref>https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/think-tank-awards-2017-who-won</ref>'''
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*North America Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Peterson Institute for International Economics]];
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*North America Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[New America (organization)]];
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*North America Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: Climate Interactive;
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*North America International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[Freedom House]];
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*EU Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]];
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*EU Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [https://www.sns.se/en/ SNS]
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*EU Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Nansen Institute]];
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*EU International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[The Casimir Pulaski Foundation]];
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*UK Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]];
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*UK Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Chatham House]];
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*UK International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: Centre for European Reform;
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*UK Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[Joseph Rowntree Foundation]];
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*One-to-Watch Think Tank of the Year: [[Inter-American Dialogue]];
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Joseph Rowntree Foundation]]
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'''2016:'''
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*North America Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Peterson Institute for International Economics]];
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*North America Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[RAND Corporation]];
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*North America Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Center for Climate and Energy Solutions]];
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*North America International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[Copenhagen Consensus Center]];
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*EU Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]];
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*EU Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for European Environmental Policy]];
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*EU International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[Carnegie Europe]];
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*UK Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]];
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*UK Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Chatham House]];
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*UK International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[Chatham House]];
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*UK Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: RSA;
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*One-to-Watch Think Tank of the Year: [[UK in a Changing Europe]];
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Chatham House]]
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'''2015:'''
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*North America Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Bipartisan Policy Center]];
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*North America Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[New America (organization)]];
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*North America Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[RAND Corporation]];
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*North America International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[Brookings Institution]];
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*EU Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]];
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*EU Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: SNS;
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*EU Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Centre for European Policy Studies]];
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*EU International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[European Council on Foreign Relations]];
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*UK Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]];
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*UK Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[IPPR]];
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*UK International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: Centre for European Reform;
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*UK Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[Resolution Foundation]];
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*One-to-Watch Think Tank of the Year: [[British Future]];
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]]
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'''2014:'''
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*UK Economic & Financial Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]];
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*UK Energy & Environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Chatham House]];
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*UK International Affairs Think Tank of the Year: [[European Council on Foreign Relations]];
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*UK Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[IPPR]];
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*One to watch: Higher Education Policy Institute;
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*North America Think Tank of the Year: [[Inter-American Dialogue]];
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*European Think Tank of the Year: [[Carnegie Europe]];
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]]
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'''2013:'''
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Resolution Foundation]];
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*European Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruno Leoni Institute|Istituto Bruno Leoni]];
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*North American Think Tank of the Year: [[Third Way (United States)|Third Way]];
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*International Publication of the Year: "[http://carnegieendowment.org/files/press_freedom_turkey.pdf Press Freedom in Turkey]";
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*UK Energy and the environment Think Tank of the Year: [[Institute of Economic Affairs]];
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*UK Social Policy Think Tank of the Year: [[Centre for Social Justice]];
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*UK Economic and Financial Think Tank of the Year: CentreForum & Policy Exchange
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'''2012:'''
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*Global Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]];
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*UK Think Tank of the Year: [[Social Market Foundation]];
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*Publication of the Year: [http://www.resolutionfoundation.org/ Resolution Foundation], "The Essential Guide to Squeezed Britain";
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*North America Think Tank of the Year: [[Carnegie Endowment]]; Runner-up: [[Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments]];
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*Europe (excluding UK) Think Tank of the Year: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]] (Brussels); Runner-up: [[Institute of Modern Politics]] ([[Sofia]])
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'''2011:'''
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*Winner: [[National Institute of Economic and Social Research]], for scrutiny of the government's economic strategy. Runner up: the [[King's Fund]], for work on [[NHS reforms]].
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*International think tank of the year: [[Peterson Institute for International Economics]]: for coverage of the financial crisis. Runner up: [[Bruegel (institution)|Bruegel]], for coverage of the eurozone.
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*Publication of the year: [[Reform (think tank)|Reform]]: "Every teacher matters".
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*Best foreign affairs think tank based in the UK: Joint award: [[Chatham House]]: for work on [[Yemen]], and [[Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies]], for work on the [[Strategic Defence Review]] and China. One to Watch: [[Media Standards Trust]], for the "[[Hacked Off]]" campaign and media scrutiny.
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'''2010:'''
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''(The judging panel was chaired by Ben Rogers, associate fellow of the [[IPPR]] and [[Demos (UK think tank)|Demos]], and included [[Kishwer Falkner]], [[Liberal Democrats (UK)|Liberal Democrat]] spokesperson for the ministry of justice in the [[House of Lords]]; David Goodhart, Prospect editor-at-large; James Crabtree, Financial Times comment editor, and [[Rohan Silva]], senior adviser to [[David Cameron]].)''
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Winner: the [[Institute for Government]].
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*Publication: [https://web.archive.org/web/20120516031507/http://policyexchange.org.uk/publications/category/item/making-housing-affordable-a-new-vision-for-housing-policy-2 Making Housing Affordable] by Alex Morton of Policy Exchange.
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*International: [[European Council on Foreign Relations]].
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*One to Watch: [[ResPublica]].
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'''2009:'''
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''(The judging panel comprised Baroness Falkner (Liberal Democrat peer), David Halpern (the Institute for Government and former advisor to Tony Blair), Rohan Silva (special advisor to [[George Osborne MP]]), David Walker (the Audit Commission), and Prospect’s editor, David Goodhart, and managing editor, James Crabtree. A fuller report is here.<ref>http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/blog/prospect-think-tank-of-the-year-the-winners/</ref>)''
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*Winner (jointly awarded): [[Centre for Social Justice]] and [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]]. One to watch: [[Demos (UK think tank)|Demos]]
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*International: [[Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies]]
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*Climate change: [[IPPR]]
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*Publication: [https://web.archive.org/web/20120714200257/http://centreforum.org/ Centre Forum], "A Balancing Act: Fair Solutions to a modern debt crisis".
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'''2008:'''
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''(David Walker again chaired of the panel of judges—read his speech here.<ref>http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/prospectthinktankoftheyearaward2008/</ref>)''
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*Winner: [[Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies]]. Runner-up: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]]
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*Publication: [[Centre for Social Justice]], “Breakthrough Britain—ending the costs of social breakdown”.
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'''2007:'''
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''(David Walker chaired the panel of judges—read his speech here.<refhttp://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/theyearinthinktankery/|title=The year in think tankery|publisher=prospectmagazine.co.uk|access-date=2014-04-06}</ref>)''
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*Winner: [[IPPR]];
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Runner-up: [https://web.archive.org/web/20120714200257/http://centreforum.org/ Centre Forum].
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*International tank: Centre for European Reform;
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Runner-up international: [http://www.chathamhouse.org/ RIIA].
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'''2006:'''
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*Winner: [[Policy Exchange]]. Runner-up: [[Young Foundation]]
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*Publication: [[King's Fund]], "Securing Good Care for Old People”.
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*Website: [[Demos (UK think tank)|Demos]]
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'''2005:'''
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*Winner: [[Institute for Fiscal Studies]]. Runner-up: [[Civitas (think tank)|Civitas]]. One to watch: [[Overseas Development Institute]]
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*Publication: [[Policy Exchange]], “Unaffordable Housing: Fables and Myths”.
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*Website: [http://www.theclimategroup.org/ The Climate Group].
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'''2004:'''
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*Winner: [http://www.nlgn.org.uk/ New Local Government Network]. One to watch: [[Policy Exchange]]
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*Publication: Centre for European Reform, “Old Europe? Demographic Change and Pension Reform”.
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'''2003:'''
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*Winner: Centre for European Reform. One to watch: [http://www.catalyst.org.uk/ Catalyst]
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*Publication: [[Civitas (think tank)|Civitas]], “Do we need Mass Immigration?”
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'''2002:'''
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*Winner: [[New Economics Foundation]]. One to watch: [[Civitas (think tank)|Civitas]]
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*Publication: [[IPPR]], “A New Contract for Retirement”.
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'''2001:'''
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*Winner: [[IPPR]]; Runner-up: [[New Economics Foundation]]. One to watch: [http://www.scottishcouncilfoundation.org/ Scottish Council Foundation]
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*Publication: [[Fabian Society]], “Paying for Progress”.
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Latest revision as of 22:38, 27 February 2021

Publication.png Prospect 
(magazine)Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Prospect.png
Typefile of unspecified type
Founder(s)David Goodhart
FoundedOctober 1995
Author(s)Unknown
SourceLink
Local copyBroken Link: [[{{{local}}}]]
Gives out annual Think Tank Awards in collaboration with Royal Dutch Shell

Prospect is a monthly British general-interest magazine, specializing in politics, economics, and current affairs. Topics covered include British, European, and US politics, social issues, art, literature, cinema, science, the media, history, philosophy, and psychology. Prospect features a mixture of lengthy analytic articles, first-person reportage, one-page columns, and shorter, quirky items.

The magazine was launched in October 1995 by David Goodhart, then a senior correspondent for the Financial Times (FT), and chairman Derek Coombs. Goodhart came up with the idea of producing an essay-based monthly general-interest magazine—a form at that time unknown in Britain—while covering German reunification as Bonn correspondent for the FT.

The Think Tank Awards

Prospect holds the annual Think Tank Awards, "which celebrate and reward the work of think tanks on a national and global scale".

Lending its name to an award to the US Air Force's RAND Corporation, the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies or the deep state Brookings Institution is a strange thing to do for an independent magazine.

The awards are sponsored by Shell.

Categories include "Global Think Tank of the Year", "Publication of the Year", "North American Think Tank of the Year", "European Think Tank of the Year" (excluding Britain), 'UK Think Tank of the Year', and many sub-categories for the UK.

According to the official website, "The awards are judged by a cross-party panel looking for evidence of influence on public policy and on the public discourse. The judges will also consider the quality of research and potential of younger and smaller organisations." The awards have been running since 2001, and have been expanding exponentially to include more global awards for international Think Tanks.

Previous winners:

2017[1]

2016:

2015:

2014:

2013:

2012:

2011:

2010: (The judging panel was chaired by Ben Rogers, associate fellow of the IPPR and Demos, and included Kishwer Falkner, Liberal Democrat spokesperson for the ministry of justice in the House of Lords; David Goodhart, Prospect editor-at-large; James Crabtree, Financial Times comment editor, and Rohan Silva, senior adviser to David Cameron.)

Winner: the Institute for Government.

2009: (The judging panel comprised Baroness Falkner (Liberal Democrat peer), David Halpern (the Institute for Government and former advisor to Tony Blair), Rohan Silva (special advisor to George Osborne MP), David Walker (the Audit Commission), and Prospect’s editor, David Goodhart, and managing editor, James Crabtree. A fuller report is here.[2])

2008: (David Walker again chaired of the panel of judges—read his speech here.[3])

2007: (David Walker chaired the panel of judges—read his speech here.<refhttp://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/magazine/theyearinthinktankery/|title=The year in think tankery|publisher=prospectmagazine.co.uk|access-date=2014-04-06}</ref>)

Runner-up: Centre Forum.

  • International tank: Centre for European Reform;

Runner-up international: RIIA.

2006:

2005:

2004:

2003:

  • Winner: Centre for European Reform. One to watch: Catalyst
  • Publication: Civitas, “Do we need Mass Immigration?”

2002:

2001:

 

A document sourced from Prospect

TitleTypeSubject(s)Publication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:Who really funds the Jewish Chronicle?Wikispooks PageJewish Chronicle
Robbie Gibb
Jake Wallis Simons
Israeli–Palestinian conflict
26 April 2024Alan RusbridgerTwo years ago, a mysterious consortium came to the rescue of the beleaguered publication—and nobody is really clear about who is behind the scenes. But openness matters, especially when politics is involved
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References