VICTORIOUS YEAR FOR LORDS OF WAR
This national museum group was founded in 1917 to record the story of the Great War as it was still being fought. It now documents all conflicts in British and Commonwealth history since 1914 in London, Cambridgeshire, and Manchester. In 2007-08 it hosted numerous new exhibitions, including one about camouflage in modern warfare, and another on Rudyard Kipling's son, who died at the Battle of Loos in 1915. The annual report is admirably detailed and interesting, but exactly how funds are allocated seems to be camouflaged.
QUALITY OF REPORTING
What is this? |
69 % |
How much info does the charity want to share? This score, taken from our search for 43 key points in the annual report, gives the answer. Top mark is 100%. Anything over 70% is a good effort. |
SIZE OF CHARITY...
What is this? |
Large |
We only profile the largest charities in England & Wales, and our sizes are relative to the largest and smallest among them. So where we describe a charity as 'Small', it is still much larger than the national average. |
HIGHEST SALARY
What is this? |
£100k to £149k |
Taken from the vague bandings given in annual reports; note that 'Under £60k' could be £9k or £59k. Nonetheless the number of bars should roughly correlate with the 'Size of charity' bars. |
ETHICAL INVESTMENT POLICY
What is this? |
Unknown |
We asked the charity if it has an ethical investment policy. If yes, it gets an angel. Those with no policy but which don't invest in tobacco/arms get a halo. Those without investments, or who didn't respond, appear neutral. Those with stakes in arms/tobacco get a fallen angel. |
But don't just take our word for it...
Reviewed: 2009-07-10 Accounts ending: 2008-03-31
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