Trustees, staff and charity volunteers handle risk as an everyday part of any charity's work - it can be as simple as basic contingency planning for a fundraising event like a garden fete.
However, the requirement to include a risk management statement in Trustees' Annual Reports means that charities need to consider risk and its management in a more structured way if a positive statement is to be made in their Annual Report. No matter what size they are, charities should take a systematic approach to the consideration and management of risk.
A particularly important aspect of considering risk is safeguarding the charity and its beneficiaries from harm. As the people who run a charity, trustees are also responsible for:
- their own conduct
- the conduct of others which they have authorised or ratified
- conduct which though neither authorised nor ratified takes place in the course of a business which they conduct and where there is a close connection between the conduct and what the wrongdoer was employed to do (this is known as vicarious liability).
This section contains our guidance on managing potential risks to a charity and how charities can protect themselves and vulnerable beneficiaries from harm. It also explains vicarious liability.
- Charities and Risk Management - our guidance for trustees and staff on the types of risk charities face and how they can put in place a practical framework for identifying, managing and reporting on risk.
- Compliance Toolkit: Protecting charities from harm - gives trustees the knowledge and tools they need to manage risks and protect their charity from harm and abuse.
- Safeguarding children - what trustees should do to make sure children benefiting from (or working with) their charity are not harmed in any way through contact with it.
- Criminal Records Bureau (CRB) checks - explains which charities should carry out CRB checks on prospective trustees and what types of check are appropriate.
- Vicarious liability of trustees - explains the circumstances in which the law can hold trustees liable for the misconduct of those whom they control even if not primarily attributable to the charity or its trustees