ECCR is a registered charity (1139618), a company limited by guarantee (2764183) in England & Wales and a Body in Association with Churches Together in Britain and Ireland. ECCR is not VAT registered.
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Rosie joins us from Christian Aid where she worked for 8 years as a Regional Coordinator with churches, volunteers and campaigners in Essex, and then as Deputy Head of the South East Region. She has also worked for Student Christian Movement and the Diocese of Lichfield and is passionate about supporting Christians to put their faith into action to create a fairer world.
Outside of work she enjoys gardening, drinking tea, climbing trees with her three small children and reading books whenever she gets a chance. She worships at St Martin’s in Worcester.
Sarah has worked in advocacy and campaigning on social justice issues for the past two decades, most recently at Tearfund where she led their Global Advocacy Team, focusing on the need to tackle the environmental crisis and global poverty together. She has previously worked on a range of human rights and global justice issues, including at Jubilee Debt Campaign, Anti-Slavery International, and Health Poverty Action.
Sarah lives in North London with her husband and two children, where she is involved in preaching and teaching in her local church and is a trustee of the local Foodbank. She enjoys reading, exploring nature, running and eating chocolate!
Bryn has spent most of his working life in various roles within the Church. He joins us from within the Baptist Church where he worked as a communications assistant and prior to that he worked within the Methodist Church as a Children’s worker. Bryn is passionate about encouraging Churches and Charities into the 21st Century, helping them to engage with social media and reach out to new audiences.
Bryn studied Mission & Ministry at Cliff College and currently attends his local Methodist Church. When he gets the chance, Bryn also runs a Christian Facebook community called THISPlace. Outside of work Bryn loves to spend time outdoors with his family, eating delicious food and reading a good book.
Ben is a chartered accountant, who has worked alongside charities and social enterprises from a variety of backgrounds in his career as a practising accountant, and is also a member of the board for BeSpace (an Oxfordshire charity working with schools to create meaningful spaces for children to learn about prayer) and, more recently, for World Outreach UK (part of a worldwide organisation seeking to grow mission in remote areas).
Ben is based in Sheffield, where he is kept busy by the demands of two young children! When he’s not working, he’s active in church life, and in his spare time likes to go cycling, play football, or add a new board game to his growing collection.
Mike is the General Secretary of Churches Together in England He is the former Co-CEO of Cinnamon Network, a charity helping churches with their community engagement. He was a founding trustee and pioneer with Transforming Lives for Good TLG working with vulnerable children and young people at risk of exclusion from school. Mike has been in ordained ministry since 1993 and became a Pentecostal Bishop with the Apostolic Pastoral Congress in 2016. He has demonstrated a long-standing commitment to ecumenism at a local, regional and national level.In 1990, he brought legal proceedings challenging the Church Commissioners’ policy on investment, arguing that they gave insufficient weight to ethical concerns arising from the Christian faith. He is the author of 26 books on the interface of Christian faith and wider culture.
Bishop Kenney was professed in the Passionist Congregation in 1963. After studies for the priesthood, he gained a License in Theology at Heythrop College and was ordained in 1969. He studied sociology and psychology at the universities of Växjö and Gothenburg and worked as a parish priest and academic sociologist within the Catholic Church in Sweden, before pursuing doctoral studies at the LSE. He then lectured in and was Director of Studies at the Dept of Religious Studies in the University of Gothenburg.
Bishop Kenney was ordained bishop in 1987. Besides his duties as Auxiliary Bishop in the Archdiocese of Birmingham, he lectures extensively and is a well-known leader of retreats. He served as President of Caritas Europe (1991-95), is a member of the International Dept of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England & Wales and represents the Conference in COMECE. He is a member of the Las Casas Advisory Board.
Fr Simon Cuff is a Tutor and Lecturer in Theology at St Mellitus College. He studied Philosophy and Theology and Jewish Studies at Oxford University. His doctoral research was on the reception of Scripture in recent philosophy and critical theory. He has a passion for social justice in every area of life. In his ministry he has had an association with craft of community organising through Citizens UK, working alongside the Living Wage campaign. He is also a trustee of Migrants Organise, which seeks to use the tools of organising to help migrant and refugee communities to build their capacity to act in society . He has a keen interest in Catholic Social Teaching, sacramental theology and evangelism, and the use of Scripture in systematic theology and political thought.
Geoff is Professor of Business Ethics at Durham University Business School, where he teaches and researches into corporate responsibility. Following an early part of his career as an engineer working in manufacturing industry, he undertook a career move into academia, and has specialised in business ethics for the past 30 years.
In addition to academic interests in this area, Geoff has maintained a practical interest in corporate responsibility largely through the Fair Trade movement. He was for many years the Chair of a small ‘World Shop’ retail outlet in Durham; helped to establish and served on the Council and Board of Shared Interest Society Ltd., an ethical investment vehicle established to support the Fair Trade movement; and was also a non-executive director of Traidcraft, the UK’s leading Fair Trade organisation. He continues to serve as a trustee of the Traidcraft closed pension scheme.
Geoff is a Reader in the Church of England, and is a director / trustee of St John’s College, Durham, an independent college of Durham University which is also home to the theological college Cranmer Hall.
Peter is a chartered surveyor, now retired; part of his working life was in employment, later he had his own business in Chester.
A lifelong Quaker, Peter has served in a variety of roles, including many years as school governor, and is a trustee of the Quaker Peace Studies Trust, which supports students and research in the Peace Studies department at Bradford University. Peter is currently chair of Churches Together in Chester City Centre, and represent Quakers on Churches Together in Cheshire.
An ordained priest of the Church of England, Dick has worked for the past twenty years as a workplace chaplain, first in the London Boroughs of Bromley and Bexleyheath and more recently in Worcestershire.
When in London he was a member of the then mayor Ken Livingstone’s Sustainable Development Commission. Dick now combines his role as Development Officer for the ecumenical charity Faith at Work in Worcestershire, promoting and supporting workplace chaplaincy around the county, with that of Lead chaplain for both West Mercia Police and Hereford & Worcester Fire and Rescue Service.
He is a trustee of Workplace Chaplaincy Mission UK (formerly called the Industrial Mission Association) a founding partner in ECCR, and is WCM UK’s nominee as a trustee for ECCR. Dick has worked in Japan, where he and his wife Yuki met, and the Phillippines.
He has been a supporter of ECCR for more than 20 years.
Andy Treharne joined the board of ECCR in 2022 and is passionate about individuals and organisations using their money ethically. Andy has a decade of experience in financial management within the public sector and he is an associate member of the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants. In addition to his role with ECCR, he is a member of an advisory body to the trustees of the Student Christian Movement having previously served as the deputy chair of trustees. He lives in Bedfordshire with his wife and 2 young children who keep him on his toes.
Grace is an experienced IT, Change Management and HR professional with a commercial career spanning 20+ years. She is also a Theological Educator, Lecturer in Pastoral Theology and an Ordinand at St. Mellitus College in London. Grace recently completed her doctorate in “Leadership Transition and The Trinity” at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary, Cleveland (where she also received an MA in Church Ministries). Grace also has an MA in Christian Leadership (St. Mellitus College/Middlesex University) and an MSc in Computing for Commerce & Industry (Open University).
Grace was a member of Tearfund’s Dream Team from 2017-2018 providing strategic input into Black-Majority Churches strategy. She is the Founder of The Deborah Gathering™ ministries, a network for women in ordained ministry, lay ministry and the marketplace. She was the first Chair of Shell UK Ltd. African Employee Network (2003-2011) and former Chair of Bringing Hope Ltd. She is a Trustee of the Ecumenical Council for Corporate Responsibility (ECCR) and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (FRSA).
Revd David Haslam is a Methodist Minister who has worked in Coventry, Southampton and London. He was minister of Harlesden Methodist Church from 1974 – 1987 when he became Secretary of the Churches Commission for Racial Justice, as an Associate Secretary of Churches Together in Britain and Ireland. He was a minister in south London and chaired the Christian Socialist Movement from 1999 to 2005. He helped found the Dalit Solidarity Network (UK) in 1998 and the international network in 1999. In 2012 he started the Methodist Tax Justice Network which in 2018 became Church Action for Tax Justice (CATJ).
A lifelong member of The Salvation Army, Denise is currently employed at their UK headquarters in London, heading up a team of Salvationists from across the country who work and support local Salvation Army churches understand the principles and benefits of being Generous Disciples.
Denise is an experienced administrator who has worked within the pharmaceutical industry and other commercial businesses in and around London.
With nearly 15 years post qualification experience in Finance, HR and Social Investment, Janie is a chartered accountant who joined us in April 2019.
Janie joined us from Access – the Foundation for Social Investment, where she was Finance Director for the previous 4 years. Janie led on the investment of Access’s £60m endowment, pioneering their “total impact” approach, seeking to maximise the social impact of the portfolio, as well as ensuring the financial goals of the portfolio were met.
Before moving into the charitable sector, Janie worked for nearly 8 years in UK Retail Banking, primarily in Finance and HR Reward roles. Prior to this, Janie spent time in both Cape Town and New York working in audit for a variety of clients. Janie is also a founding trustee of Orchards, a recently established charity with the vision to see women free from sexual exploitation.
Janie is married with two small children who keep her busy playing endless games of dress-up, lego and perfecting craft constructions when not at work!
Lee Coates is founder-director of Ethical Investors Group, an independent financial advice firm dedicated exclusively to ethical investment, and Ethical & Environmental Screening Services, which provides social and environmental screening services to charities, faith groups and ethical investment funds. He is an Associate of the Chartered Insurance Institute and of the Institute of Financial Planning. Lee was awarded an OBE for services to ethical business and finance in the 2011 Queen’s Birthday Honours.
Raymond was in International Banking before he became a URC minister in 1987. Currently he is minister in South London and was for twelve years in the 1990s an Industrial Chaplain with South London Industrial Mission Blackfriars, when he was National Trade Union chaplain to AEEU, CWU, NUPE, NUJ and UNISON. As a result of these chaplaincies he has worked on issues such as anti-(water and post office) privatization, and for workers rights. Through the Industrial Mission network in Europe he supported the movement towards awareness of ‘ethical’ investment in the EC.
Raymond is currently working with the Farm Labour Organizing Committee (FLOC) and AFL-CIO as they seek to achieve dignity for tobacco workers among the workforce in North Carolina (USA).
Maranda St John Nicolle is the Executive Director of Christian Concern for One World (CCOW), an ecumenical charity that helps churches and individuals work out how they are called to love God and neighbour in a globalised world. She is also seconded part-time by CCOW to the Diocese of Oxford, where she works on global issues and world church partnerships. She is a member of the Diocesan Environment Officers Energy group and on the steering group of the International Anglican Family Network.
Steve Hucklesby has a background in international development and humanitarian aid, having managed programmes in the context of conflict and post-conflict rehabilitation in Africa and Asia. Steve joined the Methodist Church in 2003 as Secretary for International Affairs and now works as a Policy Adviser within the Joint Public Issues team serving the Baptist, Methodist and United Reformed churches. This role includes acting in an advisory capacity to the Joint Advisory Committee on the Ethics of Investment to assist the Central Finance Board of the Methodist Church in its work on social responsibility in the global context. Steve holds an MA in Third World Studies and edited Peacemaking: A Christian Vocation, a publication of the Methodist and United Reformed churches.
Christopher is a businessman who has been involved with a number of companies over the course of 50 years. He did a business degree and helped establish corporate planning in a major engineering company before running property and furniture companies. For twenty years he led the damaged Lloyd’s Names in their fight for justice against fraud and negligence at Lloyd’s, running several major court cases.
Christopher helped pioneer the concept of social audit and was active as a consultant advising a number of major companies about developing their social responsibility policies. He has always believed companies owe a wider duty to stakeholders and must look beyond the next year’s profits forecasts.
As a member of the URC Christopher helped start the 1% campaign in the URC before being asked to lead a similar campaign in the Church of England. He subsequently served on a Diocesan synod. He was a founder of the World Development Movement and also of Christian Concern for One World and of One World Week. Today he is “retired” running a holiday cottage business and doing building and gardening (plus helping with grandchildren!) as well as trying to help develop ECCR.
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