Case for Support Training Video

Laura Greenfield explains the fundraising term ‘case for support’ and why this document is important to your development activities. She provides a step-by-step guide to creating your organisation’s case for support and how to tailor it to meet the needs of your different donors.

Stats

‘Neurodiversity’ is a term meaning people have different brain types. The term neurodivergent can be used by people who have neurological condition such as, but not limted to: autism, ADHD, dyspraxia, dyslexia and discalculia. It is also common for  neurodivergent conditions to be co-occuring (a person can have two or more conditions).

Autism is a  ‘spectrum’ condition, with a wide range of characteristics, but which nevertheless share some common features in terms of how people learn and process information.

  • Without understanding, autistic people and families are at risk of being isolated and developing mental health problems.
  • Autism is much more common than many people think. It is currently estimated there are around 700,000 people on the autism spectrum in the UK – that’s more than 1 in 1001. If you include their families, autism is a part of daily life for 2.8 million people.
  • Autism doesn’t just affect children. Autistic children grow up to be autistic adults.
  • Autism is a hidden disability – you can’t always tell if someone is autistic.
  • Autism is not something which can be cured, but the right support at the right time can make an enormous difference to people’s lives.
  • According to a survey in 2021, Less than half of autistic children are happy in school. [2]
  • Three quarters of parents and carers (74%) said their child’s school place did not fully meet their needs. [2]
  • There are over 160,000 autistic pupils in schools across England.* Over 70% are in mainstream school, with the rest in specialist education, home educated or out of education altogether. [2]
  • Government figures show that autistic children are twice as likely to be excluded from school either for a fixed period or permanently as pupils with no special educational needs. [2]
  • Seven in 10 autistic children say that the biggest thing that would make school better is having a teacher who understands autism. [2]
  • 70% of autistic young people have mental health problems, compared to 13% of their non-autistic peers [3]
  • Autistic people are four times more likely to experience loneliness and social isolation.[3]
  •  Only 16% of autistic adults in the UK are in full-time paid work [7]
  • The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has published data in 2020 that shows just 22% of autistic adults are in any kind of employment [4]
  • Autistic spectrum conditions are not classed as a learning disability in themselves, however, approximately 20-30% of people with a learning disability also have autism and people with autism are more likely to experience mental health problems. [6]
  • Around 70% of autistic people have at least one physical or mental health issue, including anxiety disorders, epilepsy and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), but these are often unrecognised. [6]

[1] What is Autism, National Autistic Society

[2] School Report 2021, National Autistic Society

[3] World Autism Acceptance Week, 2023, National Autistic Society

[4] New Data on the Autism Employment Gap, National Autistic Society

[5] The Autism Act, 10 years on, National Autistic Society

[6] People with a Learning disability, autism or both, NHS England

[7] The Autism Employment Gap, National Autistic Society

Organisations

Autism in Mind support individuals who are both newly diagnosed with autism or diagnosed during childhood but have been unable to access support or services during their adult lives.

Autism Independent UK helps to increase awareness of autism to the notice of all, together with well established and newly developed approaches in the diagnosis, assessment, education and treatment.

Dimensions supports people with learning disabilities, autism and complex needs out of institutions, helping them lead ordinary lives in their local communities.

National Autistic Society is the leading UK charity for autistic people (including those with Asperger syndrome) and their families.

Contact support families with the best possible guidance and information, bringing families together to support each other, and helping them to campaign, volunteer and fundraise to improve life for themselves and others.

Scope - End the Awkward

Stats

  • In 2016 the mid-year population estimate (based on Lower Super Output Areas, LSOAs) for England was 55.3 million, of which 9.4 million (17.0 per cent) lived in rural areas and 45.9 million (83.0 per cent) lived in urban areas.
  • The population in rural areas has a higher proportion of older people compared with urban areas. Just over 45 per cent of those living in rural areas are aged below 45 years, compared with almost 60 per cent in urban areas, and overall there are proportionately fewer younger people living in settlements in a sparse area.
  • Approximately 60 per cent of the population living in rural village and dispersed in a sparse setting are aged 45 years and over.
  • Both rural and urban areas have seen an increase in overall population between 2011 and 2016. Rural has increased by 2.6 per cent and urban by 4.4 per cent.
  • The population aged 65 and over increased by 37 per cent in predominantly rural areas between 2001 and 2015, compared with 17 per cent in predominantly urban
  • Predominantly rural areas have seen an increase of 7 per cent in infants (0-4 year olds) compared with a 22 per cent increase in predominantly urban
  • In 2017, median workplace-based earnings in predominantly urban areas (excluding London) were £22,900 while predominantly rural areas were slightly lower at £21,400.
  • The highest rate of home workers was found in rural hamlets and dispersed areas, at 34 per cent, compared with 13 per cent in urban areas. Overall rural areas had a higher rate of home working compared with urban areas.
  • In Wales, three quarters of community exhibitors are societies or community cinemas, with multi-arts providers making up the remainder (including a small proportion of film festival screenings).
  • Almost half of the screenings take place in community halls and almost a third in mixed-use venues. A variety of spaces, from schools to commercial cinemas make up the remainder.
  • 66% of community exhibitors use DVD or Blu-ray projection systems. 27% use digital projection, mostly in mixed-use venues.
  • 78% of community exhibitors offer a mix of specialised and mainstream programming.
  • A fifth of community screen programmes are dedicated to specialised film. Only two offer mostly mainstream films.[1]
  • UK -wide, there is a significant number of community cinemas lacking public transport access.
  • The Scottish Government 2014 Scottish Household Survey (12) confirmed that cinema going is the most popular form of cultural attendance in Scotland, with over half of the respondents viewing a film over a twelve-month period.[2]
  • 16% of the rural population is aged under 14. The England average is 17%.
  • In urban areas 21% of the population is aged 15 to 29 years, but in rural areas this falls to 15%.[3]

[1] Rural Community Film Exhibition in Wales, Bigger Picture Research
[2] Mapping Film Exhibition in Scotland A report for Creative Scotland
[3] Action with Communities in Rural England (ACRE)

Organisations

Cinema for All help communities screen films. They are the national support and development organisation for community-led cinema: community cinemas, film clubs and societies.

Community Screen Forum represents organisations that promote, support and enable community screen experiences in under-serviced areas of the United Kingdom.

Rural Media Company is a Hereford-based production company and charity producing award-winning films and digital arts projects.

Live & Local Rural and Community Touring Scheme  supports a network of volunteer organisations who bring their communities together to enjoy performance and film at their local village hall, church or school.

Action with Communities in Rural England is the national voice for the 38 rural community councils who make up the country’s largest rural network.

Campaign to Protect Rural England work to protect, promote and enhance our towns and countryside to make them better places to live, work and enjoy, and to ensure the countryside is protected for now and future generations.

Scottish Rural Parliament aim to become a powerful voice for the diverse people and communities of rural Scotland, particularly those not already represented by other interests, to assure that policy and decision-making meets the needs of rural Scotland.

Scottish Rural Action is a grassroots-led, non-profit organisation. We seek to ensure that decision-makers understand the needs and strengths of rural communities in Scotland, and that policy does not disadvantage rural communities.

Campaign for the Protection of Rural Wales  has worked to safeguard the quality and diversity of  all Welsh landscapes and seascapes.

Rural Development Council in Northern Ireland provides a range of development, support,  training and delivery services for individuals, farmers, farm families, groups, communities, public and private sector organisations.

Stats

  • In the UK, asylum applications (excluding dependents) peaked at 84,100 in 2002 and reached a low point of 17,900 in 2010. After several years of increases, applications dropped by 6% to 30,700 in 2016.
  • Asylum applicants and their dependents comprised an estimated 9% of net migration in 2015, down from 44% in 2002.
  • In 2016, 68% of initial asylum applications were refused but 42% of appeals against initial refusals were successful.
  • Men made up 75% of main applicants for asylum in 2016.
  • The UK received about 3% of asylum claims made in EU countries (plus Norway and Switzerland) in 2016, and was the sixth highest recipient of asylum claims.[1]
  • According to the UNHCR, by mid-2015 there were 117,234 refugees, 37,829 pending asylum cases and 16 stateless persons in the UK. That’s less than one quarter of a percent of the UK’s total population (around 0.24%)
  • Asylum applications to the UK are relatively low – 32,733 in 2015. Although they have increased a little in recent years, they’re still significantly lower today than the peak of 84,000 applications back in 2002.
  • The vast majority of people who seek asylum in the UK have fled countries ravaged by war and human rights abuses. In 2015, the largest number of asylum applications to the UK came from nationals of Eritrea (3,695), Iran (3,242), Sudan (2,912) and Syria (2,539).
  • Over 65 million people around the globe have had to flee their homes – that’s like the entire British population having to leave.
  • It’s poor countries, not rich, western countries, who look after the vast majority of the world’s refugees. The UN’s Refugee Agency estimates that nearly nine in ten of the world’s refugees are sheltered by developing countries.
  • Last year, 172, 362 people arrived in Europe via sea. Just under half were women and children. 3,119 men, women and children have lost their lives during their attempt to cross the Mediterranean Sea.
  • In September 2015, European countries agreed to relocate 160,000 refugees away from Greece and Italy to help ease the pressure. By September 2017, almost 27,700 refugees had been relocated.
  • In 2017, an estimated 668,600 people sought safety in Europe. Britain received 26,350 asylum applications, a 14% decrease since the year before. Britain received less than 3% of all asylum claims made in the EU during last year.
  • By the end of 2017 more than 14,600 asylum applications had been waiting for longer than six months for an initial decision on the case. That’s an increase from 8,820 compared with the previous year. In Germany alone, 199,200 asylum applications were made.
  • The total backlog in cases pending a decision totalled 28,787.
  • In 2017, 27,331 people were imprisoned in immigration detention centres; among them many people seeking asylum. 54% were released back into the community.
  • The number of Syrian refugees resettled in the UK now stands at 10,538 since the conflict began.
  • In 2017, 813 non-Syrian refugees were resettled in Britain via the Gateway Protection Programme run in conjunction with the UN’s Refugee Agency (UNHCR). Just 1% of the world’s refugees will ever be resettled.[2]

[1]Migration to the UK: Asylum – The Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford
[2]Refugee Council – Top 20 facts about refugees and asylum seekers.

Organisations

Refugee Action has spent 35 years helping refugees build safe, hopeful and productive new lives in the UK.

In Place of War has worked with creative communities in some of the most challenging contexts in the world. It is a support system for community artistic, creative and cultural organisations in places of conflict, revolution and areas suffering the consequences of conflict.

Regional Refugee Forum North East is the independent membership organisation created by and for the North East region’s Refugee-led Community Organisations (RCOs), enabling them to unite and produce their Collective Voice and empowering them to be active agents in change.

Women for Refugee Women challenges the injustices experienced by women who seek asylum in the UK.

The Refugee Council is one of the leading charities in the UK working directly with refugees, and supporting them to rebuild their lives.

University of East London – Directory of Services & Organisations for Refugees, Asylum Seekers & Migrants

Welcome Cinema: Welcoming Refugees to the UK

A Guide to Welcoming Immigrants and Refugees

Stats

In the United Kingdom, someone is deemed low income if their household income is 60% of the median wage.  The government uses the median income over the mean, whereas the median is not affected by a few large numbers.

Based on the low income data, information is generated on low income households but there are many other ways to measure low-income households. This measurement is also the one that’s used to deem whether or not someone is classed as living in poverty. It is known as relative income poverty.

Many working class people in the United Kingdom may also be located as “low-income” communities because of their economic experiences. Unlike other characteristics such as race or gender, people from low income backgrounds weren’t afforded the same protection under the law. Therefore there has been less discussion on lower-income groups in strands of work looking to engage disenfranchised groups.

  • 21% of households are low-income communities. [1]
  • Black and minority ethnic groups are more likely to have a lower income background than people who do not have a black and minority ethnic background. [2]
  • Women are slightly more likely to have a lower income background than men. [3]
  • Of all religious groups, people with Muslim backgrounds are the most likely group to come from low-income backgrounds. [4]
  • 24% of people in Wales, 22% of people in England, 20% of people in Northern Ireland and 19% of people in Scotland have low income backgrounds. [5]
  • Low-income rates are higher in families where one person is disabled. [6]
  • One in 3 people in the UK feel that they are “too poor” to join in with society by taking part in activities such as going to the cinema. [7]

[1] GOV.UK – Households below average income
[2] Joseph Rowntree Foundation – Poverty and ethnicity in the UK
[3] Dept. of Social Policy & Intervention – Poverty through a Gender Lens
[4] Centre for Social Investigation – Review of the relationship between religion and poverty
[5] Joseph Rowntree Foundation – UK Poverty Statistics
[6] Joseph Rowntree Foundation – Poverty rates in families with a disabled person
[7] Joseph Rowntree Foundation – Poverty, Participation and Choice

Organisations

Joseph Rowntree Foundation is an independent organisation working to inspire social change through research, policy and practice.

End Child Poverty (ECP) coalition was set up in 2003 to leverage the work of a wide range of groups all of whom shared the objective of eradicating child poverty in the UK.

Child Poverty Action Group work to understand what causes poverty, the impact it has on children’s lives, and how it can be solved – for good.

Turn2us is a national charity helping people when times get tough. We provide financial support to help people get back on track.

Salvation Army support people on a journey towards a sustainable outcome…

Habitat for Humanity is an international charity fighting poverty housing in the UK and across the world

Stats

  • One in two people aged 90 and over are living with sight loss.
  • Nearly two-thirds of people living with sight loss are women.
  • People from black and minority ethnic communities are at greater risk of some of the leading causes of sight loss.
  • Adults with learning disabilities are 10 times more likely to be blind or partially sighted than the general population.
  • Only 17 per cent of registered blind and partially sighted people were offered any form of emotional support at the time of diagnosis.
  • In the year after registration, less than 30 per cent of people who lost their sight say they were offered mobility training to help them get around independently.
  • Almost half of blind and partially sighted people feel ‘moderately’ or ‘completely’ cut off from people and things around them.
  • Older people with sight loss are almost three times more likely to experience depression than people with good vision.
  • Only one in four registered blind and partially sighted people of working age are in employment.[1]

[1] RNIB

Organisations

Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) is the UK’s leading charity supporting blind and partially sighted people.

Vocal Eyes provide opportunities for blind and partially sighted people to experience the arts at UK’s theatres, museums, galleries and heritage sites.

Scope exists to make this country a place where disabled people have the same opportunities as everyone else.

LOOK-UK supports young people and families living with a vision impairment.

CVI Society is a UK charity that raises awareness of Cerebral Visual Impairment providing education and support to families and healthcare professionals.

VICTA supports children and young people who are blind or partially sighted and their families across the UK.

What is Audio Description? - RNIB

Stats

  • There are over 11 million people with a limiting long term illness, impairment or disability.
  • The most commonly-reported impairments are those that affect mobility, lifting or carrying.[1]
  • There are 13.9 million disabled people in the UK. 8 per cent of children are disabled, 19 per cent of working age adults are disabled, 45 per cent of pension age adults are disabled.[2]
  • After housing costs, the proportion of working age disabled people living in poverty (28 per cent) is higher than the proportion of working age non-disabled people (18 per cent).[3]
  • Life costs you £570 more on average a month if you’re disabled.[4]
  • Over a quarter of disabled people say that they do not frequently have choice and control over their daily lives.[5]
  • Around a third of disabled people experience difficulties related to their impairment in accessing public, commercial and leisure goods and services.[6]
  • The spending power of families with at least one disabled person is estimated by the Government to be over £200 billion a year.[7]
  • Disabled audiences are over-represented amongst video buyers.[8]

[1] ONS Opinions Survey 2011
[2] Family Resources Survey 2016/17
[3] Households Below Average Income, 2015-16
[4] Scope: The disability price tag
[5] ONS Opinions Survey 2011
[6] ONS Opinions Survey 2010
[7] Department for Work and Pensions
[8] BFI Audiences Research and Statistics 2015

Organisations

Scope exists to make this country a place where disabled people have the same opportunities as everyone else.
Disability Rights UK want a society where everyone can participate equally.

Centre for Accessible Environments (CAE) provides consultancy, training, research and publications on building design and management to meet all user needs, including disabled and older people.

Mind provides advice and support to empower anyone experiencing a mental health problem.

Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) is the UK’s leading charity supporting blind and partially sighted people.

Action on Hearing Loss supports and helps people experiencing hearing loss, so they can take back control and live the live they choose.

Contact supports families with the best possible guidance and information. They bring families together to support each other, and help families to campaign, volunteer and fundraise to improve life for themselves and others.

Disability Arts has an extensive database of cinema and arts organisations

Sensory Trust also has a useful list

Access to live music for disabled audiences: Glastonbury Festival & Band on the Wall

Stats

Stonewall, as the leading organisation advocating for LGBT+ rights in the UK, says it is a reasonable estimate that there are between 5-7% people in the UK who are LGBT+.

Some further interesting statistics:

  • One in five LGBT people have experienced a hate crime or incident because of their sexual orientation and/or gender identity in the last 12 months
  • Two in five trans people have experienced a hate crime or incident because of their gender identity in the last 12 months[1]
  • Nearly half (42 per cent) of trans people are not living permanently in their preferred gender role stated they are prevented from doing so because they fear it might threaten their employment status[2]
  • Nearly half (45 per cent) of LGBT pupils – including 64 per cent of trans pupils – are bullied for being LGBT in Britain’s schools. This is down from 55 per cent of lesbian, gay and bi pupils who experienced bullying because of their sexual orientation in 2012 and 65 per cent in 2007[3]
  • A quarter of the world’s population believes that being LGBT should be a crime[4]
  • 1 in 3 homeless youth are LGBT[5]
  • LGBT people are more likely to be substance dependent[6]
  • LGBT people are more likely to face mental health challenges such as depression and anxiety[7]

[1]Stonewall: The Gay British Crime Survey (2013) and LGBT in Britain – Hate Crime (2017)
[2]Stonewall: Gay in Britain (2013) and Engendered Penalities (2007)
[3]Stonewall: The School Report (2017) and The RaRE Research Report (2015)
[4]Stonewall: Stonewall’s International Work and ILGA World (2016).
[5]Crisis, 2005
[6]University of Central Lancashire, 2014
[7]King et al 2008

Organisations

Stonewall works for acceptance without exception for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.

LGBT Foundation is a national charity delivering advice, support and information services to lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans (LGBT) communities.

See the downloads for a detailed list of organisations.

How to talk (and listen) to transgender people - Jackson Bird

How We Can Reduce Prejudice with a Conversation- David Fleischer