Government
This area of the website explores our relationship with Government.
From here you can access information on:
- Departments, ministers and committees with relevance to IWF’s remit
- Parliamentary questions with relevance to IWF's remit
- Parliamentary debates with relevance to IWF's remit
To help raise awareness of our ‘Hotline’ and further our work combating illegal content online, the Internet Watch Foundation aims to have its work widely embraced throughout national and local government as well as internationally.
We operate independently of Government, but are closely supported by the Home Office, the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) and the Ministry of Justice as well as working with the Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF) and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) and a number of Parliamentarians, Peers and MEPs who take an interest in our work.
At the Home Office, the Rt. Hon. Alan Johnson MP is Secretary of State and Alan Campbell MP is the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State with responsibility for crime, including e-crime.
Within the DCSF, the Rt. Hon. Ed Balls MP is Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families and Baroness Delyth Morgan is Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Children, Young People and Families.
Our self-regulatory role with the internet industry links the IWF to the Rt. Hon. Lord Peter Mandelson, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills and the Rt. Hon. Stephen Timms MP, Minister for Digital Britain and Financial Secretary to the Treasury.
Ben Bradshaw MP is the DCMS Secretary of State and Sion Simon MP's is Minister for Creative Industries.
At the Ministry of Justice, the Rt. Hon Jack Straw MP is the Secretary of State for Justice with Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Claire Ward MP, having responsibility for the criminal justice system and its reform.
IWF is a member of the UK Council for Child Internet Safety (UKCCIS) and has a seat on the Council’s Executive Board.
Cross parliamentary Committees with relevance to IWF include All Party Parliamentary Communications Group (apCOMMS) and the Parliamentary Information Technology Committee (PITCOM); and the Information Society Alliance (EURIM) is a not-for-profit membership organisation which works to support a globally competitive, socially inclusive and democratically accountable information society.
Page Created: Wed, September 1st, 2004
Page Modified: Fri, November 27th, 2009


