Policy Exchange authors have included former government advisor Professor
Dieter Helm, economist
Robert Shiller, author and broadcaster
Bill Bryson, historian and journalist
Anna Reid, former
Financial Times journalist
John Willman, and Olympic athlete
James Cracknell.
Building More, Building Beautiful In June 2018, Policy Exchange published
Building More, Building Beautiful, which argued that if developers build more homes in ways that the public find beautiful, there will be less opposition to new housebuilding. The paper argued that this would make development less risky, with increased benefits to people's physical and mental health. The report included a poll of more than 5,000 people, which detailed their preferences for the design and style of the built environment. Its foreword was written by
James Brokenshire, Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, and the report was by commended by
Theresa May in a speech to Policy Exchange. The Government subsequently announced the establishment of the
Building Better, Building Beautiful Commission, an independent body to advise ministers on how to promote and increase the use of high-quality design for new build homes and neighbourhoods. An article in
The Economist hailed the policy as the "brainchild of Policy Exchange" and "the biggest idea in housing policy since the sale of council houses under Margaret Thatcher." To feed ideas into the Commission, in January 2019 Policy Exchange also published
Building Beautiful, a cross-party essay collection with contributions from politics, architecture and the housebuilding industry, including by the Housing Minister
Kit Malthouse MP,
Dame Fiona Reynolds, and
Jon Cruddas MP. In a Policy Exchange event on beauty in the built environment and the left,
Lisa Nandy, MP for Wigan, argued that the building of "grim, grey, massive tower blocks" in the post-war period was proof that the planning authorities had not listened to the concerns of ordinary people.
The New Netwar: Countering Extremism Online In 2017 Policy Exchange published
The New Netwar: Countering Extremism Online, which provided an analysis of the struggle against online extremism. It included a survey of public opinion which showed that two-thirds of people believe the leading social media companies are not doing enough to combat online radicalisation. Three-quarters of people want the companies to do more to locate and remove extremist content. The report explored a range of policy options for interdicting the supply-chain of extremist content. In covering the report,
Con Coughlin of the
Daily Telegraph called Policy Exchange "One of London's most effective think tanks, which has done ground-breaking research on the emerging jihadi threat" while William Booth of the
Washington Post said that its "reports often inform government policy in Britain".
The Fog of Law In 2013 Policy Exchange published
The Fog of Law, which argued that the increasing application of civilian norms to military conflict, and resulting increase in legal claims against the Ministry of Defence, risked undermining the effectiveness of the armed forces and therefore the security of the nation. The co-authors were former US army lawyer
Laura Croft and former British Army officer
Tom Tugendhat. The report recommended that the government should legislate to define Combat Immunity to allow military personnel to take decisions without having to worry about risk of prosecution, that the MoD should be exempt from the
Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007, for the UK to derogate from the
European Convention on Human Rights during deployed operations and for legal aid to be removed from foreign nationals. In March 2015, an update was published called
Clearing the Fog of Law by Tugendhat,
Richard Ekins and
Jonathan Morgan. This further developed the argument that the expansion of "lawfare" hinders the ability of commanders on the ground to make immediate and potentially life-or-death decisions. Five former Chiefs of the General Staff wrote to the
Times on 8 April 2015 to support the recommendations, saying "We urge the government to recognise the primacy of the Geneva Conventions in war by derogating from the European Convention on Human Rights in time of war and redefining combat immunity through legislation to ensure that our serving personnel are able to operate in the field without fear of the laws designed for peacetime environments."
The Cost of Doing Nothing In 2016, the Labour MP
Jo Cox started working with Conservative MP
Tom Tugendhat on a pamphlet which would examine Britain's attitude to intervening in humanitarian situations overseas. They intended to publish the report to coincide with the publication of
The Iraq Inquiry's report into the origins of the
Iraq War. The report was put on hold when Jo Cox was murdered in June 2016. However, her family agreed that the report should be completed and her friend Labour MP
Alison McGovern helped Tugendhat to finish it. The report examines the history of British intervention overseas and argues that successful examples such as
Sierra Leone,
Kosovo and the
Gulf War demonstrate the value potential for intervention to succeed. The authors contrasted this with examples of Britain and the wider international community failing to intervene in time to prevent mass atrocities, such as the
Rwandan genocide, massacres in
Bosnia and most recently the death of hundreds of thousands of people in the
Syrian Civil War.
Education Schools Week wrote in February 2017 that "Policy Exchange's power can be seen in the impressive number of policies foreshadowed in their reports: reducing the frequency of Ofsted inspections, sharpening up accountability, removing vocational qualifications from league tables in favour of a focus on so-called academic GCSEs."
Modernising the United Kingdom In August 2019, Policy Exchange published a report looking at ways the new Conservative government could work to modersnise the United Kingdom. The report argued that the new government should pursue a "Grand Strategy to modernise the United Kingdom, drawing on the strength of the Union to stimulate local areas through both an audacious programme of infrastructure investment and further devolution of powers." It pushed for greater devolution and enhancement of community and government partnerships. The report was cited as an insight into how Johnson's government plan to strengthen the Union.
McDonnellomics In October 2019, in anticipation of the UK December election, Policy Exchange published ''McDonnellomics: How Labour's Economic Agenda Would Transform the UK''. The paper looked at John McDonnell's policy approach and political inspiration. It argued that "'McDonnellomics' would represent the biggest shift in UK economic policy since the advent of
Thatcherism."
Peter Mandelson wrote a foreword to the paper and argued: "Instead of moving Britain forward, with new ideas and utilising the opportunities that digital technology and AI, for example, offer us to transform the economy and public services, a Corbyn-McDonnell government wants to reassert the statist mindset that New Labour disavowed."
Academic freedom in the UK In November 2019, Policy Exchange published a paper arguing that universities should be places of free speech and should avoid a 'culture of conformity'. Polling that informed the paper revealed that 'a solid core of 30% of students are consistently in favour of free speech' however noted that 'cancel culture' was becoming prevalent on UK campuses.
"Whitehall Reimagined" and Government Reimagined In December 2019, a report looking into civil service reform was published by Policy Exchange. The report argued for policy proposals that would make 'the civil service more democratically accountable and better able to deliver on the mandate of the government of the day.' The report was widely covered by the media as it was highlighted that
Dominic Cummings was 'used as a source by the think tank Policy Exchange for its new briefing paper "Whitehall Reimagined", which recommended that the Prime Minister's office and special advisers should lead fundamental reforms to "unlock the potential" of the civil service.' In October 2020, Policy Exchange established a Commission of "heavy-hitters" to examine how the Civil Service could be improved and modernised. The Policy Exchange Reform of Government Commission was composed of
Patricia Hodgson (Chair),
Hazel Blears,
Lockwood Smith,
Nick Macpherson,
Trevor Phillips,
Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury,
Peter Wall,
Lord Caine of Temple Newsam,
Nicky Morgan,
Ben Houchen, and
Lord Hill of Oareford. The Commission heard from a range of expert witnesses, including
Mark Sedwill, former Cabinet Secretary;
David Blunkett, former Home Secretary; and
Francis Maude, former Cabinet Office minister. The Commission published its final report, entitled
Government Reimagined: A Handbook for Reform, in May 2021. The report, which was written by Policy Exchange's Head of Technology Policy, Benjamin Barnard, received widespread media coverage. The report was endorsed by a range of figures including
Rt Hon Michael Gove MP (then Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster),
Sir Howard Bernstein (former Chief Executive of Manchester City Council), and
Dame Sue Owen (former Permanent Secretary at DCMS). In June 2021, the Government set out a Declaration on Government Reform, which echoed the recommendations made in
Government Reimagined. ==Addresses==