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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221003T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221003T140000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220825T135042Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184848Z
UID:3740-1664798400-1664805600@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History for Beginners: Ancients to Present - 3rd October
DESCRIPTION:As part of Black History Month 2022\, the NHS London Leadership Academy will be hosting this Ancestry Talks event on Monday 3rd October 2022\, from Midday to 2pm. \nThis event is open to all NHS Staff in every region. \nPlease be aware spaces are limited\, to avoid disappointment please do not delay in booking your place. Places are given on a first come first serve basis. \nAbout the event: \nPaul Crooks is a published author and trailblazing genealogist with a specialist interest in Black ancestry. He pioneered research into Black genealogy during the 1990s when he became the first to trace his family history from London\, back six generations\, to ancestors enslaved on a sugar plantation in North America 200 years ago. \nBlending Black History with genealogy\, Paul will take you on a journey through the most enlightening periods Black history from the ancient to the modern era. \nHe will; \n– highlight key topics and events along the epic Black History timeline \n– emphasise events where Africans in the diaspora have taken action – on a grand scale – to shape their future and the future of others. \nAbout the speaker \nPaul Crooks is a published author and trailblazing genealogist with a specialist interest in Black ancestry. He pioneered research into African Caribbean genealogy during the 1990s when he became the first to trace his family history from London\, back six generations\, to ancestors enslaved on a sugar plantation in North America 200 years ago. Paul discovered that his ancestors were enslaved on a sugar plantation in Jamaica. \nPaul gained national recognition for his work when his acclaimed historical novel Ancestors (based on the true story of the author’s Ancestors) was published in 2002. He appeared on Who Do You Think You Are? (Moira Stuart) as the expert in African Caribbean genealogy. His second book A Tree Without Roots is the seminal guide to tracing Black British ancestry. \nPaul is credited with inspiring an upsurge in interest in Black and British ancestry. He is also recognised for having spawned an industry in African Caribbean genealogy. \nFor more about Paul Crooks: https://paulcrooks.info/ \nTo book your place on this event\, please complete the booking form below: \nTHIS EVENT IS NOW FULLY BOOKED  \n\nYou can request a place on a waiting list by emailing jake.cutting@leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-history-for-beginners-ancients-to-present-3rd-october/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/08/A-Black-History-21-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221004T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221004T150000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220831T160408Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184938Z
UID:3766-1664888400-1664895600@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:The Benin Trust - Unsung African Heroines
DESCRIPTION:The Benin Trust – Unsung African Heroines \nMAINSTREAMING THE UNTOLD STORIES OF UNSUNG AFRICAN HEROINES \nThere can be no doubt that African women have contributed immensely to the development of black history and civilisation worldwide. These unsung heroines are depicted as queens\, princesses\, feminists\, warriors\, activists\, chiefs and leaders of men and movements that resisted the European colonisation of Africa. The names of many of these women should have been chronologically recorded in the annals of African history. This black history month activity will use a workshop\, short docufilm (videography)\, music storytelling and a book to mainstream the untold stories of 20 unsung African heroines. The event is designed to educate the general public on the significant contribution of black African women to the evolutionary history of black civilisation. \nSome of the notable heroines that will be mainstreamed include Queen Nanny or Nanny of Maroons (c. 1685 – c. 1755)\, Queen Idia of Great Benin Kingdom (1504 – 1550)\, Queen Amina Sukhera of Zazzau (now Zaria) (1533 – 1610)\, Queen Yaa Asantewaa Asante of Ghana (c. 1840–1921)\, Queen Nzinga Mbande of Matamba kingdom\, (c. 1583 –1663)\, Tarenorerer of Emu Bay in northern Tasmania (c.1800-1831)\, Harriet Tubman of Philadelphia (1820 – 1913)\, Kaigirwa of Rwanda and Uganda (1850 – 1950)\, Queen Ann Nzingha of the Ndongo and Matamba Kingdoms (modern-day Angola) (c. 1582 – 1663)\, Neithhotep\, the first queen of Kmt (ancient Egypt)\, circa 3200 BCE\, Carlota Lukumí of Cuba (1844)\, Tarenorerer of Emu Bay in northern Tasmania (c.1800-1831)\, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari of Kmt dynasty (c 1570-1530 B.C.) etc. \nNHS Black History Month activities:  \n\nIntroduction to the workshop and a book on “The untold stories of 20 unsung African heroines”\nA short docufilm (videography) mainstreaming the untold stories of 14 unsung African heroines\nAfrican Drumming session\nStorytelling and cultural display\nQ & A Session\n\nAbout The Benin Trust \nThe Benin Trust is a charity registered in England (1116338). Some of its activities include the promotion of black history and delivering of volunteering\, recreational services\, film-making\, arts and other general charitable activities. Over the years\, we have delivered several workshops on black history\, talking drums\, drama and storytelling which were funded by the Newham Council and National Lottery Heritage Fund. \nFor more information \nContact Dr Charles Omorodion\, Coordinator\, on Tel: +44 7985728982; Tel: +4420 8519 4107 or visit TBT \nwebsite www.thebenintrust.com or www.afromusicals.com \nTo book your place on this event\, please complete the booking form below: \n\n\n\n                        \n                            Booking Form: The Benin Trust - Unsung African Heroines\n                            Please complete this form to book your place. \n                        \n                        Full Name:*Band*Email:*Telephone number:*Your current role:*Organisation*Region:*LondonSouth East EnglandEast of EnglandMidlandsNorth East EnglandNorth West EnglandOtherICS you are based in:*Please select the ICS you are based inNorth East LondonNorth West LondonNorth Central LondonSouth East LondonSouth West LondonNot ApplicablePlease indicate any additional requirements or comments i.e. disabilities
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/the-benin-trust-unsung-african-heroines/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/08/Benin-Trust-Logo.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221012T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221012T140000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220825T155901Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184908Z
UID:3742-1665576000-1665583200@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black Ancestry | The Truth About What’s in a Name? - 12th October
DESCRIPTION:As part of Black History Month 2022\, the NHS London Leadership Academy will be hosting this Ancestry Talks event on Wednesday 12th October 2022\, from Midday to 2pm. \nThis event is open to all NHS Staff in every region. \nAbout the event: \nBritish and North American descendants of ancestors once enslaved\, often assume their surnames are a legacy of slave ownership. Some Black and mixed-Black descendants reject their ‘slave name’. For others\, the ‘slave name’ may be their only link to a history that has been intentionally erased. \nIn this masterclass\, African Caribbean genealogist Paul Crooks will reveal new insights into names and naming practices within Caribbean enslaved societies. The focus will on Jamaica\, as a proxy for what was happening in other parts of North America once colonised by slave owners and administrators\, mainly from England\, Scotland\, and Ireland. \nPaul will draw from historical documents based on his search for his ancestors captured off the Gold Coast and enslaved in Jamaica. Paul will throw light on: \n\nhis journey to bring his black family history to life\nname giving within slave society\nthe tradition of Caribbean nicknaming\nevidence of covert resistance by his ancestors and enslaved communities in Jamaica\, to the imposition of slave names\ndocuments revealing the widespread use of African names prior to emancipation\nthe adoption of surnames following emancipation in British colonies in 1838.\n\nPaul research displaces disempowering histories of how Black people in North America and naming practices with a more empowering version. \nAbout the speaker \nPaul Crooks is a published author and trailblazing genealogist with a specialist interest in Black ancestry. He pioneered research into African Caribbean genealogy during the 1990s when he became the first to trace his family history from London\, back six generations\, to ancestors enslaved on a sugar plantation in North America 200 years ago. Paul discovered that his ancestors were enslaved on a sugar plantation in Jamaica. \nPaul gained national recognition for his work when his acclaimed historical novel Ancestors (based on the true story of the author’s Ancestors) was published in 2002. He appeared on Who Do You Think You Are? (Moira \nStuart) as the expert in African Caribbean genealogy. His second book A Tree Without Roots is the seminal guide to tracing Black British ancestry. \nPaul is credited with inspiring an upsurge in interest in Black and British ancestry. He is also recognised for having spawned an industry in African Caribbean genealogy. \nFor more about Paul Crooks: https://paulcrooks.info/ \nTo book your place on this event\, please complete the booking form below: \nTHIS EVENT IS NOW FULLY BOOKED
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-ancestry-the-truth-about-whats-in-a-name-12th-october/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/08/A-Black-History-23.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Jake Cutting":MAILTO:jake.cutting@leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221017T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221017T140000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220905T120232Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184804Z
UID:3776-1666008000-1666015200@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History Month: Mental Health Impact of Windrush with Patrick Vernon - 17th October 2022
DESCRIPTION:The British Nationality Act of 1948 gave citizens of UK Colonies the right of settlement in the UK. In the wake of post World War 2 labour shortages\, the British government campaigned for workers from abroad\, which led to increased immigration from 1948 and 1970\, particularly from African and The Caribbean. Working age adults and many children travelled to join parents or grandparents in the UK or travelled with their parents without their own passports. They helped to build the NHS\, staffed the transport systems and transformed industry in the UK. \nDespite these achievements\, 2018 ushered in the ‘Windrush Scandal’\, where it emerged that for years this generation had faced deportation and evictions due to failures by the Home Office to keep records of their legal status. This was met with protests and public pushback which resulted in a commitment to support and compensate those who have been affected. \n \nSo where are we now? What lessons can we learn for the future? \n\nWhy hostile environment policy created the Windrush Scandal\nWhy Windrush Generation was more impacted by other Commonwealth communities affected by Hostile Environment\nCampaign to expose the scandal\nThe impact of Hostile environment policy on lifestyle and aspirations of the Windrush Generation\nRighting the Wrongs of the Scandal (Windrush Taskforce\, Compensation Scheme and Lessons Learned Review)\nThe impact of the scandal and mental health and wellbeing of the Windrush Generation\n\nPlatform: Please note this event is due to take place virtually via MS Teams \nAbout the Presenter: \nPatrick Vernon was born in the constituency where Enoch Powell was an MP. His family still lives in Wolverhampton and he is proud of his roots and the contribution of migrant communities from the Windrush Generation have made to Britain which forms a larger of his values and principles – Windrush Day Matters. \nPatrick is a Clore and Winston Churchill Fellow\, Fellow at Imperial War Museum\, fellow of Royal Historical Society and former Associate fellow for the department of history of medicine at Warwick University. He has over twenty years’ senior experience working across mental health\, public health\, heritage and race equality and is well known in health\, local government and the voluntary sector. Patrick is currently Associate Director for Connected Communities at the Centre for Ageing Better\, Equality and Diversity Adviser to Lambeth Council\, Chair of Citizens Partnership for Healthcare Investigation Branch (HSIB) and Senior Associate at OLMEC. He was the first director of Black Thrive a mental-health multi-agency tackling mental health in Lambeth\, former non-executive director of Camden and Islington Mental Health Foundation Trust\, Health Partnership Coordinator for National Housing Federation\, former director of Afiya Trust\, committee member of Healthwatch England\, NHS England Equality Diversity Council\, director of Brent Health Action Zone and regional director for MIND. Patrick was former Independent Chair of Westminster Partnership for Race Equality where he played a key role with the Met Police and the Muslim community with the aftermath of 7/7 bombings in Westminster in 2005. \nHe is a former member of the Labour and the Coalition Government Ministerial Advisory for Mental Health. Patrick was a former councillor in Hackney between 2006- 2014 and was appointed by Jeremy Corbyn as Race Equalities Adviser to the Shadow Equalities Ministerial Team between 2015 to 2017.Patrick is also founder of Every Generation Media and 100 Great Black Britons\, which develops education programmes\, publications and films on cultural heritage and family history. Patrick was made Pioneer of the Nation for Cultural History by the Queen in 2003. He is a leading expert on African and Caribbean genealogy in the UK. In 2017 was appointed editor for Black History Month magazine (2017 and 2018 magazines) and in 2018 for Windrush Commemorative magazine. \nYou can log onto the event using the link here: \nClick here to join the meeting \nMeeting ID: 348 243 212 852\nPasscode: ecWjmQ \nTHIS EVENT IS NOW FULLY BOOKED  \n\nYou can request a place on a waiting list by emailing jake.cutting@leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-history-month-mental-health-impact-of-windrush/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/09/RS12650_438A6305-1-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221020T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221020T121500
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220906T120745Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184705Z
UID:3803-1666263600-1666268100@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History Month: The “Model Black”: What the experiences of black leaders can teach us all about belonging. (Morning Event) 20th October 2022
DESCRIPTION:Can you be authentic and be a successful leader?  How does this play out for black leaders in British organisations? Why should this matter to all of us? \nIn this interactive session\, Dr Barbara Banda shares her ground breaking research on successful black British leaders across a range or organisations and industries. She explores what her research tells us about the choices that black leaders make if they are to achieve positions of leadership. Participants attending the session will discuss the implications of this research for creating an inclusive culture within the NHS. \nAll are welcome. Be part of the conversation. \nAbout the Presenter \nBarbara Banda is the founder of the leadership consultancy\, Barbara Banda Consulting\, which works with Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 companies. As Professor of Practice and Educator in Leadership\, Inclusive Leadership and Change at Duke Corporate Education\, Rotterdam School of Management and Hult Ashridge\, she is passionate about connecting leadership education to the realities of daily life in organisations. Barbara holds five degrees\, including a D.Phil from the University of Oxford that explored the importance of connecting management education to the workplace\, which informs her approach with clients. She is black British of Jamaican heritage. \n  \nPlatform: Please note this event will take place virtually via MS Teams. \nSpaces are limited to 25 places\, places are given on a first come first serve basis. Once capacity of the event has been reached\, you can request to join a waiting list.  Please instructions provided should this occur. \nTo book your place on this event\, please complete the booking form below: \nTHIS EVENT IS NOW FULLY BOOKED  \n\nYou can request a place on a waiting list by emailing awladuz.zaman@nhs.net
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-history-month-the-model-black-what-the-experiences-of-black-leaders-can-teach-us-all-about-belonging-morning-event-20th-october-2022/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/09/Barbara-Banda-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221020T140000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221020T151500
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220922T111440Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184637Z
UID:3812-1666274400-1666278900@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History Month: The “Model Black”: What the experiences of black leaders can teach us all about belonging. (Afternoon Event) 20th October 2022
DESCRIPTION:Can you be authentic and be a successful leader?  How does this play out for black leaders in British organisations? Why should this matter to all of us? \nIn this interactive session\, Dr Barbara Banda shares her ground breaking research on successful black British leaders across a range or organisations and industries. She explores what her research tells us about the choices that black leaders make if they are to achieve positions of leadership. Participants attending the session will discuss the implications of this research for creating an inclusive culture within the NHS. \nAll are welcome. Be part of the conversation. \nAbout the Presenter \nBarbara Banda is the founder of the leadership consultancy\, Barbara Banda Consulting\, which works with Fortune 500 and FTSE 100 companies. As Professor of Practice and Educator in Leadership\, Inclusive Leadership and Change at Duke Corporate Education\, Rotterdam School of Management and Hult Ashridge\, she is passionate about connecting leadership education to the realities of daily life in organisations. Barbara holds five degrees\, including a D.Phil from the University of Oxford that explored the importance of connecting management education to the workplace\, which informs her approach with clients. She is black British of Jamaican heritage. \n  \nPlatform: Please note this event will take place virtually via MS Teams. \nSpaces are limited to 25 places\, places are given on a first come first serve basis. Once capacity of the event has been reached\, you can request to join a waiting list.  Please instructions provided should this occur. \nTo book your place on this event\, please complete the booking form below: \nTHIS EVENT IS NOW FULLY BOOKED  \n\nYou can request a place on a waiting list by emailing jake.cutting@leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-history-month-the-model-black-what-the-experiences-of-black-leaders-can-teach-us-all-about-belonging-afternoon-event-20th-october-2022/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/09/Barbara-Banda-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221024T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221024T140000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220905T130550Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184739Z
UID:3789-1666612800-1666620000@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History Month: 100 Great Black Britons by Patrick Vernon - 24th October 2022
DESCRIPTION:Joining Link: \nClick here to join the meeting \nMeeting ID: 324 687 101 779\nPasscode: fhfnYM \n  \nA long-overdue book\, 100 Great Black Britons honours the remarkable achievements of key Black British individuals through history\, in collaboration with the 100 Great Black Britons campaign founded and run by Patrick Vernon OBE and Dr Angelina Osborne. With a foreword written by David Olusoga\, this book includes a list of Black British names and accompanying portraits – including new role models and previously little-known historical figures. Each entry explores in depth the individual’s contribution to British history – a contribution that too often has been either overlooked or dismissed. \nThe arrival of the SS Empire Windrush in Britain from the Caribbean has been mythologised as the defining moment that changed Britain from an exclusively white country into a racially diverse one. Yet Africans have been present in Britain since Roman times and there has been a constant Black presence in Britain since the sixteenth century. \nIn 2003\, Vernon and Osborne\, frustrated by the almost complete exclusion of the Black British community from mainstream notions of Britishness in education and popular media\, launched their ground-breaking 100 Great Black Britons campaign\, which invited the public to vote for the Black  Briton they most admired. The campaign was a huge success across Britain. \nIn 2019\, in the wake of Brexit and the 2018 Windrush Scandal\, Vernon and Osborne decided it was time to relaunch the campaign to ensure recognition of the continued legacy and achievement of Black people in Britain. The results will be announced in September 2020\, and their book\, out on 24 September 2020\, will compile the updated list and act as a companion to this vital and updated campaign. \nAbout the Presenter  \nPatrick Vernon was born in the constituency where Enoch Powell was an MP. His family still lives in Wolverhampton and he is proud of his roots and the contribution of migrant communities from the Windrush Generation have made to Britain which forms a larger of his values and principles – Windrush Day Matters. \nPatrick is a Clore and Winston Churchill Fellow\, Fellow at Imperial War Museum\, fellow of Royal Historical Society and former Associate fellow for the department of history of medicine at Warwick University. He has over twenty years’ senior experience working across mental health\, public health\, heritage and race equality and is well known in health\, local government and the voluntary sector. Patrick is currently Associate Director for Connected Communities at the Centre for Ageing Better\, Equality and Diversity Adviser to Lambeth Council\, Chair of Citizens Partnership for Healthcare Investigation Branch (HSIB) and Senior Associate at OLMEC. He was the first director of Black Thrive a mental-health multi-agency tackling mental health in Lambeth\, former non-executive director of Camden and Islington Mental Health Foundation Trust\, Health Partnership Coordinator for National Housing Federation\, former director of Afiya Trust\, committee member of Healthwatch England\, NHS England Equality Diversity Council\, director of Brent Health Action Zone and regional director for MIND. Patrick was former Independent Chair of Westminster Partnership for Race Equality where he played a key role with the Met Police and the Muslim community with the aftermath of 7/7 bombings in Westminster in 2005. \nHe is a former member of the Labour and the Coalition Government Ministerial Advisory for Mental Health. Patrick was a former councillor in Hackney between 2006- 2014 and was appointed by Jeremy Corbyn as Race Equalities Adviser to the Shadow Equalities Ministerial Team between 2015 to 2017.Patrick is also founder of Every Generation Media and 100 Great Black Britons\, which develops education programmes\, publications and films on cultural heritage and family history. Patrick was made Pioneer of the Nation for Cultural History by the Queen in 2003. He is a leading expert on African and Caribbean genealogy in the UK. In 2017 was appointed editor for Black History Month magazine (2017 and 2018 magazines) and in 2018 for Windrush Commemorative magazine. \n  \n \nPlatform: Please note this event will take place virtually via MS Teams.
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/black-history-month-100-great-black-britons-by-patrick-vernon/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/29/2022/09/100GBB2020montageS.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20221028T153000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20221028T170000
DTSTAMP:20260621T193851
CREATED:20220922T112306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230125T184613Z
UID:3844-1666971000-1666976400@london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk
SUMMARY:Black History Month: Aspiring To Be More - Motivational Talk by Francis Koh
DESCRIPTION:Francis Koh is a London based speaker\, self-development coach and producer who has spent his time working closely with individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds. \nWe invite you to join him on this motivational talk about career progression including examples of black leaders who have excelled to the top\, despite struggling through adversity. The talk will be followed by a workshop where participants will determine their career motivations\, gain an understanding of their skill sets and how they can work towards achieving their career aspirations. \nFrancis will talk through the following: \n\nBlack leaders\nYour career\nPersonal Finance\n\nThis event is open to all NHS staff\, particularly those starting early in their careers between Bands 2\,3\,4 and 5 are encouraged to attend. \nThe event will have a limited number of spots\, so please do book in at the earliest opportunity! \n  \n\n\n                        \n                            Black History Month: Aspiring To Be More - Motivational Talk by Francis Koh\n                            Please complete this form to book your place. \n                        \n                        Full Name:*Band*Email:*Telephone number:*Your current role:*Organisation*Region:*LondonSouth East EnglandEast of EnglandMidlandsNorth East EnglandNorth West EnglandOtherICS you are based in:*Please select the ICS you are based inNorth East LondonNorth West LondonNorth Central LondonSouth East LondonSouth West LondonNot ApplicablePlease indicate any additional requirements or comments i.e. disabilities
URL:https://london.leadershipacademy.nhs.uk/event/aspiring-to-be-more-motivational-talk-by-francis-koh/
CATEGORIES:Black History Month,Inclusion
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