Lucy Mulvagh
- Job Title: Director of Policy, Research and Impact
- Phone: 0141 404 0231
- Email: lucy.mulvagh@alliance-scotland.org.uk
- Twitter: @lkmulvagh
Lucy oversees the ALLIANCE’s policy and public affairs work, Scottish Sensory Hub, and a portfolio of programmes and work streams.
As a member of the ALLIANCE’s senior management team, her goal is to ensure the organisation sustains and strengthens its position of influence and achieves its vision of a Scotland where everyone has a strong voice and enjoys their right to live well.
Lucy’s areas of responsibility and strategic oversight include:
- Policy and public affairs.
- Research, outcomes and impact.
- Humans rights.
- Health and Social Care Academy Programme.
- Scottish Sensory Hub.
- Special Projects (Scotland Reducing Gambling Harm and Living Well: Emotional Support Matters).
Opinions written by Lucy
Human rights are for everyone, every day, not just 10 December
Published:
Lucy highlights some ALLIANCE human rights activity from this year and to mark Human Rights Day 2023.
Continue readingIt’s time to make human rights real in Scotland
Published:
The next Scottish Parliament could transform lives with a new human rights law.
Continue readingWhy embedding human rights in Scots law matters
Published:
Social care is just one aspect of people’s lives that would vastly improve if we incorporate international human rights.
Continue readingTaking stock of human rights in Scotland
Published:
An independent evaluation of the first five years of Scotland’s National Action Plan for Human Rights has been published.
Continue readingLet’s put rights at the heart of social care
Published:
The ALLIANCE proposes a rights based approach to the reform of adult social care in Scotland.
Continue readingTaking a rights based approach to social security
Published:
Lucy highlights that universal access to independent advocacy should be a cornerstone of the new Scottish system.
Continue readingHow do women experience Self-directed Support?
Published:
Not as well as they should, if the ALLIANCE’s research is anything to go by.
Continue reading