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Misogyny Is Real, But It Cannot Be Used to Deflect Attention From Safeguarding Failures
Safeguarding competence is not a matter of sex or gender. Sex or gender does not make someone a safe pair of hands. Safeguarding is about judgement, accountability, humility, and moral courage. It is about how power is exercised, constrained, and scrutinised. It is about what happens when harm is disclosed, when difficult questions are asked, and when institutional reputation is at stake.
3 days ago


I Was a Diocesan Safeguarding Adviser: When a PR Firm Controls the Narrative, Truth Becomes Optional
Victim-survivors don’t experience safeguarding as a policy. They experience it as a decision: will you protect me, or will you protect yourselves?
Jan 26


Guarding the Flock or Guarding the Institution?
Many bishops now carry moral residue: the enduring weight of having chosen what was least disruptive rather than what was right.
Jan 18


Power Is the Safeguarding Exemption
Justice does not simply need to be done; it needs to be seen to be done. Yet the Church of England repeatedly behaves as though how things look to survivors is an inconvenience rather than a safeguarding imperative. Survivors are told to “trust the process” while watching the same group of senior leaders rotate roles; gatekeeper today, colleague tomorrow, and respondent the next.
Jan 9


Holding the Line: Leadership, Safeguarding, and the Cost of Avoiding Surgery
The Church does not need a nurse to hold its hand. It needs a surgeon to cut out the cancer.
Jan 5


Safeguarding: Leading with Care
safeguarding is not an “add-on.” It is an expression of pastoral care — rooted in the same common sense and compassion that shape all good leadership. When safeguarding is embraced as part of vocation rather than a burden, the church becomes a place where people can truly flourish.
Sep 30, 2025
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