Call for Evidence
Non-consensual intimate image abuse
The Women and Equalities welcomes submissions from people who have been affected by non-consensual intimate image abuse (‘revenge porn’).
Important information about making a submission
Please read this section before making a submission. This information is particularly important for people making written submissions in an individual capacity, and about their own lived experience.
Guidance on giving evidence to a select committee of the House of Commons is available here.
Individual cases
In line with the general practice of select committees the Women and Equalities Committee is not able to take up individual cases. If you would like political support or advice you may wish to contact your local Member of Parliament.
How your submission will be treated
The Committee has discretion over which submissions it accepts as evidence, and which of those it then publishes on its website. If your submission is accepted by the Committee, it will usually be published online. It will then be available permanently for anyone to view and may be found online by using search engines. It cannot be changed or removed. If you have included your name or any personal information in your submission, that will normally be published too. Please consider how much personal information you want or need to share.
Anonymisation
Decisions about publishing evidence anonymously are made by the Committee. If you would like to ask the Committee to accept your submission anonymously (meaning it will be published but without your name) please tick the box when you make your submission. This lets the Committee know what you would like but the final decision will be taken by the Committee.
If you would like to request that your submission is published anonymously, then you are responsible for ensuring you cannot be identified from your submission. Please make sure you have not included information that would allow someone to work out who you are.
We may anonymise or redact some of your submission if it is published, even where you have not requested this.
Confidential submissions
The Committee may decide to accept evidence on a confidential basis. Confidential submissions remain available to the Committee but are not published or referred to in public.
If you would like to ask the Committee to accept your submission confidentially, please tick the box when you make your submission. This lets the Committee know what you would like but the final decision will be taken by the Committee.
We may treat submissions confidentially, even where you have not requested this.
Regardless of how your evidence is treated – anonymously, confidentially, or published and attributed to you), your contact details will never be published.
Evidence accepted by the Committee is protected by parliamentary privilege. However, if published evidence suggests that criminal behaviour has occurred, there is no bar on external bodies investigating that behaviour, which may lead them to find independent evidence which could be put before a court.
Information about other people in your evidence
If you include personal information about other people in your submission (including your friends and family), the Committee may decide not to publish it. It is advisable to make your submission about your own experiences and to keep information about other people to a minimum.
Legal cases
We can’t publish submissions that mention ongoing legal cases. Please do not include details of an ongoing case, or details that are likely to be the subject of future proceedings, in your submission.
Safeguarding
If your evidence raises any safeguarding concerns about you, or other people, then the Committee has a responsibility to raise these with the appropriate safeguarding authority.
If you have immediate safeguarding concerns about yourself or someone else, we urge you to contact the Police on 999.
Signposting
We understand that the issues raised in this work may be sensitive or upsetting. The following organisations may be able to offer support or further information:
Revenge Porn Helpline 0345 6000 459
The Revenge Porn Helpline provides support and advice for cases of intimate image abuse.
Want to talk? | Rape Crisis England & Wales 0808 500 2222
Rape Crisis’ helpline is open 24/7 every day of the year. Their helpline says “If something sexual happened to you without your consent – or you're not sure – you can talk to us. No matter when it happened”.
Criminal law - Rights of Women 020 7251 8887
The helpline gives free and confidential legal advice to women on the law in England and Wales with a specific focus on Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG).
This call for written evidence has now closed.
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