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NSPCC

www.nspcc.org.uk


National Society for the Prevention

of Cruelty to Children

Weston House

42 Curtain Road

LONDON

EC2A 3NH


0207 825 2500

Helpline 0808 800 5000


info@nspcc.org.uk


About the NSPCC

The London Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children was founded in 1884.  It changed its name to The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) in 1889.  its aim then was to protect children from cruelty, support vulnerable families, campaign for changes to the law and raise awareness about abuse.  Today, the NSPCC looks very different, but its purpose remains the same: to end cruelty to children.


The NSPCC's work

We have 180 community-based projects and run the NSPCC Helpline and ChildLine in the UK and the Channel Islands.  Most of our work is with children, young people and their families.  We also work to achieve cultural, social and political change - influencing legislation, policy, practice, public attitudes and behaviours and delivering services for the benefit of young people.


Our aim

We want to see a society where all children are loved, valued and able to fulfil their potential. To do this, we have four objectives:


  • To mobilise everyone to take action to end child cruelty.
  • To give children the help, support and environment they need to stay safe from cruelty.
  • To find ways of working with communities to keep children safe from cruelty.
  • To be, and be seen as, someone to turn to for children and young people.



CEOP

www.ceop.gov.uk

www.thinkuknow.co.uk


CEOP (Child Exploitation and

Online Protection)

33 Vauxhall Bridge Road

LONDON

SW1V 2WG


0870 000 3344


The Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP) Centre is dedicated to eradicating the sexual abuse of children. That means we are part of UK policing and very much about tracking and bringing offenders to account either directly or in partnership with local and international forces.

But our approach is truly holistic. Walk through the CEOP Centre today and within any one team you will find police officers specialising in this area of criminality working with professionals from the wider child protection community and industry. You will find seconded staff from organisations such as the NSPCC, teams sponsored by the likes of VISA and SERCO and experts from government and corporations such as Microsoft offering specialist advice and guidance.


That approach is dedicated to building up intelligence that in turn drives the business, informs our operational deployments, steers our CEOP Academy programmes to law enforcement, child protection and educational sectors and drives our dedicated Thinkuknow programme for children and parents of all ages.


It is an approach that sees the development of specialist areas such as our Behavioural Analysis Unit, our approach to victim identification or the development of our Child Trafficking Unit as well as filtering into all areas of our outreach activities such as the Most Wanted initiative and our public awareness plans.


In fact the real lifeblood of the CEOP Centre is intelligence - how offenders operate and think, how children and young people behave and how technological advances are developing - all are integral to what we are about and what we deliver.



CWASU

www.cwasu.org


Child & Women Abuse Studies Unit

London Metropolitan University

Ladbroke House

62-66 Highbury Grove

LONDON

N5 2AD


0207 133 5014


cwasu@londonmet.ac.uk


These five points form the basis of all work undertaken in CWASU.


  1. To work from, and extend, a feminist perspective, which recognises the complexities of, and interactions between gender, race, ethnicity, class, age, sexuality and disability.
  2. To explore the connections between various forms of assault and abuse experienced by children and women, their short and long term consequences, and how the public, the media, government and agencies respond.
  3. To conduct independent research which creates useful knowledge for policy makers, practitioners, survivors, supporters and activists.
  4. To develop training programmes, provide consultancy, enhance networking, and disseminate our work in spoken and written forms.
  5. Through all of these activities to be part of a national and international network that, in the short term advocates for sanctuary for children and women who have been victimised and sanctions for perpetrators, and in the longer term seeks to eradicate violence and abuse.



CCPAS

www.ccpas.co.uk


CCPAS (Churches Child Protection Advisory Service)

PO Box 133

Swanley

Kent

BR8 7UQ


0845 120 45 50


info@ccpas.co.uk



The Churches’ Child Protection Advisory Service (CCPAS) is the only independent Christian charity providing professional advice, support, training and resources in all areas of safeguarding children and for those affected by abuse.


Our services are used not only by churches and groups across the denominational spectrum, but increasingly by other faiths as well as non-faith based organisations keen to utilise the resources and expertise we offer. We also give advice to Children's Services Departments, Police and other agencies across the UK.



BASPCAN

www.baspcan.org.uk


British Association for the

Study and Prevention of

Child Abuse and Neglect

17 Priory Street

YORK

YO1 6ET


01904 613605


baspcan@baspcan.org.uk



BASPCAN is primarily a membership association for professionals and volunteers working in the field of child protection who can demonstrate active participation or interest in the aims of the Association. It is the only multi-disciplinary association of its kind in the UK, bringing together personnel from all agencies who work in the field with children in need, and with those who are abused and neglected.



Stop It Now!

www.stopitnow.org.uk


Stop It Now! UK and Ireland

Bordesley Hall

The Hollway

Alvechurch

Birmingham

B48 7QA


01527 598184

Advice Line 0800 1000 900


office@stopitnow.org.uk

Confidential emails: help@stopitnow.org.uk



Stop it Now! UK & Ireland is a campaign, managed by the Lucy Faithfull Foundation, which aims to prevent child sexual abuse by raising awareness and encouraging early recognition and responses to the problem by abusers themselves and those close to them. It does this through:


  • the establishment of national and regional projects based on partnerships between the local community and the statutory and voluntary agencies
  • the dissemination of information and 
  • the provision of a confidential helpline.


Stop it Now! believes sexual abuse is preventable and urges abusers and potential abusers to seek help and gives adults the information they need to protect children effectively. Stop it Now! encourages adults to create a society that no longer tolerates the sexual abuse of children.



The Survivors Trust

www.thesurvivorstrust.org


27b William Street

Rugby

Warwickshire

CV21 3HA


01788 550554


info@thesurvivorstrust.org



The Survivors Trust is a national umbrella agency for over 120 specialist voluntary sector agencies providing a range of counselling, therapeutic and support services working with women, men and children who are victims/survivors of rape, sexual violence and childhood sexual abuse.




NOTA (National Organisation for the Treatment of Abusers)

www.nota.co.uk


PO Box 356

HULL

HU12 8WR


0131 4660139


administrator@nota.co.uk



Developing work with sexual abusers and preventing sexual abuse.

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