A dark street. A late-night bus. Even a park in broad daylight. These are the places we’re warned about, spaces we’re told to fear. Yet violence against women and girls (VAWG) is not confined to unlit routes or shadowed corners. It permeates every environment and every part of our society. This International Women’s Day, we cannot look away from this crisis.
Widespread fears and myths about strangers have long dominated conversations around VAWG. But the devastating truth is that women are most likely to be harmed by someone they know. Perhaps even more heartbreaking is the fact that the most dangerous place for a woman is her home.
As the CEO of Refuge, the UK’s largest specialist domestic abuse charity, I have heard many women describe the fear they lived with behind closed doors. For these women, the place that should have offered safety instead became a prison created by their perpetrator. That’s why Refuge launched Home is Where the Hurt is – a campaign designed to confront this difficult truth and shine a light on the danger millions of women face in their own homes.
Read more:
- “How we define ‘sexual exploitation’ is fuelling violence against women and girls”
- “How all men can join the fight to end violence against women”
- ‘There was no way out’: Survivors of domestic abuse forced to stay with abusers or face destitution
New data released as part of the campaign reveals that public perception of this issue is worryingly inconsistent. The poll, conducted by YouGov on our behalf, found that more than half of UK adults (57%) acknowledge the home is where women are most at risk of abuse, despite 85% believing that most people feel safe there.
Women are more likely to recognise the risk, with 62% identifying the home as the most common setting for abuse, compared with 52% of men. Yet misconceptions remain. When asked where women are most commonly abused, 14% of respondents said outdoor public spaces such as parks, 10% cited the street, 5% public transport, and 4% the workplace. A further 10% said they did not know.