
- Highlights that missed opportunity to establish a legal definition for honour-based abuse perpetuates the current lack of guidance and cohesive response.
- Covers the urgent need for training for different agencies—and how this might be implemented.
- Explains why barriers for victims and lack of protocol exacerbate the status of honour-based abuse as a hidden crime.
In September, the government responded to recommendations made by the Women and Equalities Committee (WEC) regarding honour-based abuse. The response rejected calls by the WEC to establish a legal definition of this type of abuse, as the government claims it already has a working definition used by the Home Office and Crown Prosecution Service (CPS).
As a lawyer working on diverse cases of honour-based abuse, this seems to me to be a missed opportunity.
As the WEC pointed out, honour-based abuse remains a hidden crime and one that victims are hesitant to report without having greater assurance that they will be protected from further abuse. Giving this abuse a legal definition