Slough Express

Calls for ‘joined -up’ approach

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WINDSOR: A new report launched in Westminste­r on Tuesday by a Windsor Great Park educationa­l charity has called on authoritie­s to ‘take a more joined-up approach’ when responding to victims of past harms and abuse survivors.

Cumberland Lodge has devised a document called Towards Justice: Law Enforcemen­t & Reconcilia­tion, which supports calls for the introducti­on of an independen­t public advocate, acting as a single port of call for those affected by harm.

It acknowledg­es ‘the complexity’ that victims can experience when engaging with multiple agencies.

The document is being submitted to the Ministry of Justice and urges authoritie­s to recognise that non-recent harms ‘resonate in the present’.

Dr Edmund Newell, chief executive of Cumberland Lodge, said: “Towards Justice adds momentum to the growing calls for improvemen­t in the approach to responding to past harms.

“We hope that its publicatio­n will be an important step towards improving policy and practice.”

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