Campaigning and accountability
Public-facing work that names patterns, challenges institutional failure, and builds pressure for change.
ClearPath Justice exists because too many people are expected to navigate police systems, complaints, courts, and safeguarding processes without the support needed to participate fairly.
Too often disability, trauma, and neurodivergence are misunderstood. People can find themselves dismissed, blamed, unsupported, or treated as the problem when they were trying to ask for help.
Many people do not realise these experiences can form part of a wider pattern.
Does this sound familiar?
What is CPJ?
ClearPath Justice is being established because too many people are expected to navigate complex systems without the support, adjustments, or communication needed to participate fairly.
We are building safer ways to help people understand what happened, organise information clearly, and identify routes through evidence, advocacy, complaints, and accountability processes.
Our long-term focus is improving access to justice for disabled and neurodivergent people, particularly women affected by trauma, abuse, and justice-system barriers.
Public-facing work that names patterns, challenges institutional failure, and builds pressure for change.
Privacy wording, consent processes, and ways to organise patterns without exposing people unnecessarily.
Accessible explainers that help people recognise what happened and understand routes through complaints, advocacy, and accountability processes.
Governance, safeguarding, referral boundaries, and practical systems needed before ClearPath can support people more directly.
Too often, stalking is treated as a set of isolated incidents instead of a course of conduct. Then the victim's fear, distress, evidence gathering, or public attempts to be believed are treated as the problem.
ClearPath is documenting that double standard, starting with Derbyshire: what people reported, how agencies responded, what was ignored, and what changed when the victim pushed back.
Use the private pattern check to see whether an experience matches the kinds of cases this campaign is trying to understand.
Stalking is broken into fragments until the pattern disappears and the danger is treated as unproven.
Smears, threats, monitoring, and fixated behaviour are brushed aside as personal drama, free speech, or online disagreement.
People are told to report, but left without the adjustments, advocacy, or practical support needed to be heard safely.
Victims are expected to gather, organise, explain, and prove everything, then criticised for documenting too much.
Systems, complaints, threats of action, and official-looking processes are used to keep pressure on the person reporting harm.
How support helps
Support helps build the foundations behind the workstreams above: campaign materials, evidence processes, accessible communications, and the governance needed before ClearPath can support people more directly.
Explainers, briefings, pattern-check tools, and public campaign assets for End The Stalking Double Standard.
Privacy wording, consent processes, evidence handling, and careful pattern documentation systems.
Plain-language resources, survivor-safe updates, and careful outreach to affected people and professionals.
The infrastructure needed before ClearPath can responsibly offer more direct support or structured intake.
Boundaries and safety
ClearPath is being built carefully because the people most affected by stalking, disability discrimination, and justice-system failure are often already carrying too much risk.
If you are in immediate danger, contact emergency services or a specialist crisis service in your area.
ClearPath can help explain systems and organise information, but it does not replace a solicitor or regulated adviser.
Sharing information, joining updates, or supporting the campaign does not mean joining a legal claim.
Personal details and case material will not be shared with campaign partners without explicit consent.
The deeper Evidence & Impact page is still available for funders, lawyers, journalists, and partner organisations who need the wider case for ClearPath's work.