Jean Hatchet
Jean is from Sheffield in South Yorkshire. She is a radical feminist activist who campaigns on the issues of men's violence against women. After suffering domestic abuse in a past relationship, Jean has dedicated her life to helping other abused women realise what is happening to them and to raising funds to donate to those women's services who can help them. She raises funds for Nia - a service provider for some of the most vulnerable women who are victim/survivors of sexual and domestic abuse. Jean is firmly committed to ensuring that women have access to single-sex, women-only, trauma-informed, services for safety and recovery from male violence. Jean is a writer just completing a novel which centres two women at the birth of the radical feminist movement in the UK. Jean Hatchet runs 'Ride For Murdered Women' a project which pays tribute to the lives of women murdered by men they knew. Jean campaigns for women tirelessly despite suffering from advanced ovarian cancer.
Smoked, but not fired
Trans activists at Sussex University have failed to get a female professor sacked
Unclean
Mridul Wadhwa wants to “clean” women out of Edinburgh Rape Crisis history
When will bishops be held to account?
If you challenge the progressive establishment, prepare to be abandoned by the hierarchy of the Church of England
The effects of Brexit are still being misreported
A new paper has received a lot of attention — all of it undeserved
Scottish independence is dead, for now
But there is no room for complacency or appeasement
The mean queens of the book world
A rare case of a “progressive” employee facing consequences will not change the publishing industry
Cultural appropriation is here to stay
So-called cultural appropriation is an American obsession, cheerfully ignored by a fast globalising world
The horror of 7 October on film
The killers’ headset footage, CCTV, interviews with survivors and heart-rending last messages
England’s forgotten football dystopia
The beautiful game is not fit to be a national religion
The US city on the banks of the Thames
Critics don’t care for Canary Wharf, considering it a monument of 1980s corporatism