IT has taken five years, but after countless hours of campaign work and support from the public, the NSPCC has finally welcomed the passing of the Online Safety Bill. I’ve written about the Bill on ...
Actor Natalie Dormer joined young people, bereaved families, and abuse survivors to celebrate the Online Safety Act becoming law at an NSPCC reception in Parliament. After years of campaigning, this ...
This article is brought to you by our exclusive subscriber partnership with our sister title USA Today, and has been written by our American colleagues. It does not necessarily reflect the view of The ...
Two in five parents say they are worried about digital devices or technology negatively affecting their children's physical or mental health, a recent survey commissioned by the NSPCC has revealed.
A fifth of parents surveyed are not confident they could spot the signs if their child was abused at their local sports club; a new NSPCC poll found one in eight parents were not confident about how ...
The NSPCC’s Keeping Your Child Safe in Sport Week urges parents to recognise how negative behaviour at sporting events and activities can impact children. Did you know with a Digital Subscription to ...
The Online Safety Bill has faced a lengthy route to the statute book, with repeated changes and delays to the proposed legislation. Campaigners said the figures highlighted ‘the sheer scale of child ...
Pokémon Go has launched in the UK and ignored demands from the NSPCC to address safety concerns for children. NSPCC’s CEO, Peter Wanless, previously wrote to the game’s owners urging them to make the ...
Thousands of children in schools across North Yorkshire are taking part in a new campaign run by the NSPCC with local partners to help young people understand appropriate and inappropriate behaviour ...
This article is brought to you by our exclusive subscriber partnership with our sister title USA Today, and has been written by our American colleagues. It does not necessarily reflect the view of The ...
Two in five parents say they are worried about digital devices or technology negatively affecting their children's physical or mental health, a recent survey commissioned by the NSPCC has revealed.
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