A dark, modern hallway with metallic walls and horizontal light strips. Overlaid text states, 'Safety is a privilege right' with the words 'safety' and 'right' in bold orange and 'privilege' crossed out in white.

Safety Is A Right is a campaign about the moments that do not always become headlines

The campaign explores real experiences of feeling unsafe in public, while giving organisations, communities and individuals a practical way to take part, show support, and help connect people to tools, information and reporting routes that can make a difference.

Safety is not a feature. Safety is not a premium extra.

Safety is not something people should have to plan their lives around

Safety IS NOT a privilege

#SAFETYISARIGHT


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Behind the headlines

A woman walking alone on a sidewalk at night under streetlights with dark surroundings.

Almost 9 in 10 women in the UK report feeling unsafe when walking alone after dark

men silhouettes in public in the dark - public space

Around 1 in 3 men report feeling unsafe in public, particularly at night

Two serious-looking adults, a man and a woman, are tightly packed in a crowded subway with other passengers around them.

Over 70% of women have experienced sexual harassment in public spaces

Nighttime street scene with parked cars along a dimly lit urban street. A person walks down the sidewalk. Buildings with closed shutters line the street, and streetlights illuminate the scene.

Younger people (across all genders) are significantly more likely to feel unsafe when travelling or being out alone

A woman with shoulder-length brunette hair sitting alone on a city bus at night, illuminated by blue and white interior lighting, with reflections in the windows showing streetlights and other passengers.

1 in 2 women say they feel unsafe using public transport at night

Silhouettes of people inside a building with large windows showing a cityscape outside.

LGBTQ+ individuals are disproportionately more likely to experience harassment or feel unsafe in public spaces

23 Real Stories…

A woman sitting alone on a train, resting her head on her hand, with a sign overlaid on the image reading, "Safety is a privilege right."
Train interior with a person sitting alone at a four-seat table, looking out the window, with a caption about a late train and empty carriage.
A dark background with orange and white text promoting a free travel guardian app. It asks, 'Feeling uncomfortable?' and suggests letting someone know your location. The app is available on the App Store and Google Play, with a QR code and app icon displayed at the bottom. The top left corner says, 'Safety is a right.'

These are not just 23 stories…

It is thousands of quiet moments people do not always say out loud.

If something has ever happened to you while travelling, walking home, commuting after work, or moving through public space, you can share your story too.

No pressure to write it perfectly. Just tell us what happened.

There are a few simple ways to get involved with Safety Is A Right campaign:

  • Displaying campaign visuals in public, staff or customer-facing spaces

  • Sharing campaign messaging across social media and communications channels

  • Raising awareness of safety concerns within their communities or audiences

  • Signposting people to support, reporting routes and trusted resources - FREE Travel Guardian app

  • Embedding safety into everyday communications and experiences

Multiple images including a digital display, a subway station sign, a woman in blue jacket and white pants holding a phone outside, an indoor theater with chairs, and a coffee cup with branding. All images feature the message "Safety is a right" and related safety propaganda.

If you would like co-branded assets please email:

gemma.green@imabi.com

Collaborate with us

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