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2024-03-31-accounts

COMPANY REGISTRATION NUMBER: 08002509 CHARITY REGISTRATION NUMBER: 1147913

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited Company Limited by Guarantee

Financial Statements

31 March 2024

WALTER HUNTER & CO LIMITED

Chartered accountants & statutory auditor 24 Bridge Street Newport South Wales NP20 4SF

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Financial Statements

Year ended 31 March 2024

Page
Trustees' annual report (incorporating the director's report) 1
Independent auditor's report to the members 21
Statement of financial activities (including income and
expenditure account) 26
Statement of financial position 27
Statement of cash flows 28
Notes to the financial statements 29

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report)

Year ended 31 March 2024

The trustees, who are also the directors for the purposes of company law, present their report and the financial statements of the charity for the year ended 31 March 2024.

Reference and administrative details

Registered charity name Rights of Women Incorporated Limited
Charity registration number 1147913
Company registration number 08002509
Principal office and registered 52-54 Featherstone Street
office London
EC1Y 8RT
The trustees
Annie Hedge - Chair
Aramide Ogunlana - Treasurer
Elisha Augustin
Laura Bennett
Olivia Dehnavi
Kristina Glenn
Kat Hacker
Katherine Minett
Victoria Poku-Amanfo
Hannah Phillips
Fiona Turnbull (Appointed 20 March 2024)
Director (Staff team) Estelle du Boulay
Auditor Walter Hunter & Co Limited
Chartered accountants & statutory auditor
24 Bridge Street
Newport
South Wales
NP20 4SF
Bankers Unity Trust Bank
9 Brindleyplace
Birmingham
B1 2HB
Lloyds Bank
31/33 Holloway Road
London
N7 8JP

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Triodos Bank Deanery Road Bristol BS1 5AS

Structure, governance and management

About Rights of Women (ROW)

Rights of Women (established 1975) is a women's legal rights organisation which specialises in supporting women who are experiencing - or at risk of experiencing - all forms of Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG), including domestic abuse and sexual violence.

Our purpose is to increase women's understanding of their legal rights and improve their access to justice so that they can live free from abuse and oppression and can make informed choices about their safety. We increase their skills to overcome problems so they can navigate the law and legal processes with confidence.

Our core provision is free specialist confidential legal advice directly to women throughout England and Wales via telephone advice lines covering family, immigration and asylum, employment law (sexual harassment at work) and criminal law.

Structure, governance and management

Rights of Women is a company limited by guarantee, Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (number 08002509) and a registered charity (number 1147913) with the Charity Commission.

The Board of Trustees met 4 times during the year for Board meetings that were convened on a hybrid basis, both in-person and online. The Chair continues a process of Board development for new and established Trustees.

The day-to-day management of the organisation continues to be delegated to the Director, Estelle du Boulay, who was assisted during this period in the delivery of the organisation's services by our Senior Leadership team comprised of Mary McGloin (Operations Manager) and Senior Legal Officers (SLOs) Olive Craig, Jasbindar Bhatoa, Hannah Couchman, Mandip Ghai, Nicole Masri and Deeba Syed.

The Board continues to employ an external financial consultant, Ken Hercules, to undertake the management accounting.

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The Finance Subgroup met virtually 4 times throughout the year, chaired by the Treasurer.

Our direct services for women continue to be supported by our team of 50 active volunteer women barristers and solicitors. The Board of Trustees would like to acknowledge the very significant commitment and energy of the Rights of Women staff team and volunteers in the delivery of our vital services for women.

Risk Management

The charity trustees have given consideration to the major risks to which the charity is exposed and satisfied themselves that systems or procedures are established in order to manage those risks. The charity has established and maintains a detailed risk register including, but not limited to: governance, operations, finances, compliance with law and the external financial and political climate. This is reviewed at every Board meeting by the trustees. In addition to this, the charity maintains and regularly reviews a wide range of organisational policies and procedures that address mitigating risk.

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Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report) (continued)

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Objectives and activities

The Memorandum and Articles of Association of Rights of Women state the objects of the organisation to be restricted to:-

Vision and Mission

In accordance with these objectives the agreed vision and mission for the organisation are as follows:-

Vision

Equality, justice and safety in the law for all women

Mission

Rights of Women advises, educates and empowers women by:-

Strategic Plan 2023-2025

Our strategic priorities and objectives are set out in our Strategic Plan 2023-25, summarised below:

Priority 1: Sustainability - Preserve ROW's unique services

Why: Our change aspiration

We are the only frontline women's legal advice organisation in England and Wales. Our free advice services are life-saving and our policy expertise is unique. Sustaining this work in challenging times is vital.

What: Our Top 3 Key Actions

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  1. Increase our sustainability by increased diversified income

  2. Increase and diversify the number of people who support us

  3. Support our staff and volunteers

Priority 2: Advice- Provide legal advice services to meet women's changing needs

Why: Our change aspiration

Advice enables women to make safe and informed choices for themselves and their families. We believe that all women have the right to accurate and accessible advice and information about the law and their legal rights, especially when those rights are being eroded or denied.

What: Our Top 3 Key Actions

  1. Increase the impact of our legal expertise and provision

  2. Ensure advice strategies centre the lived experience of women

  3. Improve accessibility to our services for the women who need us most

Priority 3: Policy- Change laws, legal procedures and systems to benefit women

Why: Our change aspiration

The law disadvantages women in myriad ways and needs radical change. We will combine our expertise with that of others to bring about changes that make access, treatment and outcomes in the law better for women.

What: Our Top 3 Key Actions

  1. Influence culture change and improvements to specific, targeted law, policy and legal advice provision

  2. Develop strategic learning from our unique evidence base

  3. Work collaboratively with sector partners and key stakeholders to increase access to legal rights

On 3rd November 2023 the Board of Trustees and staff team attended a hybrid away day at Linklaters in London and online. The sessions for the day focused on agreeing a 5 year vision for our Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) work, reviewing progress against our strategic plan and considering the future development of our partnership work with women who are experts-by-experience.

Theory of change

The Board of Trustees has developed an organisational theory of change which underpins the priorities within the Strategic Plan 2023-25.

We have identified the following changes (outcomes) as priorities for our organisation to work towards:

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We are operating in a very challenging political and financial environment and these challenges have increased during the pandemic.

Since April 2013, with the introduction of the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012, there has been a complete transformation in the availability of legal advice and representation for women in the key areas of expertise of Rights of Women. This means that our model of frontline service delivery is frequently overstretched in meeting women's legal advice and information needs, and this is exacerbated by very limited resources.

This current external economic and political landscape continues to have the following impact:-

Our frontline services remain a unique source of legal advice and information. Our policy and public affairs work gains its legitimacy from the experiences of those frontline services. Our service users' voices inform our campaigning and policy work.

Undertaking our unique combination of frontline services, second tier support and policy and public affairs work strengthens our response to the challenges of the current landscape.

Developing new and innovative ways of reaching women with our advice and information services is essential to securing women's access to justice in the absence of alternative sources of support. Building our relationships with key partners creates new opportunities to develop and extend the reach of our activities in this new landscape.

Collaborating with our sector and building new relationships with Government, Parliamentarians and policy makers will increase the effectiveness of our future influencing work and is vital to resisting a push back in women's equality in the law and to preserving the advances we have achieved to date.

Building new audiences of supporters and activists through our social media activity and generating new campaigning capacity will also be vital in extending our reach and keeping our issues on the public and political agenda.

In these ways we will ensure that women have a more confident, informed and positive experience of the law and our justice systems and that they have a greater control over the legal problems they face with improved access to their remedies. We will also prevent the further erosion of women's ability to access the law and their legal remedies, ensuring that women are able to protect themselves from violence and secure more equal futures.

Public benefit

We have referred to the advice contained in the Charity Commission's general guidance on public benefit when reviewing our aims and objectives and in planning our future activities.

Our objects (set out above) are carried out for the public benefit as follows:-

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Strategic report

The following sections for achievements and performance and financial review form the strategic report of the charity.

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Achievements and performance

Advice service

We continued to provide free legal advice provision to women who have experienced, or are at risk of or experiencing, Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) throughout the year.

In this period our telephone legal advice services have supported a total of 3359 women with advice and information on their legal rights.

Our family and criminal law advice lines, and FLOWS answers online advice service, provided 2454 women with advice on family law issues including relationship breakdown, finance and children issues and/or with advice and support on the criminal justice process arising from domestic and/or sexual violence.

Our immigration and asylum law lines, including our EU Settlement Scheme advice line and professionals' advice line, provided advice and support to 646 individual women and professionals supporting women with an insecure immigration status.

Our Sexual Harassment in the Workplace (Employment Law) advice service provided advice and support to 259 women.

During this period our telephone advice services have been supported by 52 volunteer women solicitors and barristers. We would like to thank all our volunteers sincerely for the time and commitment they have given over the past year to helping women through the law.

Training and Events

In total this year we have delivered training and events to over 1300 professionals throughout England and Wales.

Training delivered under the Ascent Project

As part of the Ascent project (funded by London Councils) we delivered specialist legal training to 493 professionals working with women survivors throughout London. All trainings are held online and our monitoring indicates the majority of participants are still expressing a preference for this format. Through our Ascent Advice and Counselling strand, we offered a quarterly course titled, Family Court: IDVA/ISVA attendance & keeping refuge addresses confidential. This course focused on the interaction between domestic abuse services and the Family Court and looked at the rules on supporting survivors of domestic abuse at Family Court hearings including:

Additionally, this session addressed recent High Court guidance on how court documents should be given to survivors residing in refuges without risking the confidentiality of the refuge address and the safety of survivors living in refuges.

Under the 2nd Tier/Support strand of the Ascent project, we delivered our recurring four-part series on

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the Domestic Abuse Act 2021: An Overview; Protection for Survivors in Legal Proceedings; Offences Involving Violent or Abusive Behaviour; and Injunctions and Powers for Dealing with Domestic Abuse. We also delivered Specialist Briefings on the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 to borough officers and community and voluntary organisations, as well as courses on Migrant Women and Immigration Control and Supporting Women and Girls at Risk of Forced Marriage and Female Genital Mutilation.

EU Settlement Scheme training

We trained 563 professionals from the community, voluntary and statutory sectors working in England & Wales on violence against women and girls (VAWG) issues. Our training provided participants with knowledge to support EU citizens and their family members, who are victims of gender-based abuse, to secure the immigration status they need to continue living in the UK.

Other training/events

In conjunction with ILPA, the immigration team co-produced a one-off training event on the topic of transnational marriage abandonment aimed at frontline professionals working with abandoned women to assist in handling these difficult cases.

Changes to the Destitute Domestic Violence Concession was delivered to over 250 professionals.

In-house training

We delivered bespoke family law training sessions in-house to a number of organisations including Watford CAB, Shropshire Domestic Abuse Service and Sateda.

We have also delivered bespoke sexual harassment training to trade union representatives including ASLEF Trade Union.

Social Media

We have a combined audience of over 67,000 across our social media accounts (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X) and regularly publish policy and legal information to increase women's understanding of the law and VAWG.

Publications

In 2023-24 a total of 622,829 legal guides, handbooks, reports, briefings, consultation responses and publications were downloaded from our website. We continued to produce new publications throughout the year.

Policy and campaigning

Access to Legal Aid

The government published the outcome of the means test review in 2022. In 2023 we highlighted that this should increase the number of survivors who are financially eligible for legal aid, but there were elements of the new scheme that still needed addressing. Unfortunately, progress has been slow and in March 2024 the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) announced that the means test reforms will not be

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introduced until 2026 due to challenges in updating digital systems.

In 2023 the MoJ began a Civil Legal Aid Review. We engaged with stakeholders in the legal aid sector and submitted our own evidence to the review to raise the barriers and issues in relation to family law, immigration law and sexual harassment in the workplace. This review is ongoing.

Rights of Women provided data and case studies for the Public Law Project (PLP's) research report 'Access to immigration legal aid: An Ocean of Unmet Need' published in September 2023. The report explores the barriers to accessing legal aid for migrants and summarises the experiences of organisations who support individuals to access legal representation. The purpose of this report was to collate information as part of pre-litigation research into a proposed judicial review against the Lord Chancellor for failing to make legal aid available for certain types of civil legal aid services including specified immigration and asylum cases.

Rights of Cohabiting Partners

The end of a cohabiting relationship, either through separation or the death of a partner, can lead to significant hardship for women (including those in religious-only marriages) which is why we have been calling for laws to protect cohabiting couples for well over a decade. In previous years, we gave written and oral evidence to the Women and Equalities Committee, and the Committee made recommendations for law reform which the Government rejected. This year, we continued to raise this issue, including with the shadow Attorney General. We were pleased to see an announcement was made at the Labour Party Conference that they will commit to reviewing the law in relation to cohabitation. We will continue to identify opportunities to influence policy positions and move this cause forward.

Family Court Reform

Our policy priorities in this area are detailed and include the treatment of survivors and children by the family courts during child arrangements cases.

Important work on the family court's approach to domestic abuse in child contact cases has been going on since the publication of the report, 'Assessing Risk of Harm to Children and Parents in Private Law Children Cases'. This report, also known as the Harm Report, was published by the Ministry of Justice in June 2020. It provided important recognition of the many problems victims face in the family court and the Government has committed to various reforms as a result.

We are developing local work in a family justice area focusing on best practice in relation to domestic abuse locally, improving understanding of domestic abuse, building co-ordinated responses to domestic abuse. This three-year project is at the end of its first year and will build on initial learning to develop accountability mechanisms that enable systemic change.

We are an active member of a Family Courts and Domestic Abuse expert working group, where we discuss trends, updates on law and practice and the potential for action to improve the family justice system for survivors of domestic abuse.

We have continued to work on strategic cases following success in four joined appeals looking at the importance of coercive control in child contact cases. Work on the Family Procedure Rules continued following the successful outcome in a strategic case in which we represented Latin American Women's Aid, Women's Aid and Refuge on issues in relation to the service of court documents on women in refuges. Influencing in relation to the new rules has been ongoing. We continue to support transparency in the Family Court by contributing to the work of the President of the Family Division's

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Transparency Implementation Group. We have been co-training with Safe Lives for their project on training family law solicitors and barristers. The aim is to increase delegates' understanding of domestic abuse, improve the service survivors receive from their lawyers, and improve the way domestic abuse is approached in the family courts.

Work on so-called parental alienation

We are developing our understanding of the experiences of victims of domestic abuse who are accused of parental alienation through work directly with those victims and the provision of advice in relation to their circumstances. An academic colleague received funding and ethics approval to begin evaluating this work. We continue to engage with sector work on this issue. This included drafting and influencing in relation to an amendment to the Victims and Prisoners Bill in relation to psychological evidence in Family Court. The Government accepted the need for changes and have asked the Family Procedure Rule Committee to address this issue.

The Family Justice Council (FJC) consulted on draft guidance on responding to allegations of alienating behaviour. We welcomed the fact that this issue is being addressed by the FJC but are concerned about fundamental flaws in the guidance which we set out in our detailed response to the consultation.

Dispute Resolution

In April 2023 the Government announced a consultation on proposed changes that would make mediation compulsory for most family law matters. This raised concerns amongst the VAWG sector given that mediation can be harmful and result in unfair outcomes for survivors of domestic abuse. We were one of the lead organisations engaged in discussing proposals and developing responses. We produced a document for the VAWG sector setting out the current rules and practices for mediation to help aid discussions.

At very short notice, we became aware that the Family Procedure Rules Committee (FPRC) was also consulting on changes to procedure rules which would be tantamount to compulsory mediation. As far as we are aware, we were the only organisation in the VAWG sector that was able to respond due to the complicated nature of procedure rules and limited time. However, to ensure the FPRC were aware of the gravity of concern amongst the VAWG sector, we coordinated and submitted a joint letter to the FPRC signed by 14 other organisations which supports our submission.

Migrant Women and Domestic Abuse

There has been considerable work undertaken by the immigration team leading up to the Home Office's significant decision to include victims of transnational marriage abandonment (TMA) in the domestic violence rules to enable them to obtain permanent status at the end of January 2024. We were delighted about the proposed new changes as we, alongside other leading VAWG organisations such as SBS have been in discussions with the Home Office about addressing the protection gap for victims of TMA for over 8 years. We also negotiated changes to the content of the new rules as well as advocating for a lower standard of proof for TMA cases given that survivors of VAWG abandoned abroad are less likely to have evidence to support their immigration applications to re-enter the UK.

Since the new rules came into force we have been continuing to influence the Government about the importance of victims of TMA in accessing support and safe accommodation upon arrival to the UK and on taking a flexible approach to these cases.

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In February 2024 there were further changes to the rules, namely the Destitution Domestic Abuse Concession (DDVC) with the scope of the concession being extended and a name change on 16th February 2024. The former DDVC is now known as the Migrant Victims Domestic Abuse Concession (MVDAC) and is similar to the DDVC giving a person leave to remain for three months enabling them to access financial support on fleeing an abusive relationship. We successfully secured changes to the application form to minimise any confusion around the eligibility criteria as well as some changes to the MVDAC guidance for decision makers. Further information about our influencing work on the MVDAC can be found in the 'partnership work' section below.

EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS)

We made submissions to the Independent Monitoring Authority (IMA) who are the body that ensure that the UK complies with the terms of the withdrawal agreement protecting rights of EU nationals and their family members. Our submissions covered a range of topics including changes to EUSS policy such as the automatic extension of pre-settled status to 2 years, changes to the reasonable grounds for late applicants (not knowing about the deadline of 30th June 2021 to apply would no longer be a reasonable ground), changes preventing illegal entrants from applying as joining family members and closure of the Zambrana (primary carers of British children) and Surinder Singh ( British citizen who had exercised treaty rights in another EU country pre Brexit) routes on 9th August last year. The IMA acknowledged our submissions as very useful feedback.

Strategic Litigation (Immigration)

We supported a charity in their strategic litigation around discrimination against pre-settled status (PSS) holders who do not have automatic access to benefits / immediate settlement.

ROW's work on gaps in protection for victims of DV who are family members of EU nationals led to the introduction of protections for victims of domestic abuse in the EUSS which meant they retained status on relationship breakdown and could qualify for settlement. In practice there remains a problem for some victims (though not the majority) being unable to access public funds on relationship breakdown due to the right to reside test applied to all PSS holders. This is the first judicial review (JR) challenge brought by a PSS holder with retained rights as a victim of DV who is ineligible for public funds on the grounds of discrimination. The client was a ROW service user whom we had supported to obtain status and referred her to the Public Law Project (PLP). We drafted a lengthy statement, in support of her claim based on our expertise relating to the EUSS and our experience in supporting victims of DV who are family members of EU nationals. The claimant decided not to pursue the claim and we are now involved in a second JR raising the same issues for another claimant.

Sexual Harassment in the Workplace

This year saw the successful passage of the Worker Protection Act 2024 through the Houses of Parliament and it will come into force from October 2024. It will create a new mandatory duty on employers to take reasonable steps to prevent the sexual harassment of employees the workplace.

This significant victory comes after four years of campaign work with our partners in the #ThisIsNotWorking alliance across the trade union movement and equalities sector. Unfortunately, the reintroduction of legal protections for victims sexually harassed by third parties was dropped from the original Bill, so this remains a strategic priority for this area of work.

Restricting the use of Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) by employers in sexual harassment and

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discrimination cases remains a live issue. This year we responded to the Legal Service Board's Call to Evidence on the 'Misuse of NDAs' and focused on the professional and ethical conduct of lawyers utilising insight and anonymised evidence from our advice service.

We also provided constructive feedback during the development of a Green Paper led by Marina Wheeler KC, commissioned by the Labour Party. The remit was to examine reforming sexual harassment law by possibly combining it with whistleblowing law. We worked alongside another expert charity in our submissions. We are currently awaiting the outcome of this work at the time of writing.

We have also joined the Expert Advisory panel of the Welsh Government on their 'Harassment in Workplace' workstream, as well as NHS England as they develop their 'Sexual Safety' Charter and their first 'Sexual Misconduct' workplace policy.

Legal Advice for Survivors of Sexual Violence

ROW continued to work with the sector working group we brought together on this issue and led work to develop and promote an amendment to the Victims and Prisoners Bill. We have been at the forefront of discussions around how a model for legal advice would work and be structured, and how it would be funded. We have drafted full briefings for parliamentarians and other decision makers. An amendment was introduced and received support but unfortunately it was not taken forward. The working group will continue to work on this issue in 2024-25.

Keeping counselling confidential

The police often request survivor counselling records as a matter of routine. These can be used to undermine survivors in court or be a reason for the police or CPS to take no further action on a case. All of this can be harmful to survivors, and some end up delaying counselling for years until after the court case has concluded. The group working on legal advice for survivors of sexual violence also worked together to prepare briefings and push for amendments to the Victims and Prisoners Bill to help ensure that survivors' counselling records are not accessed by police unless they are of substantive probative value. We had very positive engagement on this issue from parliamentarians across the house. On 23 April 2024 the government accepted the amendment to the Bill.

Other policy work

In other areas of our policy work we have continued to focus on addressing the gaps in law and policy relating to women affected by violence. We sit on a range of key groups including the EU Commission Network, Home Office EUSS Safeguarding User Group, Home Office Vulnerability Advisory Group (Future Immigration Scheme).

We continue to raise awareness of our work via social media and our website.

Partnerships and other achievements

Voices of Women panel

We are committed to ensuring our work is driven by women with lived experience of the issues we work on. In 2020 we established an experts-by-experience panel who named themselves the ROW Voices of Women Panel. This year the panel has been kept updated on the progress of FLOWS Answers and the development of From Report to Court following on from their contributions to these projects. We have convened a small group of staff to consider how to build upon and expand our work with experts by experience. This work is ongoing.

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Developing our relationships with the media

As part of our strategic communications work, we have been developing and solidifying new and existing relationships with key journalists and publications and taking proactive approaches to increasing women's understanding of VAWG and the legal system. We have been featured in high-profile media (developing relationships with Cosmopolitan, BACP Magazine, Independent, ITV). This has included but is not limited to advocating for the rights of cohabiting couples, highlighting our work on keeping counselling confidential, and raising awareness of new issues relating to developments of the policing and prosecuting of sexual violence. We are working with the team to raise awareness of the barriers to accessing justice through the family courts and raise Rights of Women's profile as a thought leader on issues in this area.

Partnership work with the Immigration Law Practitioner's Association (ILPA)

The immigration and asylum legal team have continued to collaborate with ILPA, a professional organisation which aims to promote and improve immigration advice and representation.

With respect to the new rules, we worked collaboratively with ILPA and the VAWG sector to influence changes to the contents of the Home Office guidance accompanying Appendix Victims of Domestic Abuse (VDA) which enables victims of DV to settle in the UK as well as raising our concerns about the delinking of the Migrant Victims of Domestic Abuse Concession (MVDAC) from Appendix Victims of Domestic Abuse. The linking of the two applications had provided a safety net for victims of DV who would have been able to regularise their immigration status after applying for the concession. This is no longer the case and for some applicants applying for the MVDAC may not be the best option.

In conjunction with ILPA we also provided training to Home Office decision-makers in advance of the TMA entry clearance route being introduced. The training was co-delivered with an academic and a front-line practitioner. The session was well received and feedback was positive including that caseworkers had developed knowledge in advance of the route going live. Slides and a recording were sent out for the rest of the Home Office team who could not attend. It is important that decision-makers have a a good grasp of the concept of TMA and apply their policies flexibly for the benefit of victims of DV hence our decision to provide this training.

Collaborative work with the migrant advice and VAWG sector

This year we submitted many joint letters to the Home Office including:

Group of experts on action on violence against women and girls and domestic abuse (GREVIO)

GREVIO is the group of experts from the Council of Europe who monitor a country's implementation of the Istanbul Convention. We attended a roundtable discussion with other VAWG sector organisations convened by GREVIO and produced a shadow report signed by 58 VAWG organisations which was submitted to GREVIO in January 2024. ROW made a significant contribution to this report in our areas

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of our expertise.

We raised concerns about:

UNCHR Special Rapporteur on VAWG (SR)

We attended a roundtable discussion convened by SR on 13 February 2024 with other VAWG organisations to discuss the UK's implementation of policies to protect and support victims of VAWG and the UK's adherence to international obligations on this issue. The issues raised were similar to those raised in the GREVIO shadow report discussed above.

Following the meeting a background note summarising our concerns about the lack of protection for migrant women highlighting issues that had not been addressed in the initial meeting was submitted to the SR.

In particular we addressed the inconsistent application of gender sensitive asylum policies by the UK government and our concerns about recent legislation being introduced that we identified as being regressive and the proposed Rwanda Bill and Illegal Migration Act.

Other issues that were raised included:

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion

In our approach to tackling VAWG, we recognise the additional barriers posed by the intersection of gender-based abuse, racism, structural inequality and other forms of discrimination and oppression that impact on women's vulnerability, exclusion and marginalisation.

Our organisation is committed to continual improvement in relation to Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) practices and has been working towards this through an EDI staff working group that meets regularly and Board oversight. During the reporting year we focused on further developing our in-house training for staff. We worked with an expert external trainer to provide training on an Introduction to Trans Awareness and arranged a six-month externally facilitated EDI training

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programme for staff which includes feedback groups and reflection space.

Increased anti-racism work

We recognise the importance of amplifying and supporting specialist 'by and for' Black and minoritised women's organisations in this work and supporting their leadership. We are an anti-racist, white-led organisation and recognise that our working practice must strengthen and be accountable to specialist 'by and for' Black and minoritised women's organisations. Our approach to working together accountably includes but is not limited to:

We have continued to invest in our organisational commitment throughout the year, including through a 6-month training course delivered by Other Box for staff on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) and working with Social Justice Collective to review our approach to EDI and develop a vision plan for our work over the coming years.

Sexual Harassment at Work Advice Service

We continued to provide legal advice to cover employment and discrimination law in relation to sexual harassment in the workplace. This year we have recruited a Legal Officer to the team which will allow us to open more hours and have added a new day time slot to better meet our callers' accessibility needs.

We continue to be grateful to the support from an Expert Advisory Panel of lawyers and policy experts who support the advice line and contribute to our strategic policy development in this area of law.

FLOWS (Finding Legal Options for Women Survivors)

Since April 2018 we have worked in partnership with RCJ Advice on the FLOWS project. This project has a focus on using technology and digital solutions to provide advice and information to survivors and the professionals that support them. We host an online forum for professionals providing peer-to-peer support on family law and criminal law issues. This project continues to work to expand its reach including facilitating online events and drop-in online Q&A sessions to reach more people and increase understanding of the legal issues and options facing survivors of domestic abuse in both family and criminal law.

This year we also trialled a new online advice service called FLOWS Answers. Through development with stakeholders and the Voices of Women panel, we ran a pilot of the service during 2023. After

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Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report) (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

initial testing and making some amendments, the service is now available for women seeking legal advice in relation to criminal law. They are able to write to ROW at a time that is convenient for them and receive a written response which they are able to refer back to in the future. The service has been successful and longer-term development is being planned.

Human Resource Management

Our aim is to create a working environment that anticipates and meets the varied needs of our team and prospective employees. Hybrid working is now an established arrangement enabling women throughout the UK to work for ROW. It is also a key element in supporting women with caring responsibilities to work for us.

We have undertaken a comprehensive programme of employee policy and training development. Our primary focus this year has been Equality, Diversity and Inclusion. All staff undertook a 6-month programme of individual and group work and a significant element of our away day with the Board of Trustees was to jointly develop a work plan to achieve key improvements for service users, staff and volunteers.

17

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report) (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Financial review

In this period Rights of Women has had two major sources of income:-

Grants and donations from a broad range of sources including major grant givers such as Access to Justice Foundation, Henry Smith Charity, Esmee Fairbairn Foundation, Justice Together Initiative, Trust for London and Treebeard. Our FLOWS partnership with RCJ Advice has been funded by the MoJ. As part of the London Violence Against Women and Girls Consortium we have received funding for the Ascent project from London Councils and the Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC). Our work on the EU Settlement Scheme has been funded primarily by the Home Office. We also received public donations and smaller grants from partners such as Garden Court Chambers.

Income generating activities included training courses.

Reserves

ROW’s Reserves Policy aims to maintain a sufficient level of reserves to ensure robust organisational management in relation to sustainability, risk and growth. The policy is updated annually.

ROW has successfully ensured that it has maintained sufficient funds in this financial year.

The Board ringfences designated funds to meet contractual obligations in respect of redundancy and winding up costs in the event of loss of funding. The amount is recalculated regularly and forms part of the annual update of the Reserves Policy. Designated fund reserves at the end of this period were £279,138.

ROW maintains a general reserves fund to enable normal operating activities to continue over a period of between 3 and 6 months should a shortfall in income occur and to take account of potential risks and contingencies that may arise from time to time. The general fund reserves at the end of this period were £249,622 that represents 3 months running costs.

In order to demonstrate transparency, accountability and sound financial management the ROW Reserves Policy clearly justifies the amount of reserves held each year.

In order to make a judgment on the amount of reserves, the Trustees have considered the risks in respect of expenditure, unrestricted income and where appropriate restricted income. Also taken into consideration are any external identified potential major risks to income and expenditure.

Review of the charity's financial position at the year end

The Board have reviewed the charity's financial position at year end and are satisfied the charity continues to be in good financial health. It is also noted that the charity's income is increasing year on year and this reflects growth in relation to meeting targets and priorities identified within the charity's Strategic Plan.

Plans for the future

Our trustees have identified the following priorities for our organisation going forward through an analysis of our work, infrastructure, funding, horizon scanning and in line with our strategic plan:

18

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report) (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Post balance sheet events affecting the charity

There are no significant post balance sheet events affecting the charity to note. However, the Board would highlight that the pandemic and cost of living crisis has had a critical impact on society, organisations and the economy as a whole. Furthermore, these changes have disproportionately affected some groups within society because of structural disadvantage faced by groups with protected characteristics and/or facing intersectional disadvantage. It has impacted greatly on access to equality, safety and justice for women and the charity will seek to increase its charitable activities to address this.

Trustees' responsibilities statement

The trustees, who are also directors for the purposes of company law, are responsible for preparing the trustees' report and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

Company law requires the charity trustees to prepare financial statements for each year which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and the incoming resources and application of resources, including the income and expenditure, for that period.

In preparing these financial statements, the trustees are required to:

The trustees are responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charity's transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charity and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charity and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

19

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Trustees' Annual Report (Incorporating the Director's Report) (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Auditor

Each of the persons who is a trustee at the date of approval of this report confirms that:

The trustees' annual report and the strategic report were approved on 11 September 2024 and signed on behalf of the board of trustees by:

Annie Hedge - Chair Trustee

20

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Year ended 31 March 2024

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (the 'charity') for the year ended 31 March 2024 which comprise the statement of financial activities (including income and expenditure account), statement of financial position, statement of cash flows and the related notes, including a summary of significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including FRS 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charity in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees' use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charity's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

21

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Other information

The other information comprises the information included in the annual report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. The trustees are responsible for the other information. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

In connection with our audit of the financial statements, our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether there is a material misstatement in the financial statements or a material misstatement of the other information. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion, based on the work undertaken in the course of the audit:

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In the light of the knowledge and understanding of the charity and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the trustees' report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

22

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Responsibilities of trustees

As explained more fully in the trustees' responsibilities statement, the trustees (who are also the directors for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the trustees determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the trustees are responsible for assessing the charity's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charity or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

23

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Auditor's responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed below:

Through these procedures, we did not become aware of any actual or suspected non-compliance.

As part of an audit in accordance with ISAs (UK), we exercise professional judgment and maintain professional scepticism throughout the audit. We also:

24

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of Rights of Women Incorporated Limited (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

We communicate with those charged with governance regarding, among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit and significant audit findings, including any significant deficiencies in internal control that we identify during our audit.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charity's members, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charity's members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor's report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charity and the charity's members as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Jonathan Rhodes BSc BFP FCA (Senior Statutory Auditor)

For and on behalf of Walter Hunter & Co Limited Chartered accountants & statutory auditor 24 Bridge Street Newport South Wales NP20 4SF

11 September 2024

25

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Statement of Financial Activities (including income and expenditure account)

Year ended 31 March 2024

2024 2023
Unrestricted Restricted
funds funds Total funds Total funds
Note £ £ £ £
Income
Donations and legacies 5 80,358 80,358 62,376
Charitable activities 6 72,779 773,195 845,974 792,882
Other trading activities 7 27,457 27,457 16,400
Investment income 8 2,990 2,990 879
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
Total income 183,584 773,195 956,779 872,537
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================
Expenditure
Expenditure on raising funds:
Costs of other trading activities 9 15,995 15,995 9,895
Expenditure on charitable activities 10,11 137,159 773,151 910,310 921,814
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
Total expenditure 153,154 773,151 926,305 931,709
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
Net income/(expenditure) 30,430 44 30,474 (59,172)
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================
Transfers between funds 3,876 (3,876)
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
Net movement in funds 34,306 (3,832) 30,474 (59,172)
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward 494,454 66,859 561,313 620,485
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
Total funds carried forward 528,760 63,027 591,787 561,313
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================

The statement of financial activities includes all gains and losses recognised in the year. All income and expenditure derive from continuing activities.

The notes on pages 29 to 47 form part of these financial statements.

26

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Statement of Financial Position

31 March 2024

2024 2023
Note £ £
Fixed assets
Investments 18 1 1
Current assets
Debtors 19 151,121 129,321
Cash at bank and in hand 643,567 496,786
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
794,688 626,107
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year 20 202,902 64,795
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
Net current assets 591,786 561,312
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
Total assets less current liabilities 591,787 561,313
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
Net assets 591,787 561,313
================================ ================================
Funds of the charity
Restricted funds 63,027 66,859
Unrestricted funds 528,760 494,454
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
Total charity funds 23 591,787 561,313
================================ ================================

These financial statements were approved by the board of trustees and authorised for issue on 11 September 2024, and are signed on behalf of the board by:

Aramide O

Annie Hedge - Chair Trustee

Aramide Ogunlana - Treasurer Trustee

The notes on pages 29 to 47 form part of these financial statements.

27

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Statement of Cash Flows

Year ended 31 March 2024

2024 2023
£ £
Cash flows from operating activities
Net income/(expenditure) 30,474 (59,172)
Adjustments for:
Other interest receivable and similar income (2,990) (879)
Accrued expenses 18,989 54,114
Changes in:
Trade and other debtors (55,912) (49,040)
Trade and other creditors 153,230 (6,822)
-------------------------------- ----------------------------
Cash generated from operations 143,791 (61,799)
Interest received 2,990 879
-------------------------------- ----------------------------
Net cash from/(used in) operating activities 146,781 (60,920)
================================ ============================
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents 146,781 (60,920)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year 496,786 557,706
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year 643,567 496,786
================================ ================================

The notes on pages 29 to 47 form part of these financial statements.

28

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements

Year ended 31 March 2024

1. General information

The charity is a public benefit entity and a private company limited by guarantee, registered in England and Wales and a registered charity in England and Wales. The address of the registered office is 52-54 Featherstone Street, London, EC1Y 8RT.

2. Statement of compliance

These financial statements have been prepared in compliance with FRS 102, 'The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and the Republic of Ireland', the Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) (Charities SORP (FRS 102)) and the Companies Act 2006.

3. Accounting policies

Basis of preparation

The financial statements have been prepared on the historical cost basis.

The financial statements are prepared in sterling, which is the functional currency of the entity, rounded to the nearest pound.

Going concern

A review of the organisation is undertaken annually in line with ISA (UK) 570 to assess the going concern status of the organisation. The assessment is undertaken as part of the budget setting process for the following year in the light of the forecast financial statements for the current year. The assessment considers key forecasts for income generation, expenditure, planned activities, risk register, cashflow, organisational performance, external factors and contingencies required to secure the future business operations of the organisation.

Trustees consider that, having reviewed the management assessment, that Rights of Women Incorporated Limited can be considered a going concern for the foreseeable future and that suitable risk mitigations and contingencies are in place.

Judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty

The preparation of the financial statements requires management to make judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts reported. These estimates and judgements are continually reviewed and are based on experience and other factors, including expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances.

Income tax

As a registered charity, the charity is exempt from income tax to the extent that its income and gains are applicable to charitable purposes only. Value added tax is not recoverable by the charity and is therefore included in the relevant costs in the Statement of Financial Activities.

29

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

3. Accounting policies (continued)

Fund accounting

Unrestricted funds are available for use at the discretion of the trustees to further any of the charity's purposes.

Designated funds are unrestricted funds earmarked by the trustees for particular future project or commitment.

Restricted funds are subjected to restrictions on their expenditure declared by the donor or through the terms of an appeal, and fall into one of two sub-classes: restricted income funds or endowment funds.

Incoming resources

All incoming resources are included in the statement of financial activities when entitlement has passed to the charity; it is probable that the economic benefits associated with the transaction will flow to the charity and the amount can be reliably measured. The following specific policies are applied to particular categories of income:

30

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

3. Accounting policies (continued)

Resources expended

Expenditure is recognised on an accruals basis as a liability is incurred. Expenditure includes any VAT which cannot be fully recovered, and is classified under headings of the statement of financial activities to which it relates:

All costs are allocated to expenditure categories reflecting the use of the resource. Direct costs attributable to a single activity are allocated directly to that activity. Shared costs are apportioned between the activities they contribute to on a reasonable, justifiable and consistent basis.

Operating leases

Lease payments are recognised as an expense over the lease term on a straight-line basis. The aggregate benefit of lease incentives is recognised as a reduction to expense over the lease term, on a straight-line basis.

Tangible assets

Tangible assets are initially recorded at cost, and subsequently stated at cost less any accumulated depreciation.

Depreciation

Depreciation is calculated so as to write off the cost or valuation of an asset, less its residual value, over the useful economic life of that asset as follows:

Equipment - 25% p.a. straight line

Investments

Unlisted equity investments are initially recorded at cost, and subsequently measured at fair value. If fair value cannot be reliably measured, assets are measured at cost less impairment.

Impairment of fixed assets

A review for indicators of impairment is carried out at each reporting date, with the recoverable amount being estimated where such indicators exist. Where the carrying value exceeds the recoverable amount, the asset is impaired accordingly. Prior impairments are also reviewed for possible reversal at each reporting date.

31

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

3. Accounting policies (continued)

Financial instruments

A financial asset or a financial liability is recognised only when the entity becomes a party to the contractual provisions of the instrument.

Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at the amount receivable or payable including any related transaction costs, unless the arrangement constitutes a financing transaction, where it is recognised at the present value of the future payments discounted at a market rate of interest for a similar debt instrument.

Current assets and current liabilities are subsequently measured at the cash or other consideration expected to be paid or received and not discounted.

Defined contribution plans

Contributions to defined contribution plans are recognised as an expense in the period in which the related service is provided. Prepaid contributions are recognised as an asset to the extent that the prepayment will lead to a reduction in future payments or a cash refund.

4. Limited by guarantee

The charity is incorporated under the Companies Act 2006 and is limited by guarantee, each member having undertaken to contribute such amounts not exceeding one pound as may be required in the event of the company being wound up whilst he or she is still a member or within one year thereafter.

There are 11 members of the company (2023: 10).

5. Donations and legacies

Unrestricted Total Funds Unrestricted Total Funds
Funds 2024 Funds 2023
£ £ £ £
Donations
Garden Court Chambers Limited 4,000 4,000
Gift Aid 1,619 1,619
Impact 100 35,000 35,000
Just Giving - The Last Leg's
Fundraiser 88 88 11,013 11,013
London Legal Support Trust 1,081 1,081 1,456 1,456
The Big Give Trust 5,480 5,480 18,741 18,741
Other donations under £2000 33,090 33,090 31,166 31,166
---------------------------- ---------------------------- ---------------------------- ----------------------------
80,358 80,358 62,376 62,376
============================ ============================ ============================ ============================

32

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

6. Charitable activities

Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2024
£ £ £
Access to Justice Foundation (HALS) 37,500 37,500
Access to Justice Foundation (ILTA) 8,333 8,333
Access to Justice Foundation (IOTLS) 79,387 79,387
Ascent (London Council's A & C) 73,309 73,309
Ascent (London Council's ASSO) 31,292 31,292
Ascent Plus 27,611 27,611
Esmee Fairbairn 40,000 40,000
Firebird Foundation 60,000 60,000
Henry Smith 60,000 60,000
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 40,000 40,000
Home Office (EUSS) 61,000 61,000
Indigo Trust 25,000 25,000
John Ellerman
Justice Together Initiative 79,000 79,000
Labyrinth Project
Miscellaneous Income 1,021 1,021
MOJ FLOWS 150,863 150,863
Training income and speakers' fees 6,758 6,758
Treebeard (PA) 35,000 35,000
Trust for London 29,900 29,900
Two Magpies
---------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
72,779 773,195 845,974
============================ ================================ ================================

33

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

6. Charitable activities (continued)

Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2023
£ £ £
Access to Justice Foundation (HALS) 75,000 75,000
Access to Justice Foundation (ILTA)
Access to Justice Foundation (IOTLS)
Ascent (London Council's A & C) 72,110 72,110
Ascent (London Council's ASSO) 29,649 29,649
Ascent Plus 27,611 27,611
Esmee Fairbairn 56,000 56,000
Firebird Foundation
Henry Smith 59,000 59,000
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 40,000 40,000
Home Office (EUSS) 54,276 54,276
Indigo Trust
John Ellerman 58,470 58,470
Justice Together Initiative 63,000 63,000
Labyrinth Project 23,591 23,591
Miscellaneous Income 2,116 2,116
MOJ FLOWS 132,883 132,883
Training income and speakers' fees 23,176 23,176
Treebeard (PA) 35,000 35,000
Trust for London 26,000 26,000
Two Magpies 15,000 15,000
---------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
81,292 711,590 792,882
============================ ================================ ================================
7. Other trading activities
Unrestricted Total Funds Unrestricted Total Funds
Funds 2024 Funds 2023
£ £ £ £
Fundraising events 27,457 27,457 16,400 16,400
============================ ============================ ============================ ============================
8. Investment income
Unrestricted Total Funds Unrestricted Total Funds
Funds 2024 Funds 2023
£ £ £ £
Bank interest receivable 2,990 2,990 879 879
======================= ======================= ============== ==============
9. Costs of other trading activities
Unrestricted Total Funds Unrestricted Total Funds
Funds 2024 Funds 2023
£ £ £ £
Costs of other trading activities -
Staging events 15,995 15,995 9,895 9,895
============================ ============================ ======================= =======================

34

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

10. Expenditure on charitable activities by fund type

Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2024
£ £ £
Access to Justice Foundation (HALS) 39,540 39,540
Access to Justice Foundation (ILTA) 4,088 4,088
Access to Justice Foundation (IOTLS) 79,387 79,387
Ascent (London Council's A & C) 73,457 73,457
Ascent (London Council's ASSO) 31,339 31,339
Ascent Plus 27,613 27,613
Core Costs 63,279 63,279
Esmee Fairbairn 46,236 46,236
Firebird Foundation 59,485 59,485
Henry Smith 64,754 64,754
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 36,384 36,384
Home Office (EUSS) 61,000 61,000
Indigo Trust 12,516 12,516
John Ellerman 139 139
Justice Together Initiative 82,936 82,936
Labyrinth Project
Ministry of Justice (FLOWS) 151,129 151,129
ROSA - JEF A&S
Support costs 15,128 2,361 17,489
Treebeard (PA) 33,533 33,533
Trust for London 26,006 26,006
Tudor Trust
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
137,159 773,151 910,310
================================ ================================ ================================
Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2023
£ £ £
Access to Justice Foundation (HALS) 74,894 74,894
Access to Justice Foundation (ILTA)
Access to Justice Foundation (IOTLS)
Ascent (London Council's A & C) 71,988 71,988
Ascent (London Council's ASSO) 29,618 29,618
Ascent Plus 26,815 26,815
Core Costs 63,083 63,083
Esmee Fairbairn 38,414 38,414
Firebird Foundation
Henry Smith 54,164 54,164
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 42,513 42,513
Home Office (EUSS) 54,276 54,276
Indigo Trust
John Ellerman 57,851 57,851
Justice Together Initiative 54,618 54,618
Labyrinth Project 23,685 23,685
Ministry of Justice (FLOWS) 132,883 132,883
ROSA - JEF A&S 70,512 70,512
Support costs 14,272 1,791 16,063

35

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

Treebeard (PA) 56,581 56,581
Trust for London 23,312 23,312
Tudor Trust 30,544 30,544
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
115,769 806,045 921,814
================================ ================================ ================================
Expenditure on charitable activities by activity type
Activities
undertaken Support Total funds Total fund
directly costs 2024 2023
£ £ £ £
Access to Justice Foundation (HALS) 39,540 39,540 74,894
Access to Justice Foundation (ILTA) 4,088 4,088
Access to Justice Foundation (IOTLS) 79,387 79,387
Ascent (London Council's A & C) 73,457 73,457 71,988
Ascent (London Council's ASSO) 31,339 31,339 29,649
Ascent Plus 27,613 27,613 27,610
Core Costs 63,279 8,093 71,372 63,629
Esmee Fairbairn 46,236 7,035 53,271 52,140
Firebird Foundation 59,485 515 60,000
Henry Smith 64,754 358 65,112 54,164
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 36,384 121 36,505 42,513
Home Office (EUSS) 61,000 61,000 54,276
Indigo Trust 12,516 12,516
John Ellerman 139 480 619 57,851
Justice Together Initiative 82,936 525 83,461 54,618
Labyrinth Project 23,685
Ministry of Justice (FLOWS) 151,129 151,129 132,883
ROSA - JEF A&S 70,512
Treebeard (PA) 33,533 362 33,895 56,581
Trust for London 26,006 26,006 23,516
Tudor Trust 31,305
-------------------------------- ---------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
892,821 17,489 910,310 921,814
================================ ============================ ================================ ================================

11. Expenditure on charitable activities by activity type

During the year ended 31 March 2024, Rights of Women received pro bono legal advice, jointly with other organisations, totalling 164 chargeable hours.

36

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

12. Analysis of support costs

Justice
Esmee Firebird Henry Smith John Together Treebeard
Core Costs Fairbairn Foundation Henry Smith
(Covid 19)
Ellerman Initiative (PA) Total 2024 Total 2023
£ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £ £
Board Meeting
Costs
171
121
292 865
Legal &
Professional Fees
5,895 5,000
480 362 11,737 10,158
Audit 2,027 2,035 515 358
525 5,460 5,040
----------------------- ----------------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- ---------------------------- ----------------------------
8,093 7,035 515 358
121
480 525 362 17,489 16,063
======================= ======================= ============== ============== ============== ============== ============== ============== ============================ ============================

37

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

13. Net income/(expenditure)

Net income/(expenditure) is stated after charging/(crediting):

2024 2023
£ £
Operating lease rentals 90
Audit fee 5,460 5,040
======================= =======================

14. Staff costs

The total staff costs and employee benefits for the reporting period are analysed as follows:

2024 2023
£ £
Wages and salaries 682,425 673,119
Social security costs 63,048 62,695
Employer contributions to pension plans 20,646 20,772
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
766,119 756,586
================================ ================================

The average head count of employees during the year was 21 (2023: 21). The average number of full-time equivalent employees during the year is analysed as follows:

2024 2023
No. No.
Number of staff involved in charitable activities 12 13
Number of administrative staff 3 1
Number of management staff 2 2
-------------- --------------
17 16
============== ==============

No employee received employee benefits of more than £60,000 during the year (2023: Nil).

Key Management Personnel

Key management personnel include all persons that have authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the charity. The total compensation paid to key management personnel for services provided to the charity was £61,737 (2023:£60,195).

15. Trustee remuneration and expenses

No remuneration or other benefits from employment with the charity or a related entity were received by the trustees (2023: nil).

During the year there were no expenses reimbursed to trustees (2023: nil).

38

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

16. Transfers between funds

During the year management has undertaken a review of the brought forward restricted funds, concluding that some funds had been provided without restrictions, and others had been released of restrictions following the completion of their funded projects. Leading to a total transfer to unrestricted funds during the year of £6,065.

Shortfall of restricted income on some projects' expenditure has been covered using the charity's unrestricted funds. Leading to a total transfer to restricted funds during the year of £2,189.

17. Tangible fixed assets

Equipment
£
Cost
At 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024 67,814
============================
Depreciation
At 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024 67,814
============================
Carrying amount
At 31 March 2024
============================
At 31 March 2023
============================
Investments
Other
investments
£
Cost or valuation
At 1 April 2023 1
Additions
--------------
At 31 March 2024 1
==============
Impairment
At 1 April 2023 and 31 March 2024
==============
Carrying amount
At 31 March 2024 1
==============
At 31 March 2023 1
==============

18. Investments

All investments shown above are held at valuation.

Investments represent 1 ordinary share held in Tindlemanor Limited, company number: 01380213, registered office 52/24 Featherstone Street, London, EC1Y 8RT.

39

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

19. Debtors

2024 2023
£ £
Trade debtors 148,907 89,604
Prepayments and accrued income 2,214 39,717
-------------------------------- --------------------------------
151,121 129,321
================================ ================================
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year
2024 2023
£ £
Trade creditors 7,618 16,125
Accruals and deferred income 173,791 32,247
Social security and other taxes 19,509 13,969
Other creditors 1,984 2,454
-------------------------------- ----------------------------
202,902 64,795
================================ ============================
Deferred income
2024 2023
£ £
Amount deferred in year 156,667
================================ ==============

20. Creditors: amounts falling due within one year

21. Deferred income

22. Pensions and other post retirement benefits

Defined contribution plans

The amount recognised in income or expenditure as an expense in relation to defined contribution plans was £20,646 (2023: £20,772).

40

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds

Unrestricted funds

Unrestricted funds
At
At 31 March 20
1 April 2023 Income Expenditure Transfers 24
£ £ £ £ £
General funds 234,454 183,584 (153,154) (15,262)
249,622
Designated Fund - see
below 260,000 19,138 279,138
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- ---------------------------- --------------------------------
494,454 183,584 (153,154) 3,876 528,760
================================ ================================ ================================ ============================ ================================
At
At 31 March 20
1 April 2022 Income Expenditure Transfers 23
£ £ £ £ £
General funds 140,501 160,947 (125,664) 58,670 234,454
Designated Fund - see
below 178,970 81,030 260,000
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- --------------------------------
319,471 160,947 (125,664) 139,700 494,454
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================ ================================

The General Fund is to support any short term shortfall, for example a gap between grants, or to cover specific expenses where grant or other funding is not available.

The following unrestricted Grants/Awards received are included within the General fund:

Big Give: This money was raised from donations from the public through an online crowdfunder to support women experiencing VAWG through provision of legal advice.

Esmee Fairbairn: This is a grant for unrestricted core costs to increase access to justice for women experiencing gender-based violence. It is focused on strategic immigration and asylum law policy influencing work to create system change in England and Wales.

Garden Court: This small grant covers core costs associated with the charity's work to support the delivery of access to justice.

Impact 100: This is a core grant from Impact100 London which is a philanthropic impact fund to give transformative grants to local charities that primarily benefit women and girls in London.

Indigo Trust: This is a core grant to support our work on access to justice in the UK.

Designated Funds are reserves ringfenced by the board to meet redundancy and winding up costs in the event of loss of funding.

Staff redundancy & notice period payments 178,178
Contractual liabilities 55,960
Professional advice 45,000
--------------------------------
At 31 March 2024 279,138
================================

41

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds (continued)

Restricted funds

Restricted funds
At
At 31 March 20
1 April 2023 Income Expenditure Transfers 24
£ £ £ £ £
Access to Justice
Foundation (ILTA) 8,333 (4,088) 4,245
Access to Justice
Foundation (IOTLS) 79,387 (79,387)
Access to Justice
Foundation (HALS) 106 37,500 (39,540) 1,934
Ascent (London
Council's A & C) 148 73,309 (73,457)
Ascent (London
Council's ASSO) 47 31,292 (31,339)
Ascent Plus 2 27,611 (27,613)
Big Lottery Fund
CAB EUSS
Comic Relief
Comic Relief Second
Grant
Esmee Fairbairn
Family Rights Group 6,065 (6,065)
Firebird Foundation 60,000 (60,000)
Foreign and
Commonwealth
Office/Forced Marriage
Unit Domestic
Programme Fund
FRG (TFL)
Henry Smith 35,112 60,000 (65,112) 30,000
Henry Smith (Covid 19) (2,513) 40,000 (36,505) 982
Home Office (EUSS) 61,000 (61,000)
John Ellerman 619 (619)
Justice Together
Initiative 8,382 79,000 (83,461) 3,921
Labyrinth Project
Ministry of Justice
(FLOWS) 11 150,863 (151,129) 255
MOPAC - Solace
PAS Projects
Paul Hamlyn
Foundation

42

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds (continued)

ROSA - JEF A&S
Tampon Tax
Tampon Tax RCJ
Treebeard (PA) 16,396 35,000 (33,895) 17,501
Treebeard Emergency
Grant
Trust for London 2,484 29,900 (26,006) 6,378
Tudor Trust
Two Magpies Fund
---------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- ----------------------- ----------------------------
66,859 773,195 (773,151) (3,876) 63,027
============================ ================================ ================================ ======================= ============================
At
At 31 March 20
1 April 2022 Income Expenditure Transfers 23
£ £ £ £ £
Access to Justice
Foundation (ILTA)
Access to Justice
Foundation (IOTLS)
Access to Justice
Foundation (HALS) 75,000 (74,894) 106
Ascent (London
Council's A & C) 26 72,110 (71,988) 148
Ascent (London
Council's ASSO) 47 29,649 (29,649) 47
Ascent Plus 1 27,611 (27,610) 2
Big Lottery Fund 577 (577)
CAB EUSS 67,398 (67,398)
Comic Relief 5,874 (5,874)
Comic Relief Second
Grant 1,480 (1,480)
Esmee Fairbairn 33,271 (33,271)
Family Rights Group 6,065 6,065
Firebird Foundation
Foreign and
Commonwealth
Office/Forced Marriage
Unit Domestic
Programme Fund 4,019 (4,019)
FRG (TFL) 1,350 (1,350)
Henry Smith 30,276 59,000 (54,164) 35,112
Henry Smith (Covid 19) 40,000 (42,513) (2,513)
Home Office (EUSS) 54,276 (54,276)
John Ellerman 58,470 (57,851) 619
Justice Together
Initiative 63,000 (54,618) 8,382

43

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds (continued) Analysis of charitable funds (continued)
Labyrinth Project 93 23,591 (23,685) 1
Ministry of Justice
(FLOWS) 11 132,883 (132,883) 11
MOPAC - Solace 165 (165)
PAS Projects 5,331 (5,331)
Paul Hamlyn
Foundation 18,114 (18,114)
ROSA - JEF A&S 72,513 (70,512) (2,001)
Tampon Tax 246 (246)
Tampon Tax RCJ 1,216 (1,216)
Treebeard (PA) 22,977 35,000 (41,581) 16,396
Treebeard Emergency
Grant 941 (941)
Trust for London 26,000 (23,516) 2,484
Tudor Trust 29,023 (31,305) 2,282
Two Magpies Fund 15,000 (15,000)
-------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- -------------------------------- ----------------------------
301,014 711,590 (806,045) (139,700) 66,859
================================ ================================ ================================ ================================ ============================

44

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds (continued)

Access to Justice Foundation Improving Lives Through Advice (ILTA): This grant is part of a grant programme that aims to demonstrate how multi-year advice funding builds sustainability, infrastructure, connections and best practice EDI approach in the delivery of frontline legal advice.

Access to Justice Foundation Improving Outcomes Through Legal Support (IOTLS): This grant is to support our frontline specialist legal advice delivery and ensure beneficiaries can access timely advice and support throughout their legal journey. It primarily funds the costs frontline advisers.

Access to Justice Foundation Help Accessing Legal Support (HALS): This is a grant to support our frontline specialist legal advice delivery and ensure beneficiaries can access timely advice and support throughout their legal journey. It primarily funds the costs frontline advisers.

Ascent: This grant is for the Ascent project which is a grant for two strands of work aimed at tackling VAWG in London, it is comprised of the London Councils Advice and Counselling Ascent strand (lead partner Women and Girls Network) which focuses on advice, training and legal publications and the London Councils 2nd Tier strand / Ascent Support Services to Organisations (ASSO) (lead partner Women's Resource Centre) focused on strengthening VAWG professionals and their organisations through training and capacity building. It primarily covers staffing and direct delivery costs. The overall management of the grant streams is via the London VAWG Consortium.

Ascent Plus: This grant is for the Ascent Plus project which is an additional grant to extend the reach of London Councils Advice and Counselling Ascent project. It is a consortium grant from MOPAC and Solace Women's Aid is the lead partner.

Family Rights Group: This is a grant for the staffing costs of a project to support women affected by domestic violence involved with social services.

Firebird Foundation: This grant funds staffing and project costs for an influencing and practicebased project focused on transforming the family justice system response to women survivors of domestic abuse.

FLOWS: This grant is for a partnership project with RCJ Advice called FLOWS (Finding Legal Option for Women Survivors) covering staffing costs and project costs. The funding is from Ministry of Justice. The project focuses on using tech and digital solutions to assist individual women survivors and professionals to access support with family law and criminal legal issues.

Foreign and Commonwealth Office/Forced Marriage Unit Domestic Programme Fund: This is a grant towards the staffing and project costs of a series of events with professionals to discuss legal and other responses to forced marriage regionally in England and Wales and to produce a report.

Henry Smith: This is a grant towards the staffing and project costs of our immigration and asylum law legal advice team to strengthen the legal advice and support available to vulnerable migrant women at a critical point in their lives.

45

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

23. Analysis of charitable funds (continued)

Henry Smith Covid 19: This is a grant towards running costs of a project providing legal advice, advocacy and support for women who have experienced or are at risk of Violence Against Women and Girls across England and Wales.

Home Office EUSS grant: This grant funds an immigration law legal advice line for women survivors of Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) who are making applications to the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) and training for professionals working with women survivors of VAWG supporting them to make EUSS applications. It primarily covers staffing, training and project costs.

John Ellerman: This is a grant for policy influencing work in relation to family and criminal law justice issues that impact on our women beneficiaries. It primarily covers staffing and project costs.

Justice Together Initiative (JTI): This grant is for policy influencing work carried out in the area of immigration and asylum law in relation to access to justice for migrant women survivors with insecure immigration status. It funds policy work and the associated delivery of advice work that produces an evidence base for this work. It primarily funds staffing and project costs.

Labyrinth project: This project provides support and training to survivors and professionals in relation to VAWG across 3 nations (England, Scotland and Northern Ireland) It is a partnership of different organisations and is led by Solace Women's Aid and funded by the Tampon Tax fund. Rights of Women is funded to provide training to VAWG professionals and legal advice publications across England. It primarily covers staffing costs.

PA Project: This grant funds delivery work to develop an understanding of the experiences of women victims of domestic abuse who are accused of parental alienation through work directly with those victims and the provision of advice in relation to their circumstances. It is funded by Treebeard Trust, Two Magpies and The Roddick Foundation. It primarily covers staffing costs.

ROSA JEF Advice and Support: This grant from the ROSA Justice and Equality Fund Advice and Counselling strand is to fund the provision of a legal advice service providing employment law advice to women survivors of sexual harassment in the workplace. It primarily covers staffing and project costs and volunteer expenses.

Trust for London: This is a grant towards the staffing and project costs to strengthen the legal advice and support available to vulnerable migrant women in London through provision of advice, second tier support to professionals and influencing work to improve policy.

Treebeard emergency grant: This is an unrestricted grant to assist with any additional costs the organisation faces due to the COVID-19 pandemic in its work supporting women experiencing domestic abuse.

Tudor Trust: This grant funds our national family law advice law service in relation to delivery of advice, policy work, publications, setting up and working with a women survivor panel and supporting volunteers. It primarily covers staffing costs, volunteer costs and project costs.

46

Rights of Women Incorporated Limited

Company Limited by Guarantee

Notes to the Financial Statements (continued)

Year ended 31 March 2024

24. Analysis of net assets between funds

Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2024
£ £ £
Investments 1 1
Current assets 731,661 63,027 794,688
Creditors less than 1 year (202,902) (202,902)
-------------------------------- ---------------------------- --------------------------------
Net assets 528,760 63,027 591,787
================================ ============================ ================================
Unrestricted Restricted Total Funds
Funds Funds 2023
£ £ £
Investments 3 3
Current assets 559,248 66,859 626,107
Creditors less than 1 year (64,797) (64,797)
-------------------------------- ---------------------------- --------------------------------
Net assets 494,454 66,859 561,313
================================ ============================ ================================
25. Analysis of changes in net debt
At
At 1 Apr 2023 Cash flows 31 Mar 2024
£ £ £
Cash at bank and in hand 496,786 146,781 643,567
================================ ================================ ================================

26. Limitation of auditors liability

By way of a members' resolution dated 2nd October 2023, the company has agreed to enter into a limited liability agreement with its auditors whereby their exposure to legal claims is limited to £50,000 per claim.

27. Related parties

The charity holds three ordinary shares valuing at £1 in Tindlemanor Limited, which owns the property occupied by the charity. The only transactions with the company during the financial year was for the payment of service charges, room hire and storage space, which amounted to £16,878 (2023: £22,207).

47