Metadata
Title
Handling Disclosures
Category
undergraduate
UUID
41b439b3e9ea4297bccb8ee725a840ea
Source URL
https://report-support.ucl.ac.uk/support/handling-disclosures
Parent URL
https://report-support.ucl.ac.uk/
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T06:04:25+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Handling Disclosures

Source: https://report-support.ucl.ac.uk/support/handling-disclosures Parent: https://report-support.ucl.ac.uk/

What is a disclosure?

A disclosure involves a person sharing an incident or experience of bullying, harassment or sexual misconduct. This may be a recent incident, or it may have occurred in the past.

\ Every experience and disclosure will be different, and there is no one-way to respond.

\ You may not recognise a disclosure at first, and the affected person may not use terms such as ‘bullying’ ‘harassment’ ‘assault’ or ‘misconduct’ to describe their experience. However, it is important to listen and enable them to describe their experience in their own words.

Receiving a disclosure

Sharing an experience of bullying, harassment or sexual misconduct is an act of trust and it is important that you affirm the affected person is not to blame.

\ Consider the following when receiving a disclosure:

How should I respond?

You may not be a counsellor or trained professional, however how you respond may influence how the affected person deals with their experience.  Remember that people who have experienced bullying, harassment or sexual misconduct, have had their decision-making and control taken away from them; try to enable them to regain control and make their own decision about how they want to proceed.

\

The following lines may be helpful:

Know your role and practice self-care

The most important thing you can do is listen to the person and take their disclosure seriously.

If you are concerned for someone’s safety then you may help them to act, without forcing them to do so. Sometimes it may be enough to acknowledge that they have shared the experience with you.

It's challenging to hear of such experiences and it is important to acknowledge how you are feeling, practice self-care and seek support. You may have feelings about the incident or opinions about what the person should do – these are important to acknowledge for your own self-care. Remember, you can still seek support following a disclosure without breaching obligations of confidence.

There are two ways you can tell us what happened

or Report anonymously (limited action can be taken)