If you and your family needed help, could you trust the law to be on your side?
Award-winning barrister Charlotte Proudman has dedicated her working life to representing women who find themselves in need of help from the family law courts. Time and again, she has watched as these women are let down by the system that is supposed to protect them. Seeking only justice and safety, they have instead been met with cruelty and disdain, deemed unreliable witnesses compared to the men who abused them.
From family courts failing to protect victims from abusers to the misogynistic bullying Charlotte herself receives from senior members of her profession, the problem is no matter their circumstances, women across the country are suffering at the hands of a legal system built by men.
But change is on the horizon. In He Said, She Said, Proudman gives voice to the women whose stories are all too often brushed aside in the name of giving abusers 'the benefit of the doubt'. Through real-life cases spanning forced marriage, domestic abuse, child abduction and female genital mutilation, Proudman highlights the troubling biases and shocking prejudice that underlie our legal system - and in a book that is at once thrilling, engaging and deeply compassionate, puts forward her own inspiring vision for long-term change.
He Said, She Said: Truth, Trauma and the Struggle for Justice in Family Court by barrister Charlotte Proudman is an urgent and powerful look at how the family court system in England and Wales is failing women, especially those seeking protection from abuse.
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Proudman draws from real cases she’s worked on, covering harrowing topics like domestic violence, rape, parental alienation, child abduction, and female genital mutilation. Through these case studies, she exposes the prejudice, institutional bias, and deep-rooted misogyny that continue to shape outcomes in family court.
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However, this isn’t just about her clients - it’s clearly also a deeply personal account. Proudman shares her own experiences of sexual assault by colleagues and the professional backlash she faced for speaking out against perceived injustice. What emerges is a pitcure of a system that is not only slow to evolve, but which also punishes those who dare to challenge it.
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This is not an easy read because of its subject matter, but it is an essential one. He Said, She Said is both a fierce indictment of injustice and a rallying call for reform from someone fighting within the system she seeks to change.
In *He Said, She Said*, barrister Charlotte Proudman delivers a searing indictment of the family court system, exposing its entrenched misogyny and the harrowing toll it exacts on women seeking justice. With the precision of a seasoned advocate and the urgency of a reformer, Proudman draws on her extensive experience representing survivors of rape, domestic abuse, child abduction, forced marriage, and female genital mutilation. What emerges is a chilling portrait of a judicial process that often deepens the trauma of vulnerable women, subjecting them to disdain, disbelief, and a gruelling ordeal that can stretch across years.
The book’s strength lies in its unflinching use of real-life cases, which Proudman handles with sensitivity and rigour. These stories lay bare the court’s systemic biases: women are routinely dismissed as liars for lacking concrete evidence or dismissed as unreliable witnesses, their credibility undermined in favour of the men who abused them. Forced to recount their worst moments in excruciating detail—sometimes in the presence of their abuser—survivors face barristers intent on dismantling their testimony. Proudman’s prose is both measured and impassioned, capturing the cruelty of a system that stakes women’s futures on the whims of individual judges, whose prejudices can shape life-altering outcomes.
This is not a dispassionate legal analysis but a call to arms, grounded in the lived realities of those the system fails. Proudman’s critique is sharpest when dissecting the court’s impulse to believe men at all costs, a tendency she argues is rooted in a broader culture of victim-blaming. Yet the book avoids despair, offering glimmers of hope through Proudman’s own tireless advocacy and her proposals for reform.
At times, the sheer weight of the cases risks overwhelming the reader, and some may wish for deeper exploration of systemic fixes. Nonetheless, *He Said, She Said* is a vital, enraging read—an urgent demand for a family court system that prioritises safety and justice over patriarchal inertia.
Many times in my work supporting women who have been forced into the Family Court system, having fled an abusive partner, I have heard them say that their experience in that arena has been as bad, if not worse, than the abuse itself. They say that they feel that their ex has found a legal way to continue to exert power and control, they feel that they’re being abused all over again, and their children are often forced into dangerous and unwanted contact arrangements. Dr Proudman explores with clarity and compassion a number of cases where these very issues are raised, alongside others representing other, equally damaging and inequitable ways in which women are disbelieved, discredited and all but destroyed by a system that should be protecting them (and their children), respecting them and upholding their rights. Dr Proudman has fought not only perpetrators, but the system itself, when it sought - unsuccessfully - to control and destroy her. Despite what I already knew, the content of ‘He Said, She Said’ is shocking, though not surprising. Disturbing though it is, it shines a light on the inadequacies and inequalities within the Family Court system, and will hopefully embolden others to campaign for change in the name of justice.
Anyone who knows anything about domestic violence and family court will know that this book is vital, necessary and absolutely devastating. Seeing these stories laid out bare, and knowing there is rarely a happy ending and even if there is it probably took years of psychological torment to achieve, is haunting. I hope that people who haven't experienced it themselves read this book, I hope it is a wakeup call that there is rot at the heart of the British legal system which protects perpetrators far more readily than victims and survivors. I am glad the author includes her own experiences of misogyny, sexual harassment and classism, this cannot be allowed to continue and the more people who expose this the more hope there is for change.
This is a good book that talks about the enablement of abuse in the family court system, severing strong relationships between loving parents and their children.
Much of what is included sounds very familiar. The only thing I want to clarify is that Parental Alienation can also be seen differently.
This is where an abusive parent will accuse the other parent of alienating the child. Often it said that a mother does this against a father but, in many circumstances, it’s the father who suggests the other parent is abusive and therefore alienates the child.
Parental Alienation comes into it in that the behaviours and allegations of the alienating parent (either gender) cut the child off from a loving parent. That parent supports the child to become abusive and align with the parent; the abusive parent acting like a puppeteer.
More needs to be said about this because it is an absolute hell to go through and is not well recognised, letting innocent parents and children down. Another stolen generation, valuable time can never be replaced.
Devastating expose of the family justice system and the way we still have to go for women’s rights in this country. Very clearly written with minimal legal jargon that makes it easier to understand for people not in the legal profession. Only critique is id say she lays out the issues with the system well, but doesn’t offer many solutions or alternatives to these issues: the trauma of victims having to testify in court is discussed repeatedly, but what is the alternative solution to this? Without those victims providing evidence on their side, their side would not get heard? If there is an appropriate and fair alternative, what is it?
All in all a great great, albeit concerning in its exposition.
Worth the wait for a few extra months (originally due to be published in February, but was released in May) this title brings to light everything any parent with the unfortunate knowledge of domestic abuse and the family court has known for decades. To Dr Proudman, from every survivor in the UK we thank you!
An informative read that will be very validating if you've been victimised by the court system or the patriarchy (or both) in any way. Each chapter is like a voice for each of the (countless) victims of just such a sick level of misogyny. Dr Proudman's resilience through all the abuse so she can fight for these victims is so admirable; the strength it requires.
I would like to give this 3.5 stars! Very informative on a topic I didn’t know much about. More of a focus on domestic abuse against mothers and their children than I had anticipated (thought it about family court more generally). A little repetive at times could have been good as an audiobook. Glad I read it. Also kudos to the author she’s such a badass