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.