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Charity sector staff face widespread intimidation and fear

Created at 8 Jul · 11:25 AM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

A report by the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) reveals that staff and volunteers in the UK charity sector are experiencing rising levels of fear, intimidation, and online hate, impacting their ability to deliver essential services.

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Key Numbers

46voluntary organisations represented in listening forums

Who's Involved

National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO)
Published a report on extremism and social division in the charity sector
Kate Lee
CEO of NCVO, stated fear is widespread
Charity Commission
Released guidance for charities facing hostile environments
Charity sector staff face widespread intimidation and fear

↳ Why This Matters

The increasing hostility and intimidation faced by charity sector staff threaten their ability to carry out vital work, potentially impacting the services and support they provide to vulnerable communities and exacerbating social divisions.

Key facts

  • Staff and volunteers in the UK charity sector are facing increased fear, intimidation, and online hate.
  • Organisations are reducing their public visibility and cancelling events due to direct threats and security concerns.
  • Charities are removing trustee names from websites and experiencing internal conflicts.
  • Those from minority backgrounds are disproportionately affected by the hostile environment.
  • The NCVO report highlights that this climate prevents charities from safely delivering their core missions.
  • The Charity Commission has issued guidance to help charities manage these difficult circumstances.

Staff and volunteers within the UK's charity sector are experiencing a significant rise in hostility, intimidation, and online abuse, according to a report by the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO).

The report, published in December 2025 following listening forums with representatives from 46 voluntary organisations, details a pervasive climate of fear that is impacting daily operations and the well-being of those working in the sector, particularly individuals from global majority backgrounds.

Participants described receiving intimidating emails and other forms of harassment, leading some organisations to cancel community events, reduce their online visibility, and scale back public activities due to direct threats or security concerns. Some charities have even removed trustee names from their websites to mitigate risks. The report also noted increasing internal tensions within organisations, stemming from conflicting views among staff, trustees, and volunteers, as well as challenges with service users.

NCVO chief executive Kate Lee emphasized that this hostile environment is preventing organisations from safely delivering their core missions and that fear is widespread, affecting staff, boards, volunteers, and the communities they support. The organisation also recognized a reluctance among minority community members to take on public-facing roles.

In response, the NCVO is calling for solidarity within the sector and is committed to mobilizing collective action and identifying guidance to support voluntary and charity organizations. The Charity Commission has also released its own guidance to help charities navigate these difficult circumstances, acknowledging that some charities are operating in an environment where their work is met with active hostility.

Frequently asked questions

The report found a pervasive climate of fear, intimidation, and online hate within the charity sector, impacting staff and operations.

Staff and volunteers, particularly those from minority backgrounds and global majority backgrounds, are disproportionately affected.

Some organisations are scaling back their public visibility, cancelling events, and removing trustee names from websites due to security concerns.

The NCVO is calling for solidarity within the sector and plans to mobilize collective action and provide guidance.

What Happens Next

01NCVO to mobilize collective action and identify guidance for the sector.
02Charities to utilize guidance from the Charity Commission to navigate hostile environments.

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Cadence

How It Developed

The NCVO held listening forums with representatives from 46 voluntary organisations.
A report was published in December 2025 detailing findings from these forums.
Participants described a pervasive climate of fear, operational disruption, direct targeting, and increasing internal tensions.
The report found that those from minority backgrounds are particularly affected.
Organisations are scaling back visibility and cancelling events due to threats.
NCVO chief executive Kate Lee stated that fear is widespread and affects staff, boards, volunteers, and communities.
The NCVO is committed to mobilising collective action and providing guidance to support the sector.
The Charity Commission has released guidance for charities navigating hostile environments.

Sources

T1
Staff at 'thousands of charities' threatened and intimidated for 'doing their jobs'Sky News
T2
'Fear is widespread': Report finds growing hostility and intimidation ...museumsassociation.org

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