Stand With Meg is built around the United States, but United Kingdom families are already submitting to the public registry. The country and family counts families see should come from the live public dashboard — we deliberately do not freeze them onto an SEO page.
The registry is jurisdiction-agnostic. Families anywhere can use it to record what happened, see global pattern data, and connect their case to the broader public record. Stand With Meg is not a substitute for United Kingdom legal counsel and we do not provide legal advice in any jurisdiction.
Yes. The survey is not US-only. Families anywhere can record their family court and social services experience. The registry is built to capture the global pattern, not just the United States.
Public actor naming is threshold-gated by independent family reports, regardless of country. Until enough independent families report the same actor, names stay non-public. Once the threshold is met, the pattern is shown publicly with care, not as proven allegations.
On the live public dashboard at my.standwithmeg.com/report. We deliberately do not hard-code country counts onto SEO pages so the public number is never out of date.
No. Stand With Meg is a public registry, dashboard, and court actor record. It is not a directory of solicitors, barristers, advocates, or attorneys, and it does not provide legal advice in any jurisdiction.