TERMS & CONDITIONS

SAFECHAIN™ Terms of Use

Acceptance
By accessing this website, you agree to these terms.Intellectual Property
All content, frameworks, models, branding, terminology and documentation are proprietary to SAFECHAINN LTD.No Legal Advice
SAFECHAIN™ provides policy analysis and reform proposals. It does not provide regulated legal advice.Use Restrictions
You may not copy, distribute, adapt, or commercially exploit any SAFECHAIN™ materials without written permission.Limitation of Liability
SAFECHAINN LTD shall not be liable for reliance on informational content.Governing Law
England and Wales.

5. DATA PROTECTION NOTE (UK GDPR Compliant)

SAFECHAIN™ processes personal data in accordance with the UK General Data Protection Regulation (UK GDPR) and Data Protection Act 2018.Personal data submitted via contact forms or correspondence will be used solely for communication and engagement purposes.We do not sell, distribute, or commercially exploit personal data.Data subjects retain the right to:• Access
• Rectification
• Erasure
• Restriction
• Objection

Contact: samantha@safe-chain.org

6. STATUTORY REFERENCES BLOCK (For Policy Papers)

SAFECHAIN™ reform frameworks align with:• Human Rights Act 1998 (Articles 3, 6, 8, 14)
• Domestic Abuse Act 2021
• Matrimonial Causes Act 1973
• Family Procedure Rules
• Companies Act 2006
• Equality Act 2010
• Data Protection Act 2018
• The Macpherson Report (1999) – Institutional Blindness Framework

7. MACPHERSON REFERENCE (Institutional Framing Statement)

SAFECHAIN™ recognises the Macpherson principle that institutional failure may arise from systemic blind spots rather than individual intent. Reform proposals therefore focus on structural coherence and cross-agency integration to reduce institutional fragmentation.

SAFECHAIN™ reform frameworks align with:

• Human Rights Act 1998 (Articles 3, 6, 8, 14)
• Domestic Abuse Act 2021
• Matrimonial Causes Act 1973
• Family Procedure Rules
• Companies Act 2006
• Equality Act 2010
• Data Protection Act 2018
• The Macpherson Report (1999) – Institutional Blindness Framework.