
Submitting Articles to the CAAGe Blog
We want to hear your views and stories, but here’s how to ensure we’ll take your article
“Tell the story of the mountain you climbed. Your words could become a page in someone else’s survival guide.”
Morgan Harper Nichols
Submitting an Article to CAAGe
CAAGe encourages articles from people, be they information, opinion or personal stories
However, we won’t just take anything.
1. The content must be relevant to people wanting to understand grooming and related issues, victims and their families and friends, and those seeking to understand and help them.
2. The language must not be offensive, aggressive, hurtful to anyone other than perpetrators, including being racist, homophobic, misogynistic, or inciting harm.
3. It must be true, and not defamatory. If you’re not sure, contact CAAGe to discuss.
4. Our website is read by people of all ages, ethnicities, abilities, nationalities, religions, beliefs. Please consider this respectfully when writing. If you are writing from a particular perspective, please make sure that this is clear – for example an article about women wearing burkhas, it is likely that we would take only very informed views by experts on the subject, either by an expert in Islam or a Muslim woman’s perspective.
5. You are responsible for your content. Please read the ‘Submitting Content’ section of our terms and conditions: https://www.caage.org/terms-and-conditions
6. We do not currently have the resources to pay for content submissions.
7. Your article should be at least 300 words long, ideally more than 600. We reserve the right to edit and add or remove links. Any images submitted with the piece must be owned by you or copyright free. We are available to ‘ghost write’ for you if you are not feeling confident about your writing skills. The article would be approved by you.
We reserve the right not to accept articles, even when the content has been agreed in advance.
“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”
Maya Angelou
“Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.”
Robert Noyce, Intel Co-Founder.