Autumn Term Insight Report Academic Year 2025/26

Introduction

This insight report covers all reports made in Autumn Term, Academic Year 2025-26 (including the Winter break). This insight report informs LSE leadership and management on the experiences of our community and is an important tool in helping shape our strategic plans in relation the prevention and response to harassment, bullying, discrimination and sexual misconduct.

All forms of harassment, bullying, discrimination and sexual misconduct are wholly unacceptable and there is no place for this kind of behaviour in the LSE community. We understand that reporting your experience can be a significant and challenging step to take and the School acknowledges our responsibility to use this information in a meaningful way.

We are committed to increasing student and staff trust in our systems and processes. A key step in this is transparency about what is being reported to us and how the School is responding to these reports. We publish termly insight reports on reports received on the Report + Support platform, as well as an annual insight report that includes details of formal case outcomes and sanctions. Click here to view the Academic Year 24-25 report.

Key insights

There were 110 reports made in period 1st September 2025 - 18th January 2026. This is compared to 62 reports in the same period in Academic Year 24/25 accounting for a 77% increase in reporting. Prior to Academic Year 24/25 the School had a different reporting tool named 'Report it Stop it'. In Academic Year 23/24 the School received 45 reports in the same period.

Out of the 110 reports, 74 reports were made with contact details (67%) and 36 were anonymous reports (33%). Only 7 reports were from Staff- 43% anonymous and 57% with contact details. This is compared to 66 reports from current students- 30% anonymous, 70% with contact details.

The most common self-reported incident was Harassment for all reporting persons, including current staff and students. This was shortly followed by General Concern and then a Hate Incident.

In 55 reports, the reported person was alleged to be an LSE student and in 20 of the reports, it was alleged to be LSE staff. Staff were reporting other staff in 6/7 (86%) of the reports, students were reporting fellow students in 39/66 (59%) reports.

The top reason for reporting anonymously was 'I'm worried about the repercussions' followed by 'I want you to have this information, but I don't want you to be identified'. For students, the top reason was 'I'm worried about the repercussions' followed by 'I'm worried about being called a troublemaker'. For staff, the most common reasons matched those overall.

In 41% of all reports the incidents happened online (e.g. social media, email, WhatsApp). After that, the most common location was in an academic Setting (15.5%). Online was the top location for students, whilst an academic setting was top for staff.

The top incident type reported as occurring online was Harassment. The top incident type reported as occurring in an academic setting was General Concern.

The top suspected factor as to why the reporting person thinks they may have been targeted was Ethnicity / Race at 41%, followed by Gender at 35%. For current students the most common suspected factor was Ethnicity/ Race, for staff the most common was Gender.

Resolving reports

Timelines

The vast majority of cases are reviewed by the respective teams on the day the report is received. Anyone who has reported with contact details should receive a direct response from Student Services or HR within 3 working days.

The time taken from report to outcome can vary depending on factors including complexity of the case (e.g. evidence and number of people involved), and availability/ response times from involved parties.

75% of all reports were reviewed, assessed and closed within 1 month of the report being received, with many reports, reviewed, assessed and closed within 1 week of the report being made (38%). A further 10% were resolved within 2 months, and then 10% within 3 months. The remaining 5% were resolved within 3+ months, with just under 5 months being the maximum time a case was open.

Outcomes

There are several factors that impact on case outcomes. This includes: the severity of the incident/s, the details provided by the reporting person, the reporting persons wishes as to how the report be handled, the safety of the LSE community, evidence available and anonymity.

Every report received is reviewed and assessed by either our Student Services or HR team.

When Student Services or HR meet with a reporting person for the first time, they ask more about the incident/s, and provide information on what next steps are possible. In all cases, even when no intervention/ actions are possible, reporting persons are signposted to support. If the reporting person is not a student or staff member, the support signposted may be external support available to members of the public.

There are some instances when a reporting person does not wish to take any further action. They may ask for support options, and for their report to stay on file. As far as possible, our teams work collaboratively with the reporting persons to identity and agree next steps, acknowledging the importance of choice and empowerment when someone has experienced harassment or sexual misconduct. This is done whilst balancing any risk to the reporting person and the wider community.

The majority of reports are dealt with by taking informal actions. We use the label 'informal action' to distinguish this from formal action, investigations and outcomes under the relevant complaint, grievance and disciplinary procedures.

Our LSE Policies and Procedures include information on handling reports 'informally'. Our teams take a flexible approach to handling reports informally, and there is a wide range of options when it comes to informal actions including:

  • Mutual agreements that may include agreed no-contact or agreed restrictions from campus space/ events.
  • The relevant Department/ Division is made aware of an ongoing issue or reporting theme in order to increase support, resource and training.
  • The reported party is asked to engage in training.
  • Genuine insight and apology for the behaviour is given by the reported person and received by the reporting person.
  • A warning is given to the reported person.
  • Parties engage in organised mediation.

Of the 110 reports made in the period 1 September 2025- 18 Jan 2026, 6 remain ongoing as of 11 March 2026. The outcomes of the other reports were as follows:

Outcome

Number of Reports

Informal action (with support)

34

Closed as anonymous

30

Support only (internal)

16

Informal action from anonymous report

8

No further action (no longer in use as of 27 Oct 25)

14

Support only (external)

3

Referred to formal complaint/grievance or disciplinary (with support)

1

At the end of October 25, minor changes were made to outcome categories which included the removal of 'No further action', and the addition of 'Informal action from anonymous report'.

Reporting Data

Number of reports year-on-year

2024/252025/26
Oct2342
Nov2019
Dec920

Incident Type

A hate incident40
(36.4%)
An assault25
(22.7%)
Bullying25
(22.7%)
General concern43
(39.1%)
Harassment49
(44.5%)
I'm not sure8
(7.3%)
Other9
(8.2%)
Sexual misconduct10
(9.1%)

NB - Multiple options could be selected in a single report. This is self-reported by reporting person and substance of the report may not meet LSE policy or Legal definition.

Incident happened to....

Me70
(63.6%)
Prefer not to say13
(11.8%)
Someone else27
(24.5%)

Reporting person/ impacted person's relationship to LSE

A member of the public, not in the LSE community13
(13.1%)
A visitor (<5)0
(0.0%)
An LSE Alumni10
(10.1%)
Executive (<5)0
(0.0%)
General Course (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know (<5)0
(0.0%)
Other (e.g. intercollegiate) (<5)0
(0.0%)
Postgraduate (Taught)31
(31.3%)
Prefer not to say9
(9.1%)
Research (PhD/MPhil) (<5)0
(0.0%)
Staff7
(7.1%)
Undergraduate29
(29.3%)

NB- 'I don't know' is most likely selected in third party / witness reports where the reporting person does not know the identity of the person impacted by the incident.

Reported person/ perpetrator's relationship to LSE

A member of the public, not in the LSE community12
(11.5%)
An LSE Alumni9
(8.7%)
Executive (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know13
(12.5%)
Other (e.g. intercollegiate) (<5)0
(0.0%)
Postgraduate (Taught)22
(21.2%)
Postgraduate Research (e.g. MRes) (<5)0
(0.0%)
Prefer not to say (<5)0
(0.0%)
Research (PhD/MPhil) (<5)0
(0.0%)
Staff20
(19.2%)
Undergraduate28
(26.9%)

Reasons for reporting anonymously

I am living with the perpetrator(s) (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know what to do (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't want anyone to know what happened (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't want to get anyone in trouble8
(7.3%)
I don’t want to go through any formal process5
(4.5%)
I feel embarrassed/ashamed (<5)0
(0.0%)
I feel I don’t have enough evidence to prove anything6
(5.5%)
I feel like they have more authority than me7
(6.4%)
I want you to have this information but I don’t want to be identified14
(12.7%)
I'm concerned it might impact my future career/studies8
(7.3%)
I'm worried about being called a trouble maker9
(8.2%)
I'm worried about the repercussion for me or others21
(19.1%)
I'm worried I won't be believed6
(5.5%)
I've reported in the past and nothing happened (<5)0
(0.0%)
I've told someone before but it wasn't taken seriously5
(4.5%)
It's not serious enough (<5)0
(0.0%)
Other (<5)0
(0.0%)

Location of incident

In a campus bar or club6
(5.5%)
In a halls of residence5
(4.5%)
In a private residence4
(3.6%)
In an academic setting17
(15.5%)
In an off-campus bar or club6
(5.5%)
In another on-campus facility (<5)0
(0.0%)
In the Student Union building (<5)0
(0.0%)
Online (e.g. social media, email, WhatsApp etc.)45
(40.9%)
Other15
(13.6%)
Prefer not to say7
(6.4%)

Suspected factor

Age13
(11.8%)
Being trans/non-binary 6
(5.5%)
Disability or impairment (<5)0
(0.0%)
Ethnicity/race45
(40.9%)
Gender38
(34.5%)
Having caring responsibilities (<5)0
(0.0%)
Having children/being pregnant (<5)0
(0.0%)
Nationality33
(30.0%)
Not answered24
(21.8%)
Other21
(19.1%)
Religion/belief19
(17.3%)
Sexual orientation12
(10.9%)

NB - Multiple options could be selected in a single report.

Demographic Data

Gender

I don't know10
(9.1%)
Man29
(26.4%)
Non-binary (<5)0
(0.0%)
Prefer not to say9
(8.2%)
Woman49
(44.5%)

Gender matches birth

I don't know18
(16.4%)
No (<5)0
(0.0%)
Not answered17
(15.5%)
Prefer not to say7
(6.4%)
Yes64
(58.2%)

Ethnicity

Another Asian background (<5)0
(0.0%)
Another ethnic group6
(5.5%)
Another Mixed or Multiple background6
(5.5%)
Another White background (<5)0
(0.0%)
Arab (<5)0
(0.0%)
Asian or Asian British - Chinese14
(12.7%)
Asian or Asian British - Indian6
(5.5%)
Asian or Asian British - Pakistani (<5)0
(0.0%)
Black or Black British - African6
(5.5%)
I don't know15
(13.6%)
Mixed or multiple background - Asian and White (<5)0
(0.0%)
Mixed or multiple background - Black African and White (<5)0
(0.0%)
Mixed or multiple background - Black Caribbean and White (<5)0
(0.0%)
Not answered19
(17.3%)
Prefer not to say15
(13.6%)
White - British, Northern Irish, Scottish, Welsh8
(7.3%)
White - Irish (<5)0
(0.0%)

Sexual identity

Asexual (<5)0
(0.0%)
Bisexual6
(5.5%)
Gay man (<5)0
(0.0%)
Heterosexual32
(29.1%)
I don't know24
(21.8%)
Not answered21
(19.1%)
Other (<5)0
(0.0%)
Pansexual (<5)0
(0.0%)
Prefer not to say22
(20.0%)

Age

18–21 years31
(28.2%)
22-25 years26
(23.6%)
26-35 years11
(10.0%)
36-45 years (<5)0
(0.0%)
46-55 years (<5)0
(0.0%)
56 years and over (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know15
(13.6%)
Not answered12
(10.9%)
Prefer not to say8
(7.3%)
under 18 (<5)0
(0.0%)

Disability

A mental health difficulty, such as depression, schizophrenia or anxiety disorder9
(8.2%)
A physical impairment or mobility issues, such as difficulty using arms or using a wheelchair or crutches (<5)0
(0.0%)
A social/communication impairment such as a speech and language impairment or Asperger’s syndrome/other autistic spectrum disorder (<5)0
(0.0%)
A specific learning difficulty such as dyslexia, dyspraxia or AD(H)D (<5)0
(0.0%)
Blind or have a visual impairment uncorrected by glasses (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know22
(20.0%)
No known impairment, health condition or learning difference29
(26.4%)
Not answered34
(30.9%)
Prefer not to say13
(11.8%)

Faith/belief

Christian11
(10.0%)
Hindu (<5)0
(0.0%)
I don't know21
(19.1%)
Jewish5
(4.5%)
Muslim6
(5.5%)
None27
(24.5%)
Not answered22
(20.0%)
Other (<5)0
(0.0%)
Prefer not to say14
(12.7%)

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