XClose

Department of Political Science

Home
Menu

Priorities for the new UK Government: Fixing the criminal justice system

14 November 2024, 6:15 pm–7:30 pm

The Criminal Justice System

Leading experts speak as part of our Policy & Practice seminar series. Free to attend and open to all.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Eleanor Kingwell-Banham – UCL Political Science

Location

G.06
Institute of Archaeology
31-34 Gordon Sq
London
WC1H 0PY
United Kingdom

 

A new government has been in power in Westminster since July. In our Policy & Practice miniseries, Priorities for the new UK Government, we will explore key issues on which the Government is—or ought to be—focusing its attention. The criminal justice system in England and Wales is on the brink of collapse. What are the specific problems? Why has it declined to its current state? And what should be done to fix it? In this event, jointly hosted by the UCL Department of Political Science and the Criminal Law Centre in the UCL Faculty of Laws, our expert panel will discuss these questions and more. 


Meet the speakers

Lord Ken Macdonald KC is a barrister at Matrix Chambers and crossbench peer. He formerly served as the Director of Public Prosecutions of England and Wales between 2003 and 2008. MacDonald was the first prominent defence lawyer to be appointed to the post. He chairs the Orwell Foundation and is President of the Howard League for Penal Reform. He was also previously the Chair of Reprieve, an anti-death penalty organisation, and the Warden of Wadham College, Oxford.  

Dame Vera Baird KC, former Victims’ Commissioner for England and Wales, Solicitor General and Police and Crime Commissioner for Northumbria, is currently Visiting Professor in Practice at the Mannheim Centre for Criminology at LSE, Honorary Fellow of St Hilda's College Oxford, writer, lecturer and Parliamentary Consultant. She is a criminal barrister and was MP for Redcar between from 2001–2010. Most recently she led the inquiry into the Greater Manchester Police’s treatment of women and girls. She is currently writing a book about the treatment and role of the victims of crime in the criminal justice system and our society at large. 

Penelope Gibbs is the Director of Transform Justice, a national charity which works for a more humane, open and effective justice system in England and Wales. Gibbs also serves as Chair of the National Appropriate Adult Network, which supports organisations providing AAs in police custody. She previously worked in the media sector before setting up the Voluntary Action Media Unit at TimeBank, a volunteering charity, and joining the Prison Reform Trust to run Out of Trouble—a campaign to reduce child and youth imprisonment. 

David Shipley is a penal reform campaigner and justice researcher. As an ex-inmate, he writes and speaks out against a prison system which he calls “neglectful, cruel and ... designed to maximise reoffending”. His work can be found in the Spectator, Inside Time and the i paper. David is also pursuing a PhD in the experiences of children with a parent in prison at Southampton University. 

Chair: Prof. David Ormerod CBE is Chair in Criminal Law, UCL Faculty of Laws. He is in part time practice as a barrister and a Bencher of the Middle Temple. Between 2010–2019 he was the Criminal Law Commissioner for England and Wales.  

 


A close up of a video camera with a LED screen showing that it is focussed on a speaker. The speaker and crowd appear blurred in the background
Recording

This event will be recorded and the video will be uploaded to our YouTube channel.

You can subscribe to our YouTube channel to be alerted when the recording is uploaded.



Accessibility

  • The corridor outside the lecture theatre(s) is sufficiently wide enough (150cm+) to allow wheelchair users to pass.
  • There is step free access into the lecture theatre(s).
  • The door opening width(s) is/are 75cm+ for the lecture theatre(s).
  • There are designated spaces for wheelchair users within the lecture theatre(s), located at the back.
  • There is level access to the designated seating from an entrance.
  • There is space for an assistance dog.
  • There is a hearing assistance system for the lecture theatre(s).
  • There is not a visual fire alarm beacon in the lecture theatre(s).

For more accessiblity info and an access guide please visit Accessable

 

Other events in this series