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A system in crisis?

14 February 2025 / Jon Robins
Issue: 8104 / Categories: Opinion , Criminal , Rule of law , Health , National Health Service , Expert Witness
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Is our criminal appeals system any more prepared to recognise an injustice than it was back in the ‘bad old days’? Jon Robins reports

It has been 25 years since the publication of Richard Nobles and David Schiff’s Understanding Miscarriages of Justice (2000) exploring ‘the pattern of repeated crisis and reform’ in our justice system. A one-day conference is being organised in May at Queen Mary University, London to mark the anniversary. Nobles and Schiff drew on analysis of media coverage of miscarriages over a ten-year period starting in 1987 as wrongful convictions unraveled. Scandals dominated headlines, fired up public outrage, and led to reforms to fix a broken justice system. 

The criminal justice system was self-evidently ‘in crisis’; but, Nobles and Schiff argued, was it? Putting to one side the book’s intimidating theoretical moorings (autopoietic systems theory, anyone?), the authors blamed journalists for their overheated coverage of miscarriages contributing to ‘episodic perceptions’ that our justice system was in crisis. They posited a miscarriage of justice ‘cycle’: sensationalistic

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NEWS
Tech companies will be legally required to prevent material that encourages or assists serious self-harm appearing on their platforms, under Online Safety Act 2023 regulations due to come into force in the autumn
Commercial leasehold, the defence of insanity and ‘consent’ in the criminal law are among the next tranche of projects for the Law Commission
The Bar has a culture of ‘impunity’ and ‘collusive bystanding’ in which making a complaint is deemed career-ending due to a ‘cohort of untouchables’ at the top, Baroness Harriet Harman KC has found
Lawyers have broadly welcomed plans to electronically tag up to 22,000 more offenders, scrap most prison terms below a year and make prisoners ‘earn’ early release
David Lammy, Ellie Reeves and Baroness Levitt have taken up office at the Ministry of Justice, following the cabinet reshuffle
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