The Assize Seminars provide a space for cutting-edge academic work to play a practical role in understanding and developing the law. They are a chance to challenge, debate and refine criminal justice, providing a bridge from academia to criminal legal practice. Just like the Assize of old, the seminars are peripatetic. <br><br>The third Assize seminar took place in Cambridge on 27 April 2018. This session was entitled "Difficulties in Getting Into the Court of Appeal Following a Change in Law", featuring: <br><br>- Speaker: Francis FitzGibbon QC, Doughty Street Chambers<br><br>For more information see the CCCJ website at: <br><br>https://www.cccj.law.cam.ac.uk/assize-seminars
The Assize Seminars provide a space for cutting-edge academic work to play a practical role in understanding and developing the law. They are a chance to challenge, debate and refine criminal justice, providing a bridge from academia to criminal legal practice. Just like the Assize of old, the seminars are peripatetic. <br><br>The third Assize seminar took place in Cambridge on 27 April 2018. This session was entitled "Disclosure", featuring: <br><br>- Speaker: Professor Ian Dennis, University College London<br>- Commentator: Alex Chalk MP<br><br>For more information see the CCCJ website at: <br><br>https://www.cccj.law.cam.ac.uk/assize-seminars
The Assize Seminars provide a space for cutting-edge academic work to play a practical role in understanding and developing the law. They are a chance to challenge, debate and refine criminal justice, providing a bridge from academia to criminal legal practice. Just like the Assize of old, the seminars are peripatetic.<br><br>The third Assize seminar took place in Cambridge on 27 April 2018. This session was entitled "What is a Sentence?", featuring:<br><br>- Speaker: Professor Nicola Padfield QC (Hon), University of Cambridge<br>- Commentator: Professor Andrew Ashworth QC (Hon), University of Oxford<br><br>For more information see the CCCJ website at:<br><br>https://www.cccj.law.cam.ac.uk/assize-seminars
Professor Jonathan Jacobs is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Institute of Criminal Justice Ethics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York City, whose publications include: Choosing Character: Responsibility for Virtue and Vice (2001) and the Routledge Handbook of Criminal Justice Ethics (co-edited with Jonathan Jackson, 2017). Professor Jacobs spoke at the Institute of Criminology on 29 November 2017.
Professor Dr Jennifer Ann Drobac of Indiana University (Visiting Fellow, Clare Hall) was a guest at a joint CCCJ/Cambridge Socio-legal Group event on 2 February 2017.
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