This conference sees the formal launch of the Open University’s Harm and Evidence Research Collaborative (HERC). HERC’s research can be summarised as “evidencing harm and harmful evidence” which encompasses a range of areas such as the use of evidence in the criminal justice system and the harmful practices of public and private institutions. The notion of harm is increasingly central to new initiatives in policy and practice. However, policy-makers and practitioners fail to regard their own institutional practices as harmful to health and wellbeing and fail to recognise that institutional neglect can severely impact on people’s life chances.
This conference brings together a range of HERC members and guest speakers all drawing on different areas – drugs, homelessness, vagrancy, sexual violence, harms against LGBT communities, miscarriages of justice, crimes of the powerful and youth justice – to engage critically with notions of harm and evidence. Tackling key issues about how harm is used problematically in social policy and the criminal justice system, speakers will also demonstrate how evidence is used harmfully against diverse constituencies.
Confirmed participants include:
Duncan Banks, Avi Boukli, Vickie Cooper, Lynne Copson, Saqib Deshmukh (Justice for Habib ‘Paps’ Ullah), Julia Downes, Ross Fergusson, Maya Goodfellow, Sarah Lamble Dan McCulloch, James Mehigan (Hillsborough), David Nutt, Jo Phoenix, Graham Pike, Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, Steve Tombs, Louise Westmarland, Richard Whittell (Corporate Watch), Chris Williams.
This is a FREE event but registration is required.
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