Bonus content: Panel discussion on 'The limits to equality — access to justice and scandal' cover art

Bonus content: Panel discussion on 'The limits to equality — access to justice and scandal'

Bonus content: Panel discussion on 'The limits to equality — access to justice and scandal'

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

In this panel discussion to accompany the second lecture of our Talk 200 series, Nazir Afzal is joined by Tom Hedges, sub-postmaster at Hogsthorpe Post Office near Skegness from 1994 until he was unjustly sacked in 2010, aged 57, after being wrongfully accused of false accounting; barrister and advocate Thalia Maragh; and Suzanne Gower, PhD researcher, lecturer in Law and former Managing Director of legal charity APPEAL.

The panel was chaired by Claire McGourlay, Professor of Legal Education at Manchester and a National and Principal Fellow of the HEA. Against the backdrop of recent injustices both in the UK and globally, including the ongoing Post Office scandal, they considered the disparities in access to justice and how we might chart a path towards fairer treatment within the legal sphere.

Find the full transcript of this episode on the Talk 200 webpage.

Further information

Find out more about:

  • The University’s research in global inequalities
  • The University of Manchester Justice Hub
  • Manchester Innocence Project
  • The Innocence Podcast series
  • Prosecuting Rap research
  • Racial Bias and the Bench report
  • Policy@Manchester article on the Westminster Commission on Miscarriages of Justice report

Find out more on our Talk 200 webpage or discover more about our wider bicentenary celebrations.

Find the full transcript for this podcast episode on the Talk 200 webpage - manchester.ac.uk/talk200

activate_mytile_page_redirect_t1

What listeners say about Bonus content: Panel discussion on 'The limits to equality — access to justice and scandal'

Average Customer Ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.

In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.