The usual suspects second edition
The Usual Suspects uses national data to assess the use of joint enterprise laws in prosecutions for serious violence in England and Wales over the last fifteen years.
The Usual Suspects uses national data to assess the use of joint enterprise laws in prosecutions for serious violence in England and Wales over the last fifteen years.
The Usual Suspects uses national data to assess the use of joint enterprise laws in prosecutions for serious violence in England and Wales over the last fifteen years.
Joint enterprise refers to the principles governing how more than one person can be held responsible for the same crime relating to a single incident.
We tend to think that prisons are there forever.
Today we launched our new interactive map of prisons in England and Wales.
We are delighted to publish our interactive map of prisons in England and Wales.
Last March, I wrote that when we come out of the pandemic, things should not go back to business as usual.
Last week our reseach analyst Matt Ford attended the campaign organisation JENGbA's demonstration against the joint enterprise doctrine in Parliament Square.
Earlier this year the Centre published a paper, Coal today, gone tomorrow, by colleagues from the Universities of Sheffield and Derby.
Up to 15 March, there have now been 15,472 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in prisons, and 130 COVID-related deaths (105 confirmed or suspected to be due to COVID).
Since my last update in December, HMPPS have released another two weeks worth of data on infection levels in prisons in England and Wales.
Here’s another update on the second wave of the pandemic in prisons as the Ministry of Justice have switched back to releasing weekly data.