Faculty of Law

Andrew Ashworth Public Lecture

Date: 8 March 2012 Time: 5.30 pm
Venue: GBLT1
"Negotiating the Fundamental Right to Personal Liberty: Four Problem Cases" - New Zealand Law Foundation Distinguished Visiting Fellow Professor Andrew Ashworth

This lecture will discuss the fundamental right to liberty of the person, looking at ways in which this basic individual right has been interpreted and negotiated by courts, so as to apply to situations involving police stops, house arrest, and the detention of ‘dangerous’ people. When is a deprivation of liberty arbitrary, and when is it justifiable?

ANDREW ASHWORTH is Vinerian Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford, a post he has held since 1997. He is also a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and a member of the Centre for Criminology.

Previously he was the Edmund-Davies Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice at King’s College London (1988-1997), Fellow and Tutor in Law at Worcester College Oxford (1978- 1988), and Lecturer then Senior Lecturer at the University of Manchester (1970-1978).

In 1980 he was appointed a member of the Criminal Law Revision Committee, which was abolished in 1985. From 1989-1992 he served as Chairman of the Select Committee of Experts on Sentencing at the Council of Europe. In 1999 he was appointed as a member of the Sentencing Advisory Panel, and he became the Panel’s chairman in 2007.

Professor Ashworth has been a Fellow of the British Academy since 1993, was appointed honorary QC in 1997, and was awarded a CBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in 2009.

His books include Principles of Criminal Law (6th ed., 2009), The Criminal Process (4th ed. with Mike Redmayne, 2010), Sentencing and Criminal Justice (5th ed., 2010), and Human Rights and Criminal Justice (3rd ed. forthcoming 2012, with Ben Emmerson QC and Alison Macdonald).

At present he is the co-holder (with Professor Lucia Zedner) of a large grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, for a three-year study of the justifications for using coercion for preventive purposes, looking at a whole range of preventive laws from the criminal law to quarantine, from civil preventive orders to the indeterminate detention of ‘dangerous’ offenders. His main teaching subject is European human rights law,  which he teaches to undergraduates, to BCL students, and to students on the MSc in Criminology.