2016
DOI: 10.1017/s1744552316000057
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Taken lives matter: open justice and recognition in inquests into deaths at the hands of the state

Abstract: Lord Neuberger describes open justice as a procedural principle requiring that ‘what goes on in court and what a court decides is open to scrutiny’ (Neuberger, 2011). The prime rationale given for this principle is that it is a safety check on procedural fairness. Such a conception of open justice applies on only a superficial level in inquests into use-of-force deaths at the hands of the state. This paper examines the practice of, and rationales behind, opening up use-of-force deaths at the hands of the state… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In this light, facts are not purely and absolutely outside the epistemological framework of the inquisitorial legal investigation (Foucault, 2019;McIntosh, 2016). The Coroner's Court produces knowledge of a social death -a death that belongs in the social and for society to respond to (Fenwick, 1984).…”
Section: Deaths In Uk Police Custody: Coroner's Courts and Inquestsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this light, facts are not purely and absolutely outside the epistemological framework of the inquisitorial legal investigation (Foucault, 2019;McIntosh, 2016). The Coroner's Court produces knowledge of a social death -a death that belongs in the social and for society to respond to (Fenwick, 1984).…”
Section: Deaths In Uk Police Custody: Coroner's Courts and Inquestsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There has also been some examination of the importance of open justice, especially where death has occurred at the hands of the state, or in custody (McIntosh, 2016). This is a principle which is generally acknowledged by the Chief Coroner who issued guidance on what information should be made available before an inquest is held.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Much of the existing research surrounding deaths in custody in North America and the UK has examined the official discourses found in institutional responses such as coroner's inquests or inquiries (Blue, 2017;Goldson, 2006;Mcintosh, 2016;Pemberton, 2008;Razack, 2015;Scraton & Chadwick, 1986;Scraton, 2002;) 3 , with some exceptions looking at the media coverage of these incidents (Ring, 2014;Wasserman, 2013, Bromwich, 2015Crepault & Kilty, 2017). 4 Much of this research has focused on deaths that have occurred while in police custody (Scraton & Chadwick, 1986;Razack, 2015;Pemberton, 2008;Blue, 2017), with some literature focused on deaths that have occurred in a jail or prison (Ring, 2014;Wasserman, 2013, Bromwich, 2015Crepault & Kilty, 2017).…”
Section: Deaths In Custodymentioning
confidence: 99%