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Updated: 14-Jan-2010

Directory of experts

Professor Susan Edwards Susan Edwards

Job title: Dean of Law; Professor of Law; Co-Director of the Centre for Multi-Cultural Studies in Law and the Family

Department: Law

Areas of expertise:

  • criminal law
  • child law
  • gender, policing and sex
  • international women's human rights

Further details: Susan Edwards is a researcher and campaigner, with degrees in both law and social sciences, and a barrister. She has been actively involved in legal issues affecting women for many years. She is author of four books, an edited collection and co-author of a textbook, and has written opinion pages on the law for The Times, The Guardian and The Age (Australia). She:

  • is a Door Tenant, Clarendon Chambers, Temple, London.
  • is an expert witness and an individual member of the Expert Witness Institute (EWI) and has provided expert reports on the effects of domestic violence in both family and criminal proceedings.
  • is a practising barrister in crime, family and civil.
  • is a member of the Bar Human Rights Group.
  • is a prison visitor.
  • is on the Editorial Board of three journals and Editor of the Denning Law Journal.
  • was formerly Adviser on Domestic Violence for the Council of Europe (2003).
  • was formerly Adviser, consultant and trainer for the Bulgarian Gender Research Foundation (2003).
  • was formerly Consultant on Expert Witnesses for the Crown Prosecution Service (2002).
  • was formerly Project Developer for the Home Office as part of their Violence Against Women Initiative 2000.
  • was responsible for shaping directions in Home Office funding for projects under the Violence Against Women Initiative (www.homeoffice.gov uk - external link).
  • was Director of Research for the Pornography and Violence Research Trust (1992-2002).
  • was on the Management Committee of CAST (an organisation for education and training of ex-offenders, 1992-).
  • has conducted research for Hammersmith and Fulham Council (1997 and 2002).
  • has conducted research for Barnardos (1998).
  • has been a Visiting Fellow at the Law School Australian National University (2000).
  • was Consultant to the Metropolitan Police on Domestic Violence (1991-93, 1984).
  • received research grants from Nuffield -1987 / Police Foundation - 1988 / Home Office Police Research Awards Scheme - 1989 / Safer Cities Home Office - 1991 / Pornography and Violence Research Trust - 1992-2002.
  • was awarded a PhD from the University of Manchester in 1979. Her thesis explored the development of the Law of Rape.
  • published her first book Female Sexuality and the Law' (Oxford: Martin Robertson, Law in Society Series, 1981).

Her last sole-authored book was Sex and Gender in the Legal Process (1996) and she is currently writing on gender, ethnicity, human rights and the criminal law. Recent publications include:

  • "Justice Devlin's legacy: Duffy - a battered woman 'caught' in time", Criminal Law Review 2009.12, 851-869.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (21 December 2009)
  • "Child protection: trapped in the middle of the edge", Family Law 39 (March 2009), 220-225.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (March 2009)
  • "The self-incrimination privilege in care proceedings and the criminal trial and 'shall not be admissible in evidence' ", Journal of Criminal Law (2009) 73 JCL 48-68.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (February 2009)
  • "A gap in the ring fence?", New Law Journal 158, Issue 7303 (11 January 2008), 51-54.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (February 2008)
  • "Shenfield, Barbara", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online, January 2008.
    Read more about this in our news article: "A woman of indomitable spirit"
  • "Descent into murder - provocation's stricture - the prognosis for women who kill men who abuse them", Journal of Criminal Law 71.4 (August 2007), 342-361.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (August 2007)
  • "Imagining Islam … of meaning and metaphor symbolising the jilbab - R (Begum) v Headteacher and Governors of Denbigh High School", Child & Family Law Quarterly 19.2 (June 2007), 247-268.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (July 2007)
  • "Disclosure: sacrificing the privilege of self-incrimination for the greater good of child protection?", Family Law 37 (2007), 510-516.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (June 2007)
  • Family law (with Mary Welstead), Oxford University Press Core Texts Series, March 2006. 2nd ed. 2008.
    Read more about this article in our Publication of the week section (July 2008)
  • Sealing one’s own fate - disclosure of documents in care proceedings - on the trail to the abrogation of a fair trial. Child and Family Law Quarterly 16.2, April 2005.
  • "Kicked, beaten, jumped on until they are crushed," all under man's wing and protection: the Victorian dilemma with domestic violence.  Criminal Conversations, ed. J. Rowbotham & K. Stevenson (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2005), pp.247-266.
  • Division of assets and fairness - "Brick Lane" - gender, culture and ancillary relief on divorce. Family Law , November 2004, pp. 809 -814.
  • Abolishing provocation and reframing self-defence - the Law Commission’s options for reform . The Criminal Law Review, March 2004, pp. 181-197 .
    (full text (105 KB) - this article was first published in the March 2004 issue of Criminal Law Review , published by Sweet & Maxwell.)
  • Injustice that puts a low price on a woman's life. The Times , Tuesday 2nd September 2003.
  • Perjury and perverting the course of justice considered. The Criminal Law Review, August 2003, pp. 525-540 .
    (full text (180 KB) - this article was first published in the August 2003 issue of Criminal Law Review , published by Sweet & Maxwell.)
  • Absolution - the power of parole. The Times , Tuesday 24th June 2003.
  • Discourses of denial and moral panics: the pornographisation of the child in art, the written word, film and photograph. Behaving Badly. Social Panic and Moral Outrage - Victorian and Modern Parallels , ed. J. Rowbotham & K. Stevenson (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2003), pp. 177-191.

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More information about Professor Edwards can be found on the Law Department staff page

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