Groundbreaking centre set to improve law and lives through community-led research
Published: 10 April 2025
UofG's GO Justice Centre is a key partner in an innovative new research centre aimed at responding to the public’s need and desire for fairer, safer and more inclusive societies.
The University of Glasgow’s GO Justice Centre is a key partner in an innovative new research centre led by the University of Liverpool, aimed at responding to the public’s need and desire for fairer, safer and more inclusive societies.
The Centre for People’s Justice (CPJ) is a coalition of 45 organisations from community, business, philanthropic, cultural, artistic, charitable, legal, government and university sectors. It will work across the UK in partnership with the Universities of Glasgow, Liverpool, Sheffield, Swansea, Wrexham, Ulster and the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies London.
The CPJ includes a £4.1million investment by the UKRI Arts and Humanities Research Council, the largest grant it has ever awarded to a Law School.
Leading the Glasgow team are Professor Nicole Busby, Glasgow Convenor and Equality, Diversity and Inclusion Lead, and Professor Jacqueline Kinghan, Nicole Marshall and Cameron-Wong McDermott who will head up the CPJ’s work on clinical legal education.
The Glasgow Open (GO) Justice Centre, based in the School of Law, undertakes a range of activities to empower communities and individuals to use the law to access justice and achieve social and economic inclusion and is home to the Emma Ritch Law Clinic which provides independent legal representation to complainers in sexual violence cases.
Go Justice’s Professor Jacqueline Kinghan, Cameron Wong-McDermott and Nicole Marshall, said: "We are excited to work with such a diverse range of partners and institutions in the Centre for People's Justice. Our work in the Centre will help build capacity for law school clinics, both in the UK and internationally, to develop creative networks to mobilise the law and improve access to justice.”
Professor Nicole Busby, Glasgow University Convenor, added: “I am delighted that our GO Justice Centre will be at the heart of this exciting and innovative approach to using arts and humanities research to respond to some of the most pressing challenges presented for all of those who use and engage with law and legal processes”.
Collaborating with Scottish organisations Creative Lives, Legal Services Agency and Scottish Women’s Aid, the CPJ will develop a creative programme of research and training aimed at connecting the public more closely with the ways in which the law is made, improving accountability for how the law is put into practice, and enhancing people’s understanding of their legal rights.
The Centre will take a grassroots approach, empowering communities to prioritise and co-produce research that responds to some of the most pressing social and legal issues including food insecurity, low-waged work, tackling violence and conflict and children’s rights. For example, an initial project, ‘The Brown Envelope Project’, will focus on the way in which the public understand and respond to official correspondence from the authorities.
Everyday law and legal processes are often experienced by the public as a letter delivered in a brown envelope through their front door, for example about an unpaid energy bill, benefits information, or a parking fine. The charity, Citizens Advice, have highlighted how such letters can invoke fear, confusion and distress, particularly for those with literacy, language, health difficulties, or those under severe financial pressure. It can mean people avoid engaging with the problem, which leads to further difficulties and money being spent on administration costs that could be better directed elsewhere.
The research will find out about how people respond to ‘brown envelope’ letters. It will involve the public in designing solutions in which information is clearer, more effective and can better support people to address problems, working with government offices and energy companies to identify how these public recommendations could be implemented.
Parveen Bird, Director at the Big Issue said: “The Big Issue has been around for 33 years now, and we have grown by listening to the real-life needs and experiences of our homeless vendors. That’s why we’re excited about our involvement with the Centre for People’s Justice. It represents the first time that The Big Issue has ever been invited to be a university research partner and is a unique opportunity to build a new and structured way for homeless and other excluded people to be involved in creating knowledge through research.”
The Centre’s university partners are already home to some of the UK’s leading law clinics, where lawyers work with students to provide free legal advice, information and representation to many thousands of people on issues ranging from sexual violence, special educational needs and disabilities, asylum and immigration, housing and employment rights.
The Centre for People’s Justice will support creative innovation in legal practice and education across these clinics with a view to nurturing the next generation of justice practitioners.
AHRC Executive Chair Professor Christopher Smith said: “Our commitment to research in and innovation arising from the study of law and justice illustrates our belief in the potential of arts and humanities research to improve the lives of everyone across the UK and represents the growing importance and excellence of sociolegal research across the UK, which is of world class quality.
"Our legal system is and has been for centuries fundamental to a resilient and secure society. It is essential that access to justice is available to all, a principle enshrined already in Magna Carta. That's why this Centre's work is so important, and we look forward to its concrete and significant policy recommendations."
First published: 10 April 2025