Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform

This thesis is a socio-legal study of police and prosecutorial decision-making in the context of special measures support for child witnesses in criminal proceedings. It presents the findings of an empirical research project conducted with the Crown Prosecution Service which examined the implementat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cooper, Debbie
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11319/
_version_ 1848791248657186816
author Cooper, Debbie
author_facet Cooper, Debbie
author_sort Cooper, Debbie
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis is a socio-legal study of police and prosecutorial decision-making in the context of special measures support for child witnesses in criminal proceedings. It presents the findings of an empirical research project conducted with the Crown Prosecution Service which examined the implementation of Part II of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999. Under that Act children may be assisted to testify in criminal proceedings though any feasible combination of: video-recorded evidence; live television link; screens; communication aids; intermediaries; and giving evidence in private. Using a small-scale, primarily qualitative, study involving semi-structured interviews with Crown Prosecutors, this thesis investigates how the attitudes, beliefs, motivations and work practices of the police and prosecutors affect the provision of special measures to children. It does so in the context of a highly directive legal framework which purports to curtail prosecutorial and judicial discretion. The thesis explores the problems that child witnesses encounter within the criminal justice system and the legislative and policy response to their difficulties. It then presents the findings of the current research study in relation to, first, the video-interviewing patterns of police officers and, second, the rate of prosecutors’ applications for special measures. In addition to the statistical data, the thesis explores prosecutors’ own reflective accounts of the factors which shape police and prosecutors’ decision-making. The thesis concludes that where the rules on special measures are highly prescriptive, we have witnessed a radical expansion in their use for children, but that the rigid system has drawbacks which raise pressure for reform. Reform proposals must be carefully considered in the light of infrastructural weaknesses in inter-agency liaison and information-management identified in this thesis. We might also be wary that reform will undermine the criminal justice system’s recently consolidated cultural acceptance of special measures for child witnesses.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:25:30Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11319
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:25:30Z
publishDate 2010
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-113192025-02-28T11:12:42Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11319/ Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform Cooper, Debbie This thesis is a socio-legal study of police and prosecutorial decision-making in the context of special measures support for child witnesses in criminal proceedings. It presents the findings of an empirical research project conducted with the Crown Prosecution Service which examined the implementation of Part II of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999. Under that Act children may be assisted to testify in criminal proceedings though any feasible combination of: video-recorded evidence; live television link; screens; communication aids; intermediaries; and giving evidence in private. Using a small-scale, primarily qualitative, study involving semi-structured interviews with Crown Prosecutors, this thesis investigates how the attitudes, beliefs, motivations and work practices of the police and prosecutors affect the provision of special measures to children. It does so in the context of a highly directive legal framework which purports to curtail prosecutorial and judicial discretion. The thesis explores the problems that child witnesses encounter within the criminal justice system and the legislative and policy response to their difficulties. It then presents the findings of the current research study in relation to, first, the video-interviewing patterns of police officers and, second, the rate of prosecutors’ applications for special measures. In addition to the statistical data, the thesis explores prosecutors’ own reflective accounts of the factors which shape police and prosecutors’ decision-making. The thesis concludes that where the rules on special measures are highly prescriptive, we have witnessed a radical expansion in their use for children, but that the rigid system has drawbacks which raise pressure for reform. Reform proposals must be carefully considered in the light of infrastructural weaknesses in inter-agency liaison and information-management identified in this thesis. We might also be wary that reform will undermine the criminal justice system’s recently consolidated cultural acceptance of special measures for child witnesses. 2010-07-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11319/1/DC_Complete_Thesis.pdf Cooper, Debbie (2010) Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. child witnesses criminal procedure reform britain uk england witness
spellingShingle child witnesses
criminal procedure reform
britain
uk
england
witness
Cooper, Debbie
Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title_full Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title_fullStr Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title_full_unstemmed Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title_short Special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
title_sort special measures for child witnesses: a socio-legal study of criminal procedure reform
topic child witnesses
criminal procedure reform
britain
uk
england
witness
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11319/