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The Judges
Profiles
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Baroness Helena Kennedy |
Helena Kennedy QC has spent her professional life giving
voice to those who have least power within the system, championing
civil liberties and promoting human rights. She has used
many public platforms – including the House of Lords,
to which she was elevated in 1997 – to argue with passion,
wit and humanity for social justice. She has also written
and broadcast on a wide range of issues, from medical negligence
to the rights of women and children. From 1992 to 1997, she
was chair of Charter 88, the constitutional reform group,
which persuaded the new Labour government to make devolution
and human rights legislation central planks of their manifesto.
She is also on the board of the Independent newspaper.
She is currently chairing an inquiry for the Royal College
of Pathologists and the Royal College of Paediatrics and
Child Health into sudden infant death, in the aftermath of
miscarriages of justice where mothers were wrongly convicted
of murdering their babies.
She is currently chair of the Human Genetics Commission,
which advises the UK government on the ethical, social and
legal issues arising from developments in genetic science.
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| Diana
Athill |
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Diana Athill was born in Norfolk in 1917 and educated at
home until she was fourteen. She read English at Lady Margaret
Hall, Oxford and graduated in 1939. She spent the war years
working at the BBC Overseas Service in the News Information
Department. After the war she met André Deutsch and
fell into publishing. She worked as an editor, first at Allan
Wingate and then at André Deutsch, until her retirement
at the age of 75 in 1993.
Her books include An Unavoidable Delay, a collection
of short stories published in 1962 and two 'documentary'
books; After A Funeral and Make Believe. Stet is
a memoir of Diana Athill's fifty-year career in publishing.
Granta has also reissued a memoir Instead of a Letter and
her only novel Don't Look at Me Like That. She lives
in Primrose Hill in London.
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Dr
Jim Al-Khalili |
Dr Jim Al-Khalili is a professor of physics at the University
of Surrey where he also holds a chair in the Public Engagement
in Science. Jim’s main research interests have been
in theoretical nuclear physics where he has published widely
on the structure and properties of rare and exotic forms
of atomic nuclei. He has written several popular science
books including Black Holes, Wormholes and Time Machines and Quantum:
A Guide for the Perplexed, which have between them been
translated into 13 languages. He is a regular contributor
to radio and television programmes on a range of scientific
topics and will be presenting a forthcoming BBC documentary
series on atoms. He is a trustee of the British Association
for the Advancement of Science and member of its council
and a fellow of the Institute of Physics and the Royal Astronomical
Society. His portrait hangs in the National Gallery as part
of the “21 faces of British science” exhibit.
He lives in Southsea in Hampshire with his wife and two teenage
children.
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| Dr
Tristram Hunt |
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Dr Tristram Hunt is a journalist and author and is one of
Britain’s leading young historians specialising in
Victorian urban history. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge
and the University of Chicago, he is the author of numerous
books including Building Jerusalem: The Rise and Fall
of the Victorian City. In addition, Tristram has worked
extensively to generate a broader public interest in heritage
through his articles in The Times, The Observer, The
New Statesman and specialist journals. He has written
and presented a number of radio and TV series including Civil
War (BBC2), Isaac Newton: Great Briton (BBC2)
and Past Presence (Radio 4) and is currently working
on a new project for Channel 4.
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Mark
Lawson |
Mark Lawson is a journalist, broadcaster and author. He
presents BBC Radio 4's arts magazine Front Row. He
has been a freelance contributor to numerous publications
since 1984 and a Guardian columnist since 1995.
In the mid-90s he presented The Late Show on BBC2
and from 1994 presented Late Review. He has twice
been voted TV critic of the Year and has won numerous awards
for arts journalism.
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