Housing and Justice in Wales

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Housing and Justice in Wales. / Nason, Sarah; Taylor, Helen.
In: Journal of Housing Law, Vol. 23, No. 5, 31.10.2020, p. 97-103.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Nason, S & Taylor, H 2020, 'Housing and Justice in Wales', Journal of Housing Law, vol. 23, no. 5, pp. 97-103.

APA

Nason, S., & Taylor, H. (2020). Housing and Justice in Wales. Journal of Housing Law, 23(5), 97-103.

CBE

Nason S, Taylor H. 2020. Housing and Justice in Wales. Journal of Housing Law. 23(5):97-103.

MLA

Nason, Sarah and Helen Taylor. "Housing and Justice in Wales". Journal of Housing Law. 2020, 23(5). 97-103.

VancouverVancouver

Nason S, Taylor H. Housing and Justice in Wales. Journal of Housing Law. 2020 Oct 31;23(5):97-103.

Author

Nason, Sarah ; Taylor, Helen. / Housing and Justice in Wales. In: Journal of Housing Law. 2020 ; Vol. 23, No. 5. pp. 97-103.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Housing and Justice in Wales

AU - Nason, Sarah

AU - Taylor, Helen

PY - 2020/10/31

Y1 - 2020/10/31

N2 - The Commission on Justice in Wales concluded that Welsh people are being let down by the England and Wales justice system. It found that the "jagged edged" reservation of courts, probation, prisons, etc alongside devolution of social justice responsibilities does not meet people’s needs in Wales. The Commission recommended legislative and executive devolution of responsibility for justice, accompanied by the transfer of financial resources. It also recommended that the law applicable inWales should be formally identified as the law of Wales, distinct from the law of England. Alongside the Justice Commission, our Nuffield Foundation funded research focused on administrative justice in Wales, including studying administrative law and dispute resolution in social housing and homelessness. Administrative justice concerns how bodies providing public services treat people, the correctness of their decisions, the fairness of their procedures and the opportunities people have to question and challenge decisions made about them.Here we present some conclusions and recommendations of our research concerning housing, and how these align with those of the Justice Commission.

AB - The Commission on Justice in Wales concluded that Welsh people are being let down by the England and Wales justice system. It found that the "jagged edged" reservation of courts, probation, prisons, etc alongside devolution of social justice responsibilities does not meet people’s needs in Wales. The Commission recommended legislative and executive devolution of responsibility for justice, accompanied by the transfer of financial resources. It also recommended that the law applicable inWales should be formally identified as the law of Wales, distinct from the law of England. Alongside the Justice Commission, our Nuffield Foundation funded research focused on administrative justice in Wales, including studying administrative law and dispute resolution in social housing and homelessness. Administrative justice concerns how bodies providing public services treat people, the correctness of their decisions, the fairness of their procedures and the opportunities people have to question and challenge decisions made about them.Here we present some conclusions and recommendations of our research concerning housing, and how these align with those of the Justice Commission.

M3 - Article

VL - 23

SP - 97

EP - 103

JO - Journal of Housing Law

JF - Journal of Housing Law

SN - 1368-6542

IS - 5

ER -