Everyday Challenges to the Rule of Law: The Case of Civil/Criminal Procedural Hybrids

Lead Research Organisation: University of Leeds
Department Name: Law

Abstract

Rules of legal procedure determine the steps to be taken and standards to be met in the resolution of issues coming before the law. Due to their different purposes - criminal law being to punish, civil law to compensate - civil and criminal processes have traditionally been distinguishable in several ways, for example, in how they conceptualise harm, in the investigatory powers available to the state, in the role taken by a prosecution authority, and in the standards of evidence to be met.

In practice this means that, while 'civil' processes operate under lesser burdens, processes designated as 'criminal' attract for the accused enhanced procedural protections as additional commitments. Importantly, it is the legal system that imposes these standards and requirements on itself, in accordance with the rule of law. The rule of law is a principle of governance comprising those foundational values that ought to be reflected in the legal system, thus establishing the minimum standards of fairness to be upheld. The additional safeguards within the criminal process protect the rights of the accused and ensure against the potential misuse of State authority.

Civil/criminal procedural hybrids, which are blended processes that employ mechanisms normally associated with the other, serve to blur the lines between the civil law and the criminal law. This is the case both in terms of their stated purposes - compensation or punishment - and in terms of the processes to be followed and standards to be met. Such low-level hybrid procedures regulate some of the most commonplace interactions between the legal system and the public, and are deserving of greater scrutiny. Considering that such line-blurring can have the result of effectively removing those additional commitments attaching to criminal processes, it has real implications in terms of the legal system's compliance with the rule of law.

Legislation introducing such hybridised procedures into UK law has become increasingly common, which begs the question as to why. What are the underlying policy reasons for the use of procedural hybrids - known alternatively as civil penalties, punitive sanctions, and quasi-criminal measures - and why are they becoming more commonplace? In the event that these reasons track important policy goals, are these goals so important that the potential rule of law concerns can be overlooked?

In addressing these questions, this theoretical and comparative investigation employs three case studies, namely civil recovery, domestic violence protection, and 'crimmigration'. These procedural hybrids have been selected to include within the study a wide range of different forms, practices, and motivations.

This research builds upon important groundwork I have done in this area and draws specific attention to the long overlooked 'rules of the proceedings' that govern the application of the substantive law. The focus of this study has been refined in consultation with stakeholders in the form of project partner Liberty and with the Advisory Board, comprising leading academics and experts from practice. It will have a transformative impact by influencing how, when and why such civil/criminal procedural hybrids are employed in the future. Outputs will target several audiences: academic, practitioner, and activist.

The main outputs of this Fellowship will be:
- Three sole-authored articles in high quality periodicals (Open Access)
- Presentations at national and international conferences
- Lectures to practitioners, stakeholders and potential beneficiaries
- A dedicated ECR/PGR workshop, including mentoring
- An end-of-project flagship conference
- An augmented international profile as a research leader in this field
- New collaborative international networks, both academic and stakeholder
- An application for further UKRI funding (large-scale)
- An edited collection (to be completed outwith the project's timeframe)

Planned Impact

This research has the core aim of creating impact by contributing to policy developments and law reform both nationally and internationally, and by generating positive change through broad stakeholder engagement. Research findings will be of interest to practitioners, activists, policymakers and those engaged in law reform within the specific fields of civil recovery, domestic violence protection, and immigration and hostile environment. They will also be of interest to those concerned with the use of preventive sanctions and civil preventive orders more generally.

Relevant stakeholders include, although are not limited to:
- the Home Office;
- Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI), an independent charity promoting justice, fairness and equality for the UK's immigration and asylum law and policy;
- Joint Security and Resilience Centre (JSaRC), a unit inside the Office for Security and Counter Terrorism (OSCT) within the Home Office;
- All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on the Rule of Law;
- Civil Procedure Rules Committee;
- Criminal Procedure Rules Committee;
- JUSTICE, an all-party law reform and human rights organisation working to strengthen the justice system - administrative, civil, family and criminal - in the UK (the Director of Justice, Andrea Coomber, is an affiliate member of the Centre for Law & Social Justice (L&SJ));
- Supporting Justice, a community interest company specialising in issues affecting victims, witnesses and their needs;
- Liberty, the UK National Council for Civil Liberties;
- the National Crime Agency;
- Migrants' Rights Network (MRN), a migrant rights campaigning organisation.

Key issues to be investigated have been selected and refined in consultation with both the project partner Liberty and the Advisory Board, composed of leading academics in legal theory, criminal law, civil/criminal procedure, and human rights experts drawn from practice. Briefing papers will be produced for dissemination by Advisory Board members and the project partner, providing convenient summaries of research findings and outlining potential applications. All members of the Advisory Board will disseminate the research findings from this Fellowship via their networks. Specific knowledge exchange events will also be held throughout the duration of the Fellowship, including the academic placement at the Law Commission, public lectures supported by Liberty, and the ECR/PGR and flagship conferences at the University of Leeds School of Law.

By critically comparing the motivations behind and the justifications given for the use of civil/criminal hybrid procedures, along with considerations of historical, political, social, and ideological context, I will produce research outputs that make original, significant, and rigorous contributions to our understanding of these processes.

Through its analysis of these hybridised procedures, this research will:
- provide a theoretically-informed, contextualised and comprehensive academic study of their use, aims, justification, and reception;
- stimulate greater public awareness of such legal techniques, and the arguable problems with them;
- influence public policy by outlining how hybrid procedures could be designed to be rule of law compliant, and promoting reliance upon these alternative procedures;
- ensure that considerations of human rights and civil liberties are situated at the very centre of debates concerning the (continued) use of procedural hybrids;
- provide expert knowledge on procedural hybrids to other jurisdictions interested in employing such legal techniques.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description This research has explored the increased UK governmental reliance upon two-step procedures to target and (pre-emptively) combat 'undesirable' behaviour. It investigated the circumstances under which such procedures are used, noting the legislative increase in their use and the specific behaviour targeted by them: knife crime, domestic abuse, football-related disorder, homelessness, public protest... This concerted research focus has identified a consistent and deliberate use of hybrid civil/criminal procedures against populations seen as undesirable or dangerous - these 'usual suspects' are identified, targeted, 'warned' via the order, and then fast-tracked into criminalisation without any of the procedural protections of the criminal law coming into play. It has highlighted this practice as a contemporary legislative preference in the UK and a serious threat to civil liberties and due process.
Exploitation Route Hybrid procedures such as the Knife Crime Prevention Order, upon which my research has largely focused, are on the rise in other jurisdictions as well. There is clear scaleable potential in my published work, largely due to its theoretical and conceptual basis and its relevance to scholars working on responsive regulation and 'enemy criminal law'.

There is further applicability across different procedural hybrids within the UK, notably the Domestic Abuse Prevention Order (DAPO), the Public Space Protection Order (PSPO), and the Serious Disruption Prevention Order (SDPO), which may yet feature in the yet-further amended Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill 2022; indeed, any order that employs such a two-step approach to interrupt anti-social behaviour.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Government, Democracy and Justice

 
Description My findings have been relied upon by civil liberties charity and NGO Liberty, the project partner, to inform their ongoing campaigns, notably the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill (and amendments) currently progressing through Parliament. My findings have also been used by law reform organisation JUSTICE in determining the contours of their Working party on the issue of civil orders with criminal consequences.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Societal

 
Description Modern Law Review Seminar Competition
Amount £5,000 (GBP)
Organisation Modern Law Review 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2021 
End 04/2021
 
Description WRoCAH funded Collaborative Doctoral Award
Amount £89,000 (GBP)
Organisation White Rose College of Arts and Humanities 
Sector Academic/University
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2022 
End 01/2026
 
Description Assize Seminar, Cambridge University 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact With my co-author Professor Colin King (Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London), I presented research on the topic 'Civil Recovery as a Pragmatic Response to Serious Crime?' at the Assize Seminars on Cutting Edge Criminal Law, Cambridge University, on May 13, 2022. This presentation was of work undertaken for our forthcoming Oxford University Press (OUP) monograph, entitled Civil Recovery of Criminal Property.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
 
Description Legal Lifelines 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Discussions with Michael Herford, the director of Legal Lifelines, a pioneering law practice specialising in criminal law, and also director of the National Diverse Student Network (www.ndsn.co.uk). Michael saw the recording of the 23ES keynote lecture and contacted me about writing an article for his website, which I have still to do, and also about potentially speaking at events being run by both of his organisations.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021,2022
URL https://legallifelines.co.uk/
 
Description Member, JUSTICE Working Party on Hybrid Orders 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Policymakers/politicians
Results and Impact I have been a member of the JUSTICE Working Party (WP) on Hybrid Orders since it commenced in June 2022, and Chair of Sub-Group 1 on the effectiveness of hybrid orders. The work of this WP is currently ongoing and expected to be completed by summer 2023, when it will publish its Report.

The WP Rapporteur, Andrea Fraser, and I have reached the late stages of preparation of a proposal to Bristol University Press to write a trade book on the topic of hybrid orders, envisaged as being a vehicle for public engagement while retaining academic quality. This proposal will be submitted in spring 2023.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022,2023
URL https://justice.org.uk/our-work/system-wide-reform/hybrid-orders/
 
Description Tell Studio 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I was contacted by local documentary makers who are undertaking scoping work on a documentary on knife crime and bladed violence. They had come across my published academic articles and emailed about meeting. We had a lengthy discussion about the legal and social aspects of Knife Crime Prevention Orders and the particular way that they operate - they found the information very useful and will be in touch with any further queries as their project progresses.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://tell.studio/
 
Description Visiting Professor, University of New South Wales (UNSW) Faculty of Law & Justice (Centre for Crime, Law, and Justice), Sydney, Australia 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact In September 2023 I undertook a brief research visit to Sydney, Australia, where I visited three different institutions (UNSW, University of Sydney, and University Technology Sydney) in my capacity as Visiting Professor at the Law Faculty, UNSW. I went to UNSW to build stronger networked connections with academics in Sydney, specifically Professor Luke McNamara (then-Centre Director and my host) and Associate Professor Julia Quilter (University of Wollongong), who are experts in issues of criminalisation and who are investigating preventive orders in the Australian context.

I presented my own research on Knife Crime Prevention Orders (KCPOs) and had the pleasure of attending several events at UNSW, predominantly criminological and criminal justice research. I also met with several scholars in other Sydney institutions, notably Professor Wojciech Sadurski, who is an expert on populism, and Josh Pallas, who is the Chair of the Australian Civil Liberties Council.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://www.cclj.unsw.edu.au/event/cclj-seminar-presented-professor-jennifer-hendry-%E2%80%98usual-s...