Helena Ann Kennedy, Baroness Kennedy of The Shaws, LT,KC,FRSA,HonFRSE (born 12 May 1950), is a Scottish
barrister,
broadcaster, and
Labour member of the
House of Lords. She was
Principal of
Mansfield College, Oxford, from 2011 to 2018. A Bencher of Gray's Inn, an Honorary Writer to the Signet and the recipient of 42 Honorary Degrees from many universities including those of Glasgow and Edinburgh in recognition of work on women and the law and on widening participation in higher education. She is President of Justice, the law reform think tank and currently is director of the International Bar Association's Institute of Human Rights.
Early life and education
Kennedy was born on 12 May 1950 in
Glasgow, Scotland, one of the four daughters of Mary Veronica (née Jones) and Joshua Patrick.[1] Her parents were committed
Labour activists and devoutly
Roman Catholic.[2] Her father, a printer with the Daily Record, was a
trade union official.[2]
In 1972, Kennedy was called to the bar at
Gray's Inn. Among her many cases, Kennedy acted as junior counsel for child murderer
Myra Hindley during her 1974 trial for plotting to escape from
Holloway Prison.[3][4]
Politics
Kennedy rebels against her
party whip in the
House of Lords more frequently than any other Labour Peer, having a dissent rate of 33.3%.[5] She was Chair of
Charter 88 (1992–1997) and is closely affiliated to the educational charity
Common Purpose. In 2020, she worked with the Conservative MP
Iain Duncan Smith and democracy activist
Luke de Pulford to create the global pressure group
Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China.[6] In March 2021, China placed sanctions on her.[7] The sanctions were condemned by the Prime Minister and led the Foreign Secretary to summon the Chinese ambassador.[8][9]
From 1978 to 1984 she lived with the actor Iain Mitchell, and together they had a son. In 1986, Kennedy married Iain Louis Hutchison, a
surgeon, with whom she has a daughter and a son.[2]
Kennedy regularly attends Mass and professes that her Roman Catholicism "remains very much part of who I am", even though she eschews its more traditional values.[2]
Kennedy presented many
editions of this series, including the 1991 "Do Men Have To Be Violent" featuring an inebriated
Oliver Reed who verbally insulted and attempted to kiss feminist
Kate Millett, as well as the 1995 special "Ireland: Sex & Celibacy, Church & State" which included an unscheduled last-minute appearance from singer
Sinéad O'Connor.
Presenter: Raw Deal on Medical Negligence, BBC TV, 1989
Presenter: The Trial of Lady Chatterley's Lover,
BBC Radio 4, 1990
Presenter: Time Gentlemen, Please, BBC Scotland, 1994 (Winner, Television Programme Award category, 1994 Industrial Journalism Awards)
Commissioner,
BAFTA Inquiry into the future of the BBC, 1990
Kennedy chaired the
Power Commission (November 2005 – March 2006), which examined the problem of democratic disengagement in the
United Kingdom. A report was produced which highlighted the "Myth of Apathy" and the lack of political engagement
Patron of
SafeHands for Mothers, a UK-based charity whose mission is to improve maternal and newborn health by harnessing the power of the visual, through the production of films.[25]
Chair,
Howard League's Commission of Inquiry into Violence in Penal Institutions for Young People (the final report, Banged Up, Beaten Up, Cutting Up, published in 1995)
Chair,
Reading Borough Council's Commission of Inquiry into the health, environmental and safety aspects of the Atomic Weapons Establishment at
Aldermaston (final report Secrecy versus Safety, published in 1994)
Chair, Royal Colleges of Pathologists' and of Pædiatrics' Inquiry into
Sudden Infant Death (producing a protocol for the investigation of such deaths in 2004)
As Commissioner of the
National Commission for Education, she chaired a committee on widening participation in further education and the commission's report, Learning Works, published in 1997.