Longford Prize

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Longford Prize is an annual award presented in the United Kingdom to an organization, group, or individuals working in the field of social or penal reform. It was established in 2002 in honor of Lord Longford, a lifelong penal reform campaigner. It is sponsored by both The Independent and The Daily Telegraph, organised in association with the Prison Reform Trust, and is presented at the annual Longford Lecture.

The prize is usually awarded to someone who has made a difference by their initiative and resourcefulness in prisoners' lives. The prize is sponsored by the McGrath Charitable Trust.[1]

Nominations & Judges[]

Candidates are nominated by the testimony of peers and/or persons who have benefited from their work. These submissions are reviewed by a panel of judges, members of the Prison Reform Trust and New Bridge. The panel is chaired by former prison governor and Longford Trust trustee, John Podmore.[2]

In 2017, the judges for the Longford Prize were: Lord Ramsbotham (formerly Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Prisons), Chloe Billington, Mary Riddell, Peter Stanford, and a representative of the sponsors, The McGrath Charitable Trust.

Past winners[]

Year Recipient Note
2002 Audrey Edwards After her mentally-ill son, Christopher, was murdered in Chelmsford Prison, Edwards campaigned to improve mental health care for offenders.
2003 Barbara Tudor Awarded for her work in restorative justice
2004 Christopher Morgan and Shannon Trust Set up the Shannon Trust in 1997, which trains prisoners to teach their fellow inmates reading and writing.
2005 Steven Taylor Awarded to the Director of the Forum on Prisoner Education for promoting the rehabilitation and re-integration of prisoners into society.
2006 FPWP Hibiscus FPWP Hibiscus is a small charity, working with female foreign national prisoners. Special mentions went to Chance UK, Roma Hooper, and Lucie Russell, and Smart Justice.
2007 Prisoners Abroad Prisoners Abroad is a UK charity which supports citizens imprisoned oversea. The judges praised "its courage, persistence and humanity, over almost three decades, sometimes in the face of public and official indifference and even hostility".[3] Special mention was given to The Forgiveness Project, Joe Baden, and the Open Book Project.
2008 HMP Grendon The judges were impressed by the prison's track record in cutting reoffending and promoting the principles of rehabilitation. A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to Lucy Gampell, director of Action for Prisoners' Families
2009 Inquest Inquest is a charity that provides support on state-related deaths. The judges praised it for its "remarkable perseverance, personal commitment and courage in an area too often under-investigated by the public authorities".[4]
2010 Circles UK A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to Peter Kilgarriff.
2011 The Clink Charity A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to David Brown.
2012 Prisoners' Advice Service A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to Paul Cavadino for his work with NACRO.
2013 Prison Radio Association A Lifetime Achievement Award was made to Reverend Paul Cowley.[5][dead link]
2014 Marina Cantecuzino Awarded to Marina Cantecuzino, founder of The Forgiveness Project, for her "significant contribution to reducing reoffending as well as having a wider impact in creating a more positive commitment in our criminal justice system to restorative justice".[6][7] A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to New Horizon Youth Centre. A drop-in day center, founded by in 1968.
2015 PACT[8] The judges wrote "[g]ood research and good practice have both long shown that maintaining strong family ties is one of the key factors in offenders’ rehabilitation and avoidance of re-offending." Judges also highly commended the Thames Valley Partnership and In2Change, and made a Lifetime Achievement Award to Eric McGraw, of Inside Time.
2016 Unlock[9] and Shakespeare Trilogy[10] The Shakespeare Trilogy is an outreach scheme by Clean Break Theatre Company, York Saint John University's Prison Partnership Project and the Donmar Warehouse, developed from over four years of workshops in women's jails. The Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Juliet Lyon.[11]
2017 Safe Ground Working through dialogue, drama, and debate with serving prisoners, Safe Ground has an outstanding track record of "reaching the angry young men who commit both crimes and are the victims of crimes."[12]
2018 Haven Distribution Founded by Lee Humphries, the Haven Distribution has sent tens of thousands of books over two decades to prisoners in jails across the country.[13]
2019 Switchback They have been helping younger individuals transition back into society after leaving prison. They believe that those that can get back and transition are less likely to commit another offense.[14]
2020 N/A No prize awarded.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "The Frank Longford Charitable Trust" (PDF).{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ "What Is The Longford Prize?". Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  3. ^ "The Longford Prize". Longford Trust. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  4. ^ "The Longford Prize Winner Inquest".
  5. ^ "Longford Prize Winner: Prison Radio Association".
  6. ^ "The Longford Trust". www.longfordtrust.org. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  7. ^ "The Forgiveness Project".
  8. ^ PACT. "Prison Advice". PACT.
  9. ^ Stacey, Christopher. "Unlock wins 2016 Longford Prize". Unlock.org.uk. Unlock. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  10. ^ Hewis, Ben. "whatsonstage".
  11. ^ "Former PRT director Juliet Lyon wins lifetime achievement award".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ "Prize Winners". The Longford Trust (in American English). Retrieved 2021-08-17.
  13. ^ "Prize Winners". The Longford Trust (in American English). Retrieved 2021-08-17.
  14. ^ https://www.longfordtrust.org/the-longford-prize/

External links[]

Retrieved from ""