Artist Nnena Kalu has been announced as the winner of this years Turner Prize, the UK’s most prestigious art award. Her sculptures and drawings, featuring intricate tornado-like shapes and bright colours, earned her the Prize’s recognition, making history as the first artist with a learning disability to be awarded first place. Kalu is a 52…
On the 3rd of December 2025, the government announced a set of reforms that, if properly enacted, will make trials a safer, fairer space for rape victims, and help them access the justice that is their due. Working in partnership with multiple charities, feminist organisations, and experts, the reforms will target the atmosphere in a…
The second annual conference on Gender Justice and Intersectional Practice took place this Wednesday on the 3rd of December in Ipswich. It was organised by domestic violence charity P.H.O.E.B.E, formerly known as the Zimbabwe Women’s Resource Centre, and had around 200 attendees. The conference welcomed speakers presenting both academic research alongside advice on the support…
Poverty in the United Kingdom is often reduced to statistics and headlines, yet behind every number sits a person navigating fragility, rising costs, and decisions that would test any of us. Our conversation with Judith Moran, director of Quaker Social Action, opens a clearer view: poverty as insufficient resources to meet minimum needs, including social…
A new report published on the second of December by the BBC shows evidence of a prison system in crisis, with alarming numbers of staff left with no choice but to take mental health leave. With evidence procured by an FOI request to HMPPS workforce, alongside statistics pulled from their quarterly reports, the BBC has…
Justice often feels distant until it brushes our lives, yet it quietly structures every choice the courts make, and every hour the people inside them endure. This conversation with criminal defence barrister Kate Kelleher and CBA communications lead James Rosseter pulls the curtain on a profession that balances solemn duty with shrinking margins. They describe…
The government’s Sentencing Bill, currently progressing through Parliament, proposes reducing prison sentences for “good behaviour.” On the surface, this sounds like a progressive reform, rewarding rehabilitation and incentivising positive conduct. In reality, without rigorous safeguards, training, and oversight, it risks embedding corruption, inequality, and arbitrariness deep into the prison system. Under the proposals, offender managers…
The View Magazine Launches Issue 16 Focused on Solidarity Through Creativity London, UK–22 December 2025, The View Magazine, the award-winning independent platform dedicated to amplifying the voices of women impacted by the criminal justice system, announces the release of Issue 16, a 120+ page winter edition examining systemic failures in medical care for women…
The ongoing trials of Palestinian Action campaigners raise serious concerns about the treatment of peaceful protesters, the narrowing of the right to protest, and the unequal power dynamics between the state and young women who dare to dissent. Many of those facing prosecution are young women with no previous conviction; students training to become lawyers,…
On 4 December 2025, the government announced that Wes Streeting is launching an independent review into the rising demand for mental health, autism and ADHD services, a move officially presented as a necessary measure to ensure “timely access to accurate diagnosis and effective support.” But for many campaigners, disabled people and families, the real fear…