Skip to main content
Home
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our Work
    • People
    • Contact us
  • Programmes
    • Courts
      • Courts Programme Synopsis
    • Civil Justice
      • ECJS Programme Synopsis
    • Regulation
      • Regulation Programme Synopsis
    • Constitutions
      • Constitutions Programme Synopsis
      • Constitutions Programme Synopsis
    • Contemporary
    • Past Programmes
      • Past
      • Rule of Law in China
        • China Programme Synopsis
      • The Social Contract
        • Programme Synopsis
      • Development
        • Development Programme Synopsis
    • China
    • Book Colloquia
  • News & Events
    • Events
      • The Max Watson Annual Lecture
    • News
    • Subscribe to our newsletter
    • Past events
  • Publications
    • Search publications
    • Courts and Public Policy
    • Constitutions
    • European Civil Justice
    • Regulation
    • China
    • Social Contract
    • Constitution in Crisis: The New Putney Debates
  • Media & Resources
    • Opinion pieces
      • Europe on the Brink?
      • Speaking in Many Voices: Egyptians Prepare for a Democratic Era
      • The Cost of a Legal Transition in Egypt: A Price Worth Paying?
      • Black Swans and Elephants on the Move: Can Emergencies Trigger Welfare State Reform?
      • Beyond the Third Way in Labour Law
      • One China, Many Systems
      • The Boumediene Decision: What Now?
      • A Break in China’s Smog: Will environmental concerns help deliver consumer rights to China?
      • A Fundamental(ly) European ‘right to be forgotten’
      • A decade on from the Morecambe Bay cockling tragedy, the business of human trafficking is thriving
      • Blue-sky thinking needed to bolster battered flood management policies
      • Colombian Peace Processes: Parapolítica and the transformative role of Courts in transition
      • Magna Carta: A Beggarly Thing, A Mess of Pottage
      • Muddling Through: Brexit, the unwritten Constitution, and the Limits of Political Authority
      • Preserving Parliamentary Power in Pakistan
      • The EU referendum: No legal salve for UK’s disenfranchised non-resident citizens
      • The Regulatory Space: An Evolving Paradigm
      • Twenty-five years since the Velvet Revolutions, how much has changed in the Eastern Bloc?
      • Will the People of Chile Succeed in Rewriting their ‘Dictatorship Constitution’?
    • Podcasts
    • Video

Search form

Subscribe to our newsletter

Enter your email address below to receive our free bimonthly newsletter
Email Newsletter icon, E-mail Newsletter icon, Email List icon, E-mail List icon  

 

Twitter Facebook Youtube Google Plus RSS Feed Apple Music
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Our Work
    • People
    • Contact us
  • Programmes
    • Courts
    • Civil Justice
    • Regulation
    • Constitutions
    • Contemporary
    • Past Programmes
    • China
    • Book Colloquia
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • News
    • Subscribe to our newsletter
    • Past events
  • Publications
    • Search publications
    • Courts and Public Policy
    • Constitutions
    • European Civil Justice
    • Regulation
    • China
    • Social Contract
    • Constitution in Crisis: The New Putney Debates
  • Media & Resources
    • Opinion pieces
    • Podcasts
    • Video

Where next for Ombudsman schemes?

The place of the Ombudsman in administrative and civil justice

Lewis Shand Smith, Chief Ombudsman

 
 
 
Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.
Download

Media & Resources

  • Opinion pieces
  • Podcasts
  • Video

Recent podcasts

Adam Smith, the Scottish Legal Profession, and Religious Freedoms

Proefssors John Cairns and Scott Peterson discuss Adam Smith's lost work on jurisprudence, examining his influence on the formation of the Scottish legal profession and on religious freedoms.

Adam Smith as Jurist

Senior Research Fellow in Politics Professor Iain McLean unearths the secrets of Adam Smith's lost work on jurisprudence, and posits a connection between smith's jurisprudence and the framers of th

More

Associated with

  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
Wolfson College
Linton Road
Oxford
OX2 6UD
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0)1865 284433
Twitter Facebook Youtube Google Plus RSS Feed Apple Music

 

Company registration: 5371054 (Registered in England and Wales)
Registered office: One Bartholomew Close, London, EC1A Charity registration number: 1111842

Copyright 2020 FLJS, Wolfson College, University of Oxford  Website by Olamalu