Welcome to the Geoffrey Robertson Website
Geoffrey Robertson QC has been counsel in many landmark
cases in constitutional, criminal and media law in the courts of Britain
and the commonwealth and he makes frequent appearances in the Privy Council
and the European Court of Human Rights. His recent cases include: appearing
for the Wall Street Journal in Jameel v WSJ, the landmark House of Lords
decision which extended a public interest defence for the media in libel
actions; representing Tasmanian aborigines in the novel action which
stopped the Natural History Museum from experimenting on the remains
of their ancestors; defending the Chief Justice of Trinidad at impeachment
proceedings; arguing the Court of Appeal case (R v F) which first defined “terrorism” for
the purpose of British law; arguing for the right of the public to see
royal wills and representing a trust for the education of poor children
in litigation in Anguilla over a billion dollar bequest. He has maintained
a wide advisory practice and has served part-time as a UN appeal judge
at its war crimes court in Sierra Leone. In 2008 the UN Secretary General
appointed him as one of the three distinguished jurist members of the
UN’s Internal Justice Council.
Mr Robertson is the author of Crimes against
Humanity – The Struggle
for Global Justice, published by Penguin and the New Press (USA), now
in its third edition; of a memoir, The Justice Game (Vintage), which
has sold over 100,000 copies, and of Robertson and Nicol on Media Law
(Sweet & Maxwell). He writes and broadcasts regularly on international
legal issues and creates Geoffrey Robertson’s Hypotheticals for
television and for ethics education. His most recent publication is
The Tyrannicide Brief, the story of how Cromwell’s lawyers produced
the first trial of a Head of State – that of Charles I. It traces
the memorable career of John Cooke, the radical barrister and visionary
social reformer who had the courage and intellect to devise a way to
end the impunity of sovereigns. The book is published by Chatto & Windus
in the UK, after Australia (where it rose to second in the non-fiction
bestseller list) and is pubished by Anchor Books in the U.S., where
it won a “Silver Gavel” Award from the American Bar Association.
Mr Robertson has written an extensive introduction to Geoffrey Robertson
presents The Levellers – The Putney Debates (Verso, 2007); the
foreword to Torture (Human Rights Watch/ Macmillan) and A Question
of Zion (Professor Jacqueline Rose/ Melbourne University Press) and
is a
contributor to Human Rights in the War on Terror (Cambridge University
Press). His paper Ending Impunity: How International Criminal Law Can
Put Tyrants on Trial has been published in the 2005 Cornell Law Journal
(issue 3, Volume 38). In 2006 he chaired a Commission of Inquiry into
the United Nation’s internal justice system. A copy is available
on this website: see “Recent Articles”.
Geoffrey Robertson is founder and head of
Doughty Street Chambers, the UK’s leading human rights practice,
which comprises some 80 barristers and 30 staff. He is a Bencher of the
Middle Temple; and a Recorder (part-time
judge) in London; an executive Member of Justice, and a trustee of
the Capital Cases Trust. He is visiting Professor in Human Rights at
Queen
Mary College, University of London. He lives in London with his wife,
author Kathy Lette, and their two children. |