Registration and exhibition open

9.30
Details

Join us for registration and coffee. Take the opportunity to connect with colleagues and meet our exhibitors before the conference begins.

Welcome

10.30-10.45
Details
Kirsty Brimelow KC, Chair of the Bar of England and Wales will welcome you to this year's Bar Conference with her opening speech.
About the speaker

Kirsty Brimelow KC

Chair of the Bar Council 2026

Kirsty Brimelow KC is Chair of the Bar 2026. Kirsty practises in criminal, international and public law from Doughty Street Chambers, where she is on the management board as head of the criminal law team. Kirsty was appointed Queen’s Counsel (now King’s Counsel) in 2011. Kirsty has the distinction of having led in both Civil and Criminal Courts of Appeal, the Supreme Court, the Privy Council, and the European Court of Human Rights. 

In 2021, Kirsty was appointed a deputy High Court judge in the King’s Bench Division and in 2022 appointed a Recorder. She is an accredited mediator and acts in conflict resolution. Kirsty worked in the Colombia peace process and negotiated an historic apology from the former President of Colombia to a community of farmers, for a massacre. 

Kirsty was a member of the Bar Council Public Affairs Committee and a Bar Council Young Spokesperson from 1998 to 2008. Kirsty was the first female Chair of the Bar Human Rights Committee (2012 to 2018) and served as the Vice Chair and then Chair of the Criminal Bar Association (2021 to 2023). In 2022, she led negotiations with the government of an historic increase in fees for criminal barristers. 

Kirsty is a Bencher of Gray’s Inn and was elected to the management board (2020 to 2023). She is an experienced high-level trainer, facilitator, and conference speaker in international human rights around the world, holding consultancies to the United Nations and OSCE (the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe). She has driven law change including in sexual offences law in Denmark and FGM protection orders in England and Wales.  

In 2018 Kirsty won both the First 100 Years ‘Inspirational Woman in Law Barrister of the Year’ Award and Advocate’s pro bono ‘International Barrister of the Year’ Award. She twice has featured as The Times Lawyer of the week. Kirsty is a trustee and director of the leading global environmental charity WWF UK, visiting professor at Goldsmiths Faculty of Law (2019 to 2025), and founding member of the Alliance for Lawyers at Risk. Kirsty was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts for her service to human rights. 

Keynote address: To be announced

10.45-11.00

 

The IT Crowd: 10 ways to get ahead with AI 

10.45-11.00
Details

Speakers:
Saara Idelbi, 39 Essex Chambers

More speakers to be confirmed

In June, the Lord Chancellor announced that legal services had been chosen as the first sector to trial and test new technology as part of the government’s AI Growth Labs initiative. Yet a BSB technology report concluded that, despite innovation in some areas, a ‘wait and see’ approach prevails and the adoption of technology driven solutions has been patchy. 

So how can and should the Bar stay ahead of the technology curve? 

In this fast-paced session, our expert speakers will give you everything you need to know to harness the power of generative AI to enhance your practice and be part of the online Bar community. 

You’ll be able to put their top tips into practice straight away and reap the benefits of their insights.

(Un)Reliable? The role of expert witnesses 

11.45-12.30
Details

Chair:
Sam Townend KC

Speakers: 
Ben Myers KC, Exchange Chambers
John Hyde, Law Gazette

Expert witnesses across all jurisdictions have hit the headlines in recent years as the focus of media coverage in high-profile cases: from Lucy Letby to the Post Office Horizon scandal and from the cases of Sally Clark to Angela Cannings. When a decision hangs on complex evidence from an expert, how can the court satisfy itself that they’ve asked the right person the right questions? 

In this session, we’ll consider how the role of experts has changed, the role of barristers in extracting the best evidence from experts, and whether and how expert witnesses should be regulated. 

About the speakers

Samuel Townend KC

The immediate past Chair of the Bar of England and Wales, Samuel is an enormously respected Silk with a heavy practice across the spread of Chambers’ work, domestic and international.  

Along with mainstream construction, international arbitration, energy and professional negligence work, he specialises in offshore construction and marine engineering including dredging, together with infrastructure and utilities. In all he is cited as a Leading Silk in eight categories across the two main legal directories.  

Samuel regularly acts for clients in the courts of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, and he has a thriving practice in international and domestic arbitration (recently acting in arbitrations to final hearing in Australia, Singapore, Paris, the IDRC and, most recently, a fully remote ICC arbitration), along with all forms of alternative dispute resolution. Samuel is also one of only a few international lawyers to be on the list of international arbitrators for the Indian International Arbitration Centre. 

Samuel is an Accredited Mediator, Adjudicator and Dispute Resolution Board panellist, he has acted as Mediator in domestic, international and remote mediations, and as Arbitrator. He also regularly acts as mediation and negotiation advocate.

Benjamin Myers KC

Exchange Chambers

Ben specialises in corporate and financial crime, murder and serious organised crime, regulatory law, and professional discipline and inquests. He was called to the Bar in 1994 and took Silk in 2014.  Notable cases include the defence of David Duckenfield, the defence of Lucy Letby and the prosecution of David Barton.  He has a wide experience of expert evidence and cross-examining experts.  He has been a member of the Bar Council and is a member of JUSTICE, the Fraud Lawyers Association, and the Criminal Bar Association.  He is Deputy Head of Chambers at Exchange Chambers and is a Governing Bencher of the Inner Temple.  In addition to his practice at the Bar, he sits as an Assistant Coroner. 

 

Lifetime Achievement in Pro Bono Award

12.30-12.45
Details

Presentation of the Lifetime Achievement in Pro Bono: the Sydney Elland Goldsmith Award.

About the award
The Lifetime Achievement in Pro Bono, the Sydney Elland Goldsmith Award, recognises and celebrates a barrister who has shown exceptional, long-standing dedication to pro bono work and widening access to justice throughout their career. The award is part of Advocate’s annual Pro Bono awards.

Lunch

12.45-1.40
Details
Join us for lunch in the venue’s grade II listed library. Network with colleagues and meet our exhibitors.

Choose your session

1.40-2.30
About the streams

Our breakout session options are organised into three themes:

  • Justice matters examines some of the most pressing issues facing the profession and society, with sessions exploring the law’s role in addressing environmental challenges and the principle of open justice. 
  • Building your practice offers practical insights and skills to support a successful and sustainable career at the Bar, with sessions on effective advocacy, career progression and thriving in your practice.  
  • Culture at the Bar examines how life at the Bar is changing including a panel on disability and inclusion at the Bar and a ‘one year on’ review of progress following the Harman review of bullying, harassment and sexual harassment at the Bar.. 

Justice matters

Details

Climate change across the Bar: Implications for every practice area

Speakers:
Lord Carnwarth of Notting Hill CVO

More speakers to be confirmed

Climate change is no longer confined to environmental law - it's reshaping the full breadth of legal practice. From commercial contracts and corporate governance to finance, disputes, construction, insurance, and public law, climate related risks and obligations are now embedded in everyday legal work. Evolving regulation, shifting market expectations, and growing exposure to liability mean that lawyers across all disciplines must understand how climate issues affect their clients. Climate literacy is no longer a specialist skill; it’s a core requirement for modern legal practice. 

This session will examine how climate change is influencing legal decision-making across sectors, and what this means in practice. We'll explore how lawyers can help clients navigate emerging risks and strengthen governance. We'll address the wider question of justice: the impacts of climate change are not distributed equally, with vulnerable communities, future generations, and developing countries often bearing the greatest burdens despite contributing least to the problem. Against this backdrop, lawyers have a vital role in ensuring access to justice and fair outcomes, while helping to shape responses that are not only effective, but lawful, accountable, and equitable.  
 

About the speakers

Lord Carnwath of Notting Hill CVO

Lord Carnwath was a member of the UK Supreme Court from 2012 to 2020, having been a judge since 1994. He began his legal career as a practising barrister from 1968 (1980-85 Junior Counsel to the Inland Revenue; 1985 QC; 1988-94 Attorney General to HRH the Prince of Wales). He became a High Court Judge in 1994, sitting in both the Chancery Division and the Administrative Court. He went to the Court of Appeal in 2002 and to the Supreme Court in 2012. From 1998-2002 he was Chairman of the Law Commission of England and Wales.  

From 2004-2012 he was Senior President of Tribunals, overseeing the implementation of the Leggatt reforms of administrative tribunals.  

He has taken a special interest in environmental law and was a founder-member of the EU Forum of Judges for the Environment (“EUFJE”), and of the Global Judges’ Institute on 1the Environment (“GJIE”).  

Lord Carnwath is currently an Associate Member of Landmark Chambers, an Honorary Professor of UCL, a Visiting Professor of Oxford University, and a Visiting Professor in Practice at the Grantham Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at LSE.  

 

 

Building your practice

Details

How to lose a case in 7 ways

Speaker:
Jennifer Johnston, mezzo-soprano and former barrister

More speakers to be confirmed

In this interactive session, you will challenge and repair your bad advocacy habits. Our speakers will lead you through seven key challenges and pitfalls you face at court and provide guidance and practical tips on how to avoid them. 

Whether you are just starting out the Bar, or have decades of experience, this session can help you to up your game.

About the speakers

Jennifer Johnston

Cultural & Artistic Strategy Consultant

Internationally celebrated British mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnston is the winner of multiple awards including the Royal Philharmonic Society’s Singer of the Year and is a former BBC New Generation Artist.  

She has a successful cultural and artistic strategy consultancy, working with global organisations across the cultural sector to foster dialogue and partnerships through culture and the arts.  

She is Patron of Streetwise Opera, Destination Opera and the Southport Bach Choir, Trustee of the Harrison Parrott Foundation, Debate Chair & Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and commentator for The Guardian, Opera Now, The Stage, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 4, Classic FM and Times Radio.  

A former barrister (1 Crown Office Row), she holds an MBA from the Global Leaders Institute, is an alumnus of the Oxford Cultural Leaders programme, and received the Royal Philharmonic Society's Enterprise Award, supporting her participation in Harvard University's Women in Leadership Program. 

 

Culture at the Bar

Details

Beyond access: Rethinking disability and inclusion at the Bar 

Chair: 
Mark Henderson KC, Doughty Street Chambers and Chair of the Bar Council’s Disability Panel

Speakers: 
Colin Wells, 25 Bedford Row
Konstantina Nouka, Nexus Chambers
HHJ Fayyaz Afzal CBE

More speakers to be confirmed

This reflective session will explore the experiences of disabled barristers, including those that are not readily visible, and the evolving landscape of access, inclusion, and support at the Bar.  

Moving beyond compliance, the discussion will examine how disability intersects with professional identity, culture, and expectations within chambers and the courts, with particular attention to the often under-recognised challenges associated with disabilities and health conditions.  

Drawing on lived experience and emerging initiatives across the profession, the session will consider the role of reasonable adjustments, mentoring, formal and informal support, and institutional frameworks, alongside the responsibilities of chambers, regulators, and practitioners in fostering a genuinely inclusive environment. Attendees will be invited to reflect on both progress to date and the barriers that endure, and to consider what a more accessible Bar might look like. 

About the speakers

Konstantina Nouka

Nexus Chambers

Konstantina Nouka is a barrister at Nexus Chambers, specialising in criminal defence and family law. Konstantina has been diagnosed with a rare and progressive muscle-wasting condition known as Ulrich Congenital Muscular Dystrophy.

She is the Founder of Bringing [Dis]Ability to the Bar (BDABar), an organisation that supports disabled individuals who wish to pursue a career at the Bar. Through her work, Konstantina aims to dismantle the stereotypes and prejudices that affect disabled people and raise awareness of disabilities and accessibility.

Colin Wells

Colin Wells specialises in advising advocates, litigators, solicitors, and direct access clients on a range of criminal law matters. His practice focuses on pre-charge investigations, criminal procedure (including abuse of process, disclosure, and private prosecutions) and the preparation and merits of criminal costs applications, including cases before the Senior Courts Costs Office and the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division). He also advises on criminal liability for individuals and corporate defendants, particularly in cases involving fraud, money laundering, confiscation, and related regulatory proceedings, alongside associated advocacy. 

Colin has significant experience in criminal defence work, with particular expertise in complex financial crime and criminal costs appeals. He was a Licensed Advocate on the Isle of Man from 2002 to 2008 and has undertaken Direct Access work since 2009. 

He has published through Oxford University Press "Abuse of process" 4th edition, the fifth edition is due out late this year, and has delivered training seminars for practitioners and law enforcement bodies both in the UK and internationally, including for the European Criminal Bar Association and institutions in New Zealand, Australia, the Caribbean, and the British Virgin Islands. 

In 2017 Colin was diagnosed with Parkinson’s and wrote candidly about its impact on his professional life in a February 2026 blog for the Bar Council, highlighting how he continues to practise and adapt successfully. 

 

Choose your session

2.40-3.25

Justice matters

Details

Sunlight on the system: what next for open justice? 

Chair: 
Jason Pitter KC, New Park Court Chambers

Speakers:
Tristan Kirk, Courts Editor for the Press Association
Mr Justice Nicklin

More speakers be confirmed

In July 2022, HHJ Sarah Munro KC delivered the first broadcast sentencing remarks from the Old Bailey. Hailed as a major step in openness and transparency, as well as an opportunity for public legal education, the move was welcomed. But, elsewhere, the single justice procedure was under fire for criminalising unsuspecting people behind closed doors. 

How do we find the right balance between open justice and swift justice, between transparency and protection of vulnerable parties? With the dramatic reduction in frontline journalism reporting court proceedings, how do make sure the media gets it right?  

In this panel debate, we’ll hear views from the Bar, the Bench and the fourth estate as we ask what next for open justice?

Building your practice

Details

Thriving at the Bar: Progression, change and wellbeing

Chair: 
Susanna McGibbon KC (Hon),
former Treasury Solicitor and Permanent Secretary of the Government Legal Department between March 2021 and March 2026

Speakers: 
Professor Jo Delahunty KC, 4PB
Deshpal Panesar KC, Old Square Chambers
Charlotte Pope Williams, 33 Chambers

This engaging session will explore the realities of career progression at the Bar, alongside the importance of maintaining wellbeing in a highly demanding profession. Drawing on perspectives from both the self-employed and employed Bar, we’ll consider how barristers can build and diversify their practice, recognising both the opportunities and pressures that come with broadening expertise.

The panel discussion will address the practical and cultural considerations involved in moving within the profession, including changing practice areas and transitioning between employed and self-employed roles, as well as the challenges and opportunities of returning to work after a period of absence.

We’ll reflect on key progression points, including taking the step from junior to senior practice, and how these transitions can be managed in a way that supports long‑term resilience and success. Bringing together a range of experiences, this session will provide practical insights on building a fulfilling career at the Bar.

About the speakers

Prof Jo Delahunty KC

4PB Chambers

Prof Jo Delahunty KC, MICarb is a family law silk specialising in extreme child abuse and medically complex cases.  She is known not just for her work in court but for her preparedness over the years to speak out about toxic issues that have blighted the Bar whether that be sexual abuse, judicial bullying, its lack of diversity and the health and wealth divide between the privately funded and legal aid Bar. 

In 2025 Jo won the Family Silk of the Year award and was voted the ‘Advocate you Most want to be.’ And in 2026 published two books “We set the Bar- Fighting for Equality, Empowerment and Change’ and “Domestic Abuse in the Family Justice System. 

Jo is ranked as a ‘Star Individual’ by Chambers & Partners and a Tier 1 Leading Silk by Legal 500. She was made a Freeman of City of London for her contribution to the law , is a Recorder, a Bencher of Middle Temple and a Reader for the Queen Elizabeth II Prize for Education. 

Deshpal Panesar KC

Deshpal Panesar KC is a leading employment silk, specialising in complex employment disputes and high‑stakes investigations, with a particularly strong and successful appellate practice. He is widely recognised for his incisive cross‑examination, exceptional work ethic, and calm, authoritative handling of the most challenging cases. 

Deshpal is instructed across the full spectrum of employment law, acting for major corporates, trade unions, and local authorities, as well as representing claimants in matters ranging from large‑scale, multi‑claimant actions to individual cases of significant personal and legal importance. 

Beyond his practice, Deshpal plays a prominent role in the profession. He is a member of the Bar Council, former Chair of the Employment Law Bar Association (ELBA), Chair of the EAT Users Group, and a member of both the Industrial Law Society and the Employment Lawyers Association. He also writes and speaks thoughtfully on the wider realities of life at the Bar. In Counsel Magazine, Deshpal has addressed the impact of barristers’ work on physical health, advocating for practical, profession‑wide steps to support wellbeing and to help barristers build long, sustainable, and healthy careers.

Charlotte Pope-Williams

Barrister

Charlotte is a leading and award-winning barrister, called to the Bar in England and Wales, and in St Vincent and the Grenadines, with a diverse practice spanning commercial and chancery litigation and international arbitration.  Charlotte’s varied practice has involved acting for a range of parties from corporates to high-net-worth individuals.   

She particularly specialises in financial services disputes, acting for banks, pension funds, asset managers and insurers in commercial litigation and in both contentious and non-contentious regulatory matters involving regulators such as the Bank of England, the Prudential Regulation Authority ("PRA"), the Financial Conduct Authority, the Financial Ombudsman Service, the Pensions Ombudsman and the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. She is ranked as a Leading Junior in Banking and Financial Services (including consumer credit) in Legal 500 2025 and 2026. 

Charlotte regularly acts as sole counsel and as part of large, multi-disciplinary teams, drawing on her experience as an employed barrister at the Bank of England, the UK's central bank, and at Pinsent Masons LLP, a multinational, award-winning law firm. 

She is proud of her Vincentian heritage, often working on matters arising from the Caribbean, particularly the Bahamas, Bermuda, Antigua, the Cayman Islands and St Vincent and the Grenadines, notably her Appellate practice before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and she is keen to continue developing her practice in this area. 

 

Culture at the Bar

Details

Beyond Harman: What’s changed one year on? 

Chair:
To be confirmed

Speakers: 
The Rt Hon Dame Maria Miller DBE, Commissioner for Conduct
Lady Justice Whipple
Kirsty Brimelow KC, Chair of the Bar Council of England and Wales 

Baroness Harman’s review of bullying, harassment and sexual harassment was a watershed moment for the Bar. Her hard-hitting report set out a roadmap for changing the culture so there is no place at the Bar for harassment and inappropriate behaviours.

In just over a year, how far have we progressed? In this panel session we’ll hear from the women charged with implementing Harman’s recommendations. The Bar’s first Commissioner for Conduct, Dame Maria Miller, will set out how she’s been working with the BSB to encourage greater reporting and prevention of bullying and harassment. Lady Justice Whipple will explore the focus on training and behaviour change at the heart of the judiciary’s commitment to tackle inappropriate behaviour in courts. And Chair of the Bar Council, Kirsty Brimelow KC, will explain why addressing bullying and harassment has been one of the key priorities for her year at the helm.

About the speakers

Rt Hon Dame Maria Miller DBE

Bar Commissioner for Conduct, The Bar Council for England and Wales

The Rt Hon Dame Maria Miller DBE is nationally recognised as a leader on equality matters, through the award of her damehood in 2022. A long serving, senior politician, Dame Maria held ministerial posts in the coalition government, including in the Cabinet as Culture Secretary. Known for her effective, collaborative working style, Dame Maria also chaired the Women and Equalities Select Committee, producing evidence-based inquiry reports on issues, including tackling sexual harassment and bullying.

Before being elected to Parliament, Maria’s business career spanned 20 years, including company director posts in two UK communication agencies. Since leaving Parliament in 2024, Maria has been appointed to Chair the Chartered Institute of Public Relations, LHC Procurement Group and the UK charity SafeLives, dedicated to eradicating domestic abuse. Maria was appointed Commissioner for Conduct at the Bar Council in January 2026.

Kirsty Brimelow KC

Chair of the Bar Council 2026

Kirsty Brimelow KC is Chair of the Bar 2026. Kirsty practises in criminal, international and public law from Doughty Street Chambers, where she is on the management board as head of the criminal law team. Kirsty was appointed Queen’s Counsel (now King’s Counsel) in 2011. Kirsty has the distinction of having led in both Civil and Criminal Courts of Appeal, the Supreme Court, the Privy Council, and the European Court of Human Rights. 

In 2021, Kirsty was appointed a deputy High Court judge in the King’s Bench Division and in 2022 appointed a Recorder. She is an accredited mediator and acts in conflict resolution. Kirsty worked in the Colombia peace process and negotiated an historic apology from the former President of Colombia to a community of farmers, for a massacre. 

Kirsty was a member of the Bar Council Public Affairs Committee and a Bar Council Young Spokesperson from 1998 to 2008. Kirsty was the first female Chair of the Bar Human Rights Committee (2012 to 2018) and served as the Vice Chair and then Chair of the Criminal Bar Association (2021 to 2023). In 2022, she led negotiations with the government of an historic increase in fees for criminal barristers. 

Kirsty is a Bencher of Gray’s Inn and was elected to the management board (2020 to 2023). She is an experienced high-level trainer, facilitator, and conference speaker in international human rights around the world, holding consultancies to the United Nations and OSCE (the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe). She has driven law change including in sexual offences law in Denmark and FGM protection orders in England and Wales.  

In 2018 Kirsty won both the First 100 Years ‘Inspirational Woman in Law Barrister of the Year’ Award and Advocate’s pro bono ‘International Barrister of the Year’ Award. She twice has featured as The Times Lawyer of the week. Kirsty is a trustee and director of the leading global environmental charity WWF UK, visiting professor at Goldsmiths Faculty of Law (2019 to 2025), and founding member of the Alliance for Lawyers at Risk. Kirsty was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts for her service to human rights. 

 

Afternoon break

3.25-3.55

Ask the judges

3.55-4.45
Details

Chair:
The Rt Hon. the Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill, Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales

Speakers: 
The Hon Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb DBE
Venetia Jackson, Counsel, Dentons and Recorder in the Family Court
Hugh Mercer, Judge at the European Court of Human Rights

More speakers to be confirmed

Your opportunity to put your burning questions to our fantastic panel of judges representing a range of perspectives. Chaired by the Lady Chief Justice, this session will explore different routes to the judiciary, the current challenges faced by the courts and justice system from the point of view of the Bench, and how technology is shaping courts and tribunals in England and Wales and Europe.  

If you want to gain an insight into judicial careers or develop a deeper understanding of how judges approach cases, send in your questions for the Lady Chief Justice to consider posing to our panel: [email protected].

About the speakers

The Rt Hon. the Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill

Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales

The Rt Hon. the Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill became Lady Chief Justice of England and Wales on 1 October 2023. As Lady Chief Justice, she is the first female President of the Courts of England and Wales and Head of the Judiciary of England and Wales.  

Her judicial career began in 2009 in crime. She was appointed to the High Court, Queen’s Bench Division in 2013, and became the second female High Court Judge to sit in the Commercial Court and the first female High Court Judge to sit in the Technology and Construction Court in 2014. She was elevated to the Court of Appeal in 2020. She was appointed as the Senior Judicial Commissioner and Vice Chair of the Judicial Appointments Commission shortly thereafter, remaining in that role until January 2023. She was a temporary Investigatory Powers Commissioner during the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Venetia Jackson

Recorder in the Family Court, Dentons

Venetia is Counsel in Dentons' London office, practising as an employed barrister. She is an expert in financial services regulation, with insights and experience drawing on nine years in the FCA's General Counsel's Division and before that several years in the Government Legal Department including time at HM Treasury. Venetia's practice focuses on consumer finance, insurance regulation, redress issues and the application of the Consumer Duty and draws on significant drafting experience whilst at the FCA, including on the Consumer Duty. 

When not practising in financial services regulation, Venetia sits as a fee paid judge.  She was originally appointed to the First Tier Tribunal, Social Entitlement Chamber in 2019 and was subsequently appointed as a Recorder in the Family Court in 2023.

Hugh Mercer

Judge of the European Court of Human Rights

Hugh Mercer is a distinguished barrister and judge with an extensive career spanning the UK and Europe. Called to the Bar of England and Wales in 1985 and appointed King’s Counsel in 2008, he has held numerous senior roles, including Attorney General A Panel Counsel and Deputy High Court Judge. 

A specialist in international and European law, Hugh has been an active member of multiple Bars across the UK, Belgium and Northern Ireland, and has long represented the UK within the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe. He also chaired the International Committee of the Bar of England and Wales from 2022 to 2025. 

In September 2025, he was appointed as a Judge of the European Court of Human Rights.

 

Closing remarks

4.45-5.00
Details
Closing remarks from Kirsty Brimelow KC, Chair of the Bar of England and Wales.
About the speaker

Kirsty Brimelow KC

Chair of the Bar Council 2026

Kirsty Brimelow KC is Chair of the Bar 2026. Kirsty practises in criminal, international and public law from Doughty Street Chambers, where she is on the management board as head of the criminal law team. Kirsty was appointed Queen’s Counsel (now King’s Counsel) in 2011. Kirsty has the distinction of having led in both Civil and Criminal Courts of Appeal, the Supreme Court, the Privy Council, and the European Court of Human Rights. 

In 2021, Kirsty was appointed a deputy High Court judge in the King’s Bench Division and in 2022 appointed a Recorder. She is an accredited mediator and acts in conflict resolution. Kirsty worked in the Colombia peace process and negotiated an historic apology from the former President of Colombia to a community of farmers, for a massacre. 

Kirsty was a member of the Bar Council Public Affairs Committee and a Bar Council Young Spokesperson from 1998 to 2008. Kirsty was the first female Chair of the Bar Human Rights Committee (2012 to 2018) and served as the Vice Chair and then Chair of the Criminal Bar Association (2021 to 2023). In 2022, she led negotiations with the government of an historic increase in fees for criminal barristers. 

Kirsty is a Bencher of Gray’s Inn and was elected to the management board (2020 to 2023). She is an experienced high-level trainer, facilitator, and conference speaker in international human rights around the world, holding consultancies to the United Nations and OSCE (the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe). She has driven law change including in sexual offences law in Denmark and FGM protection orders in England and Wales.  

In 2018 Kirsty won both the First 100 Years ‘Inspirational Woman in Law Barrister of the Year’ Award and Advocate’s pro bono ‘International Barrister of the Year’ Award. She twice has featured as The Times Lawyer of the week. Kirsty is a trustee and director of the leading global environmental charity WWF UK, visiting professor at Goldsmiths Faculty of Law (2019 to 2025), and founding member of the Alliance for Lawyers at Risk. Kirsty was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts for her service to human rights. 

 

Drinks reception

5.00-7.00
Details
Join us after the conference for drinks and informal networking – an opportunity to unwind, connect with colleagues, and continue conversations in a relaxed setting.

 

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