The defence of the wrongly convicted | James Lockyer | TEDxIB@York

James Lockyer obtained his LLB at the University of Nottingham in 1971 and is a member of the Bar in England. From 1972 until 1977, he was an Assistant Professor at the Law Faculties of McGill University and the University of Windsor. In 1977 he was called to the Ontario Bar and began to practice criminal law. He has been a criminal lawyer for 33 years and is the founding director of the Association In Defence Of The Wrongly Convicted. TEDxIB@York is an event for International Baccalaureate Diploma students from all over the world to come together to experience TED talks and share ideas with peers and professionals. This event is held annually at The York School, a coeducational, non-denominational, IB, independent day school in Toronto, Canada. This event gives students a chance to see amazing speakers, musicians, artwork, poetry, videos and to connect with people from all walks of life in the spirit of "ideas worth spreading".

The true injustice of wrongful conviction | Jeffrey Deskovic | TEDxMarthasVineyard
▶︎

The true injustice of wrongful conviction | Jeffrey Deskovic | TEDxMarthasVineyard

Germany: Low Crime, Clean Prisons, Lessons for America | Jeff Rosen | TEDxMountainViewHighSchool
▶︎

Germany: Low Crime, Clean Prisons, Lessons for America | Jeff Rosen | TEDxMountainViewHighSchool

Why Innocent People Plead Guilty | Adnan Sultan | TEDxFurmanU
▶︎

Why Innocent People Plead Guilty | Adnan Sultan | TEDxFurmanU

Who would confess to a murder they didn’t commit? Maybe you. | Nancy Franklin | TEDxSBU
▶︎

Who would confess to a murder they didn’t commit? Maybe you. | Nancy Franklin | TEDxSBU

How I spent 32 years in prison | George Martorano | TEDxPenn
▶︎

How I spent 32 years in prison | George Martorano | TEDxPenn

Can a Good Lawyer be a Good Person? | Ronald Sullivan | TEDxBeaconStreet
▶︎

Can a Good Lawyer be a Good Person? | Ronald Sullivan | TEDxBeaconStreet

Presumed Innocent: The Myth, The Mantra and Messiah | Deirdre Enright | TEDxCharlottesville
▶︎

Presumed Innocent: The Myth, The Mantra and Messiah | Deirdre Enright | TEDxCharlottesville

5 steps to designing the life you want  | Bill Burnett | TEDxStanford
▶︎

5 steps to designing the life you want | Bill Burnett | TEDxStanford

An insider’s plan for rehabilitating the juvenile justice system | Jeff Wallace | TEDxNaperville
▶︎

An insider’s plan for rehabilitating the juvenile justice system | Jeff Wallace | TEDxNaperville

Igniting Change: Lessons from the Innocence Movement | Lara Zarowsky | TEDxUofW
▶︎

Igniting Change: Lessons from the Innocence Movement | Lara Zarowsky | TEDxUofW

What facing 200 prison years taught me about happiness | Shaun Attwood | TEDxHSG
▶︎

What facing 200 prison years taught me about happiness | Shaun Attwood | TEDxHSG

Wrongful convictions: Rob Warden at TEDxMidwest
▶︎

Wrongful convictions: Rob Warden at TEDxMidwest

How gangs keep inmates safe | David Skarbek | TEDxWarwick
▶︎

How gangs keep inmates safe | David Skarbek | TEDxWarwick

Errors of justice | Asbjørn Rachlew | TEDxArendal
▶︎

Errors of justice | Asbjørn Rachlew | TEDxArendal

He who opens a school closes a prison | Daniel Geiter | TEDxNaperville
▶︎

He who opens a school closes a prison | Daniel Geiter | TEDxNaperville

How to fix our broken criminal justice system | Robert Barton | TEDxSanQuentin
▶︎

How to fix our broken criminal justice system | Robert Barton | TEDxSanQuentin

Mending broken trust: Police and the communities they serve | Charles Ramsey | TEDxPhiladelphia
▶︎

Mending broken trust: Police and the communities they serve | Charles Ramsey | TEDxPhiladelphia

Dolph Lundgren | On healing and forgiveness | TEDxFulbrightSantaMonica
▶︎

Dolph Lundgren | On healing and forgiveness | TEDxFulbrightSantaMonica

The surprising reason our correctional system doesn't work | Brandon W. Mathews | TEDxMileHigh
▶︎

The surprising reason our correctional system doesn't work | Brandon W. Mathews | TEDxMileHigh

How parolees are sentenced to fail | Troy Williams | TEDxSanQuentin
▶︎

How parolees are sentenced to fail | Troy Williams | TEDxSanQuentin