2. Five Principles for a New Public Services Ombudsman
Richard Kirkham and Chris Gill
3. The Public Services Ombud and the Claims of Democracy
Nick O’Brien
4. The ombud’s jurisdiction: integration, specialism, and territorial scope
Carolyn Hirst and Chris Gill
5. The ombud and own-initiative investigation powers
Chris Gill
6. The ombud and “Complaint Standards Authority” powers”
Chris Gill
7. Managing complaints: Focusing on users and non-users of the system
Naomi Creutzfeldt
8. Strengthening procedural fairness and transparency through ombudsman legislation
Richard Kirkham
9. The Challenges of Independence, Accountability and Governance in the Ombudsman Sector
Brian Thompson
Richard Kirkham is Senior Lecturer in Public Law at the University of Sheffield, UK.
Chris Gill is Lecturer in Public Law at the University of Glasgow, UK.
This book seeks to persuade policy-makers and legislators of the need for legislative reform of the ombudsman sector, and to evidence the ways in which such reformative legislation can be designed. In pursuing this goal, this book represents an academic response to a challenge laid down by the current Parliamentary Ombudsman in February 2018, at a JUSTICE event. It draws on the original research of the authors and bases its proposals for reform on a fundamental re-assessment of the focus and purpose of ombudsman systems. A Manifesto for Ombudsman Reform deals with key, recurring controversies in ombudsman scholarship, including the role that the ombudsman should be fulfilling, the procedures it should employ, the powers that are necessary for effectiveness, and the means of ensuring both freedom of operation and accountability. It will inform academic and policy debates about the future of the ombudsman institution in the UK and its analysis should be of interest to academics and policy-makers in other jurisdictions.