Anthony Gifford, 6th Baron Gifford explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Lord Gifford
Office1:Member of the House of Lords
Status1:Lord Temporal
Term Label1:as a hereditary peer
Term Start1:21 June 1961
Predecessor1:The 5th Baron Gifford
Term End1:11 November 1999
Successor1:Seat abolished
Birth Name:Anthony Maurice Gifford
Birth Date:1 May 1940
Occupation:Barrister, politician and peer
Education:Winchester College
Alma Mater:King's College, Cambridge

Anthony Maurice Gifford, 6th Baron Gifford, KC (born 1 May 1940), is a British hereditary peer and King's Counsel. He inherited the title of Baron Gifford on the death of his father, the 5th Baron, in April 1961. In 1970, Gifford was instrumental in establishing the first law centre in the UK.[1]

Biography

Anthony Gifford was educated at Winchester College and King's College, Cambridge, was called to the Bar in 1962 and took silk in 1983.[2]

He was a co-founder of the North Kensington Neighbourhood Law Centre, Britain's first law centre, giving free legal advice.[3] [4] He founded Wellington Street Chambers and was its head for 15 years. He joined 8 King's Bench Walk in 1989 and from 2001 was head of Chambers. In 2006, the chambers relocated to 1 Mitre Court Buildings, remaining there until 2014.[5]

He was Counsel for Paul Hill in the Guildford Four appeals and for Gerry Hunter in the Birmingham Six appeals.

Gifford was chairman of the Broadwater Farm inquiry and the Liverpool Eight inquiry, both of which investigated patterns of alleged racism and discrimination. He represented the family of James Wray at the Bloody Sunday Inquiry.

Cases in which he has been engaged include appeals involving trade unions, libel, contract and tort as well as criminal law. In 1991, he set up a firm of attorneys in Kingston, Jamaica, dividing his practice between Jamaica and the UK.[6]

He was a prominent member of the anti-apartheid group Lawyers Against Apartheid.[7]

Gifford sat on the Labour benches while in the House of Lords. The passing of the House of Lords Act 1999 removed his automatic right to sit in parliament, and he was excluded on 11 November 1999.[8]

Gifford's autobiography, The Passionate Advocate, was published in 2007. A review in the Jamaica Gleaner stated: "Lord Gifford, a lifelong human-rights lawyer and advocate for the freedom struggle, has done more than his fair share to better the lot of the world's oppressed. The book really is an important study in the power of law, contemporary history and politics, international relations, slavery, and the resultant modern-day racism it bred."[9]

Reparations campaign

Gifford has campaigned in favour of reparations for slavery.[10] At the First Pan-African Congress on Reparations, held in Abuja, Nigeria, in April 1993, he delivered a paper entitled "The legal basis of the claim for Reparations".[11] [12] [13] Raising the issue in debate at the House of Lords on 14 March 1996, Gifford asked "Her Majesty's Government whether they will make appropriate reparation to African nations and to the descendants of Africans for the damage caused by the slave trade and the practice of slavery".[14] [15] Gifford is a member of the Jamaican reparations commission and has said of the reparations issue: "I would like to see it approached on a Caribbean-wide basis."[16]

Family life

Gifford married first on 22 March 1965 Katherine Ann Mundy, daughter of Dr Max Mundy of 75 Bedford Gardens, London. They had two children before they divorced in 1988:

Gifford married secondly on 24 September 1988 Elean Roslyn Thomas, daughter of Right Reverend Bishop David Thomas of Kingston, Jamaica. They had one daughter before they divorced:

Gifford married Tina Natalia Goulbourne, daughter of Clement Nathaniel Goulbourne, on 11 April 1998.

Publications

Notes and References

  1. News: Justice is at risk, but together we can defend it . Anthony . Gifford . . 4 June 2013.
  2. https://archive.today/20130420012732/http://www.emplaw.co.uk/barristers/HB0003960 GIFFORD, Lord Anthony Maurice QC
  3. Web site: The Founding of the North Kensington Law Centre . North Kensington Law Centre . 19 September 2024.
  4. Web site: Justice is for all. There are simple truths. They should be self-evident . Jon . Robins . . 9 October 2015 . 19 September 2024.
  5. https://1mcb.com/about/ "About us"
  6. https://www.gtbjamaica.com/ "Firm Profile"
  7. Web site: Professions Against Apartheid . AAM.

    "Lawyers Against Apartheid held its first meeting in April 1987."

  8. Web site: MPs and Lords House of Lords Lord Gifford . UK Parliament.
  9. News: A refreshingly enjoyable read . Barbara . Gayle . Jamaica Gleaner . 17 June 2007.
  10. Web site: Reparation is crucial in a divided world – Lord Anthony Gifford . . . 28 August 2021 . Also at National African American Reparations Commission (NAARC), 14 September 2021. Retrieved 19 September 2024.
  11. Gifford, Lord Anthony, "The legal basis of the claim for Reparations". A paper presented to the First Pan-African Congress on Reparations, Abuja, Federal Republic of Nigeria, 27–29 April 1993.
  12. Web site: Lord Gifford Makes Case for Slavery Reparations . Jamaica Information Services . 31 October 2007 . 19 September 2024.
  13. Gifford, Anthony, "Pipe Dream or Necessary Atonement?", Index On Censorship, 2007. Via Sage Publications.
  14. Slavery: Legacy. Hansard. 570. 14 March 1996. 4 October 2024.
  15. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld199596/ldhansrd/vo960314/text/60314-24.htm Publications and Records
  16. David McFadden, "Jamaica revives slavery reparations commission", The Guardian, 1 November 2012.
  17. http://www.wildy.com/isbn/9781898029885 The Passionate Advocate