"A marvellous insight for those who are willing to face up to what others think of them. The blunt and genuine views of bruised witnesses and less-than-engaged defendants can make for difficult reading." Counsel Magazine "This carefully constructed research study opens the doors of the Crown Court in a unique and engaging way revealing the formalities, misunderstandings, tension and sometimes tedium, considered judgements and the adversarial nature of British justice." Juliet Lyon CBE, Director, Prison Reform Trust "A fascinating account, and one which rings very true." Criminal Law Review "An insightful and timely account of justice as experienced by victims, witnesses and defendants at the Crown Court." Professor Julian Roberts, University of Oxford "I commend this book to students, lawyers and policy-makers. It provides a unique window on what is really going on, dispels myths, chronicles what is changing and shows what still needs to change." Penny Cooper, Professor of Law, co-founder and Chair of The Advocate's Gateway "Exploring the 'structured mayhem' of court proceedings and the reluctant conformity marking court users' participation and sense of legitimacy, the book offers a compelling glimpse of the realities of the courtroom entangled with routine case processing and moments of personal drama." Professor Nigel Fielding, University of Surrey