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How lived experience reveals what we owe one another: women and children in the justice system.
ComplexitySalon is delighted to host Professor Laura Abbott from the UK and Tahlia Isaac from Australia, who will share their research and experiences relating to women and children navigating the justice systems. Together, they will explore how power operates at the margins of society, and what these experiences reveal about our humanity, our institutions, and the values we choose to uphold.
Please join our conversation with Professor Laura Abbott and Tahlia Isaac.
Laura is a leading expert in maternal health and criminal justice, a qualitative researcher dedicated to improving the lives of incarcerated pregnant women and mothers. She founded the Specialist Prison Midwives Action Group, strengthening practice, peer support and national advocacy for women in custody and co-founded Pregnancy in Prison Partnership International (PiPPI). She is the Principal investigator of ESRC-funded ofThe Lost Mothers Project (lostmothers.org). She has shaped policy and brought national attention in the UK to the experiences of pregnant women and new mothers in prison through creative collaborations using arts and theatre to communicate research.Scenes from Lost Mothers has been adapted into a production by Clean Break Theatre Company in collaboration with the University of Hertfordshire.
Tahlia is the founder of Project:herSELF (projectherself.org.au) and brings both professional expertise and lived experience to the Australian conversation on women and the criminal justice system. Formerly incarcerated herself, she went onto complete degrees in business and criminology following her release. Today she is a wife, mother of two, and a powerful advocate for women's basic rights in prison. Project:herSELF delivers a structured release program and one-on-one peer mentoring, and is the only service-delivery social enterprise in Australia that employs exclusively women with conviction histories. This is her recent address to the National Press Club of Australia.
Join us for the conversation on 26 May 2026 at 6PM in Australia (AEST) and 9AM in the UK (BST), including a Q&A with participants. The event is expected to run for 1.5 hours.
A 1.5 hours experiential group discussion will run the following day at the same time. Places are limited, please express interest in the experiential group when purchasing tickets.
All revenue from ticket sales will be divided between Laura's and Tahlia's NGOs.
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