The Judicial College serves as the central pillar of professional training and development for the judiciary across England and Wales. By providing structured, high-quality education, it ensures that judges, magistrates, tribunal members, coroners and legal advisers maintain the highest standards of competence, impartiality and fairness.
Established on the 1st April 2011, the Judicial College replaced the earlier Judicial Studies Board and unified training arrangements under a single organisation. This move strengthened consistency and efficiency while fully respecting judicial independence.
Historical Background and Governance
The College traces its roots to the Judicial Studies Board, created in 1979. The 2011 reorganisation enabled all judicial office holders under the responsibility of the Lady Chief Justice and Senior President of Tribunals to receive training from one body. Coroners and their officers joined in 2013.
Governance rests on statutory foundations, including the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, the Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007, and the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.
The College operates within the Judicial Office. Its Board, chaired by a Court of Appeal judge which is currently the Right Honourable Lady Justice Eleanor King DBE who sets strategic direction, agrees business plans, and monitors delivery.
Supporting committees address courts, tribunals, Wales (including Welsh language needs), and international training. The Judicial College Faculty, launched in 2016, focuses on educational best practice and curriculum innovation. A defining feature remains that training is led by the judiciary, for the judiciary.
Scale and Scope of Training
The College supports approximately 24,000 judicial office holders, including around 14,600 magistrates. It organises roughly 1,700 live training courses annually, alongside extensive digital resources such as e-learning modules, webinars, bench books, and guidance materials.
Key Training Areas
- Criminal Jurisdiction: Practical courses featuring mock trials and hearings, together with updates on sentencing, evidence, and procedural developments.
- Civil and Family Jurisdictions: Continuing education on procedure, substantive law, and sensitive issues involving children and vulnerable parties.
- Tribunals and Magistrates: Specialised induction and continuation programmes.
- Coroners: Dedicated courses on inquests and investigations.
- Senior and Cross-Jurisdictional: Seminars for High Court and appellate judges, plus flexible deployment training.
International programmes allow judicial office holders to share expertise and support capacity-building overseas.
The 2026–2030 Judicial College Strategy
Published in early 2026, the Judicial College Strategy 2026–2030 sets an ambitious path to remain a world leader in judicial education. It identifies three core priorities:
- High-Quality Education in the Contemporary Judicial Role – covering substantive law, judgecraft, domestic abuse awareness, trauma-informed practice, leadership, and artificial intelligence.
- Strong Educational Practice and Support – focusing on accessibility, inclusion, and trainer development.
- External Engagement and Relationships – promoting transparency and international partnerships.
Recent Initiatives and Resources
The annual Judicial College Prospectus 2026–2027 details available courses and learning outcomes. A new public summary on judicial education in domestic abuse highlights training on coercion, control, and safe participation.
Other key publications include the Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases, the Equal Treatment Bench Book and the Crown Court Compendium.
Conclusion
Well-trained judicial office holders contribute to efficient case handling, fair outcomes, and public trust. In an era of increasing case volumes, technological change, and societal expectations, the College equips its participants to respond effectively while supporting diversity, inclusion, and wellbeing.
The Judicial College represents a vital investment in the quality and integrity of justice in England and Wales. Through comprehensive, judiciary-led training and a clear strategic vision, it ensures those who deliver justice are equipped for the demands of today and tomorrow.
Check out our articles on Rule of Law, Open Justice, R v Sussex Justices, Judges Salaries and Fees, Dodgy Judges, Do you Have to Bow to a Judge ?, Can you Email a Judge ?, Can you Criticise a Judge ? and the highly dubious Sussex Family Justice Board.
The Ministry of Injustice is not the Ministry of Justice nor is it affiliated in any way with the justice system, legal profession, police or any other law enforcement agencies.
Latest Articles ↓
- What is the Judicial College ?The Judicial College serves as the central pillar of professional… Read more: What is the Judicial College ?
- Police Leadership Commission ReportAn independent review by the Police Leadership Commission has concluded… Read more: Police Leadership Commission Report
- Repeal a LawRepealing a law in the United Kingdom does not mean… Read more: Repeal a Law
- What are Judges Lodgings ?The provision of judges’ lodgings is a longstanding feature of… Read more: What are Judges Lodgings ?
- What is Two Tier Policing ?The BBC describes so-called “two-tier policing” as where right-wing protests… Read more: What is Two Tier Policing ?
- Lawful Use of Handcuffs by the PoliceHandcuffs are a standard restraint tool used by police officers… Read more: Lawful Use of Handcuffs by the Police
- His Honour Judge Nicholas RowlandJudge Nicholas Edward Rowland, known as His Honour Judge Nicholas… Read more: His Honour Judge Nicholas Rowland
- Police Barred and Advisory ListsThe police barred and advisory lists, which are managed by… Read more: Police Barred and Advisory Lists
- President of the Family DivisionThe President of the Family Division is a highly esteemed… Read more: President of the Family Division
- Is Crimestoppers Anonymous ?Crimestoppers is widely promoted as the United Kingdom’s leading provider… Read more: Is Crimestoppers Anonymous ?
- What is a Court Legal Adviser ?In magistrates’ courts across England and Wales, lay justices (magistrates… Read more: What is a Court Legal Adviser ?
- What is a Skeleton Argument ?A skeleton argument is a concise written document prepared by… Read more: What is a Skeleton Argument ?
Most Popular ↓
You should always seek formal legal advice from a qualified and reputable lawyer (solicitor or barrister).
There are a number of links to Free and Paid For Legal Resources and Legal Organisations on the Free Legal Advice , Legal Aid and Pro Bono pages.
[post_title] was last updated on the 16th July 2026











