Barbara Wootton, Baroness Wootton of Abinger


Barbara Wootton, Baroness Wootton of Abinger CH was a British sociologist and criminologist. She was one of the first four life peers appointed under the Life Peerages Act 1958. She was President of the British Sociological Association from 1959 to 1964.

Early life

Wootton was born Barbara Adam in Cambridge. She had two older brothers. Her father, James Adam was a classicist and tutor at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Her mother, Adele Marion, was a fellow of Girton College, Cambridge.
Wootton was educated at the Perse School for Girls. She studied Classics and Economics at Girton College, Cambridge from 1915 to 1919, winning the Agnata Butler Prize in 1917. Wootton gained a first class in her final exams, but as a woman she was prevented from appending BA to her name.

Professional life

Inter-war period

On leaving Cambridge Wootton moved to the London School of Economics to take up a research studentship. In 1920 she took up a fellowship at Girton College. She was appointed Director of Studies and Lecturer in Economics in the college. During this time the board of economics invited her to lecture on economics and the state. She left Girton to take up a post as a research officer at the TUC jointly with the Labour Party Research Department. She worked for the next four years on workers educational issues, such as adult literacy. From 1926 she was principal of Morley College for Working Men and Women in the Yorkshire clothier districts. The following year she returned to London to a promotion as Director of Studies for Tutorials at the University of London. In the 1930s Wootton was a member of the Federal Union and represented the Union in a historic debate against Edgar Hardcastle of the Socialist Party of Great Britain, which was later published as a pamphlet. She served on the Royal Commission investigating workmen's compensation schemes.

Second World War

During the Second World War Wootton considered herself to be a conscientious objector, although she was never liable for military service. She was, however, required, under the Registration for Employment Order 1941, to be interviewed in 1943 by a National Service Officer of the Ministry of Labour and National Service, who deemed her service as an unpaid magistrate to be of sufficient value as not to require direction to any employment. With her agreement, her husband, George Wright, registered as a conscientious objector in 1941, and did farm work and later civil defence work.

Post-war

Wootton served as a chairman of juvenile court magistrates in London for nearly 20 years, and as a lay magistrate.
In 1948 she became a Professor at Bedford College of the University of London. In 1952 she received a Nuffield Foundation Research Fellowship. In 1952, she transferred within the university to take up a Nuffield Research Fellowship at Bedford College. She did extensive research into the pathological effects of social research and their economic benefits. The findings were published in Wootton's Social Science and Social Pathology in 1959.
Wootton was governor of the BBC from 1950 to 1956.
She also served on two major post-war Royal Commissions on the press and civil service. In 1968, she was awarded an Honorary Degree by the University of Bath. In 1969 she was made an Honorary Fellow of Girton College. In 1977 she was made a member of the Order of the Companions of Honour. In 1985 she was awarded an honorary Doctorate from the University of Cambridge. In 1984 she was chosen as one of six women for the BBC 2 series 'Women of Our Century'.
She was created a Life Peer on 8 August 1958 with the title Baroness Wootton of Abinger, of Abinger Common in the County of Surrey, on the advice of Harold Macmillan and was thereby one of the first women ever to sit in the House of Lords; she also became the first woman to sit on the Woolsack as a Deputy Speaker. She was the chairperson of the Wootton Report. She also supported the Sexual Offences Act 1967 which partially decriminalised male homosexuality.
In 1960, she wrote an article for the New Statesman on women's social position in Britain, reviewing and commenting on Joan Barnes's pamphlet A Woman's Place: Wider Horizons. Wootton observed that " indeed has been accomplished. In nearly every sphere of public activity the sex which constitutes the majority of the population is now at least a visible minority. But almost always a minority... Contemporary discriminations are of a subtler order - and for that reason more difficult to deal with." She conceded that " equality of the sexes in public and professional life cannot, of course, be expected," but proposed that men and women share more domestic responsibilities: "Here then is where the next revolution is needed... all social classes the role of fathers... no longer ends with wiping up. In more and more homes father at least baths the children or takes them out on Saturdays or Sundays... I can see no reason why we should not travel much further along this road - almost, if not quite, as far as the point at which everything that can be shared is shared." Although such a change would necessitate "great reorganisations... in working hours and arrangements in the industrial and professional worlds... greater social changes than this have happened before." This hope for equal sharing of domestic labor is still unrealized in Britain nearly 60 years later.
Ethically, she was a supporter of utilitarianism. She supported an "Incurable Patients Bill" in the 1970s which would have allowed doctor-assisted suicide. Her views on abortion which were pro-life but without any religious basis led her to be removed from her position as Vice-President of the British Humanist Association.

Publications

Wootton wrote several books on economic and sociological subjects, including Lament for Economics, End Social Inequality, Freedom Under Planning, Social Science and Social Pathology, Crime and the Criminal Law and Incomes Policy.
In Crime and the Criminal Law she controversially advocated that all crimes ought to be crimes of strict liability. In other words, it was her contention that mens rea – the 'guilty mind' – should not be taken into account. This would remove the burden from the prosecution of proving intent or recklessness.

Personal life

One of her brothers, Captain Arthur Innes Adam, was killed in France on 16 September 1916 and another brother, Neil Kensington Adam, became a noted chemist.
In 1917, she married John "Jack" Wootton. They had thirty-six hours together as husband and wife, before she saw him off to France. He was wounded during World War I and died weeks after their marriage.
In 1935 Wootton married George Wright, a colleague in adult education and London government. Despite Wright's infidelity, the couple remained married until his death from cancer in 1964. The couple had no children.
Wootton died in a care home in Surrey on 11 July 1988, aged 91.