Hillsborough Independent Panel

Completed

Hillsborough Panel

Chair Bishop James Jones Other
Established 01 Feb 2010
Final Report 12 Sep 2012
Commissioned by Home Office Independent panel; not a statutory public inquiry

Panel examining documents relating to the 1989 Hillsborough disaster which killed 97 Liverpool football fans.

Evidence & Impact
The Hillsborough Independent Panel was established in 2010 to oversee disclosure of all documents relating to the 1989 Hillsborough disaster. Chaired by Bishop James Jones, the Panel published its report on 12 September 2012, making nine recommendations focused on preserving and providing public access to the disclosed materials.

The government formally accepted five of the nine recommendations, with no published response to the remaining four. Evidence indicates progress on several fronts. The Coroners (Investigations) Regulations 2013 introduced formal requirements for coroners' record retention, addressing the Panel's first recommendation. A Distributed Permanent Archive was established as recommended, with original materials held across Sheffield Archives, Liverpool Record Office, and The National Archives. The Digital Archive containing 450,000 pages from 85 organisations was made publicly accessible through a dedicated website, which has been permanently preserved by The National Archives.

However, no published evidence has been identified for several key recommendations. The Panel's recommendation for a review of police records under the Public Records Act 1958 received no formal government response, and while Hillsborough documents were transferred to The National Archives, no broader review has been announced. Similarly, no Editor-in-Chief position was established for ongoing management of the Digital Archive, which instead exists as a static snapshot. Without this editorial oversight, no formal protocol for adding or removing archive material was developed.

The evidence suggests a pattern where recommendations relating to preserving existing disclosed materials were acted upon, while those requiring ongoing institutional arrangements or broader policy reviews received no formal response. No progress updates or implementation reviews have been published since the initial government response in December 2012, leaving the status of several recommendations unclear in the public record.
Reforms Attributed to This Inquiry
- The Coroners (Investigations) Regulations 2013 established formal requirements for coroners' record retention, including a mandate under regulation 27(1) that all inquest recordings must be kept for at least 15 years
- A Distributed Permanent Archive was established holding Hillsborough-related materials across Sheffield Archives, Liverpool Record Office, and The National Archives at Kew
- The Digital Archive containing 450,000 pages of material from 85 organisations was made publicly accessible via the hillsborough.independent.gov.uk website and permanently preserved by The National Archives
- Central government documents relating to Hillsborough disclosed to the Panel were transferred to The National Archives at Kew
Unfinished Business
- No formal government response was published regarding a review of police records under the Public Records Act 1958
- No Editor-in-Chief position was established for ongoing management of the Digital Archive as recommended
- No formal protocol for adding or removing archive material was developed
- No formal mechanism was established to encourage private organisations to deposit further records into the Distributed Permanent Archive
Generated 18 Mar 2026 using claude-opus-4. Assessment is indicative, not authoritative.
2 years, 7 months Duration
£5m Total Cost
450,000 Documents
395 Report Pages
Government Response

Total Recommendations 9
Data last updated: 1 Dec 2012
Data verified: 24 Mar 2026 (import)
How to read this

Government Response tracks what the government said it would do (accepted, rejected, etc.).

Full methodology

since Apr 2016
01 Dec 2025
Early Day Motion Introduction of the Hillsborough Law and the 36th anniversary
Tom Morrison (Liberal Democrat)
22 Apr 2025
Early Day Motion Hillsborough disaster and the National Curriculum
Ian Byrne (Labour)
15 Nov 2021
Early Day Motion 50th anniversary of the Ibrox disaster
Chris Stephens (Scottish National Party)
30 Dec 2020
Early Day Motion Provision of The Sun newspaper on the Parliamentary Estate
Paula Barker (Labour)
09 Jan 2020
View all 10 mentions →
15 Dec 2009
Inquiry Announced
01 Feb 2010
Inquiry Established
12 Sep 2012
Final Report Published

Recommendations (4)

2
No Response
Police records under Public Records Act 1958
Recommendation
We recommend that the preservation of police records be reviewed to ensure that all such documents are treated as public records, held on behalf of the public, subject to the Public Records Act 1958 and to transfer to the National … Read more
Published evidence summary
No formal government response was published regarding this recommendation (Govt response, 2012-12-01). While the Hillsborough documents disclosed by the Panel were transferred to The National Archives, a broader review of police records treatment under the Public Records Act 1958 has not been formally announced (Govt response, 2012-12-01). No further published evidence has been identified since 2012.
Home Office (Primary)
View Details
5
No Response
Private owners encouraged to deposit records
Recommendation
We recommend that, once a copy of all material has been placed on a Digital Archive, private owners - including the FA and SWFC - be encouraged to deposit original materials to an appropriate archive in the Distributed Permanent Archive. … Read more
Published evidence summary
No formal government response was published for this recommendation (Govt response, 2012-12-01). While private organisations like the FA and Sheffield Wednesday FC contributed documents to the Panel's disclosure process, no formal mechanism has been established to encourage further deposits of private records to the Distributed Permanent Archive (Govt response, 2012-12-01). No further published evidence has been identified since 2012.
The National Archives (Primary)
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6
No Response
Editor-in-Chief for digital archive
Recommendation
We recommend the appointment of an Editor-in-Chief to oversee the presentation on the Digital Archive of documents relating to the disaster, and to the role of each of the organisations involved. The organisations concerned should fund this post and work … Read more
Published evidence summary
No formal government response was published for this recommendation, and there is no evidence that an Editor-in-Chief position was established for the ongoing management of the Digital Archive (Govt response, 2012-12-01). The original Panel website (hillsborough.independent.gov.uk) was archived by The National Archives as a static snapshot, without active editorial oversight (Govt response, 2012-12-01). No further published evidence has been identified since 2012.
Cabinet Office (Primary)
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7
No Response
Protocol for adding/removing archive material
Recommendation
We recommend the development of a protocol which identifies the criteria according to which material not disclosed by the Panel may be added in the future, and material currently disclosed may be removed. Such decisions should be made by the … Read more
Published evidence summary
No formal government response was published for this recommendation (Govt response, 2012-12-01). Due to the absence of an Editor-in-Chief (as per Recommendation 6), no formal protocol for adding or removing archive material was developed (Govt response, 2012-12-01). The archive remains a static snapshot at The National Archives, with no further published evidence identified since 2012.
Cabinet Office (Primary)
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