 Felly, gweithio ychydig, a gweithio i'n mynd i gyd, mae'n iawn i'n unig o unigol o unigol o unigol ar y Unigol. Ychydig yw Susan Stewart, a dylai'r ymdweithiau unigol o unigol o unigol o unigol ac yn y bydd y OUN Scotland, rwy'n iawn i'n fawr i mi rydyn ni'n gweld i'r unigol yma. Y OUN Scotland yma yw unigol i'r Unigol o unigol o unigol o unigol o unigol o unigol. Rydyn ni'n ymdweithio'n unigol o unigol o unigol o unigol ac yn mynd i'n mynd i'r Sgoledin. Yn ystod, mae'n gweithio gyda'r llwyr i'w pwyllgor o'r gwyllgor ar 21 yma, ond mae'n gweithio'r gweithio i'r gwyllgor, ac mae'n gweithio'r prospectifau fân yn ei ddwylo, ac mae'n gweithio'n gweithio'n gweithio i'n gweithio. Yn y gallwn yma yma, yna ymdweud hynny, yma y dyma'r tynnu, ymdweud hynny'n gwneud y byd. Mae'r cyfnod yw pethau yn tyfu i chi i'n ei bod chi'n ddweud itwch gael credu'r rai amser neu rai nidai'r gweithio'n byw. Fe phethau ar gyfer ddweud sy'n colli dim yn ymighfodol mewn weebeithio ar gyfer myymu. Fy fwrdd yn bwysig i gweithio yma oedd ei hunain, ond wnaethon ni'n rai hwn ni'n ddiwr i gweithio yma'r fforns ond rwy'n ddweud eu fenyw oherwydd dwi'n cael ei fodwys mewn littlehau. there will be feedback forms at the back as you exit this evening. We'd also like to invite you to tweet and engage on social media for those who do that sort of thing. The hashtag tonight will be OU Talk Crime. You'll see it at the bottom and I think you'll be able to get Mitchell Library free Wi-Fi if you've got a device with you. I'm delighted to introduce Professor Jean Hartley, who will chair tonight's session featuring Karen McCluskey, who is one of OU's honorary graduates and Dr Haley Ness from OU in Scotland. One of the advantages of OU in Scotland is that Open University is the UK's only university that has footprint and presence in all four nations of the UK, and that means that we benefit from four different policy and political context, four different funding streams, and in terms of meeting some of the challenges that are common across the UK but have different manifestations, depending on different contexts, we can draw on the expertise of our four nations academics. And Jean is one of our research stars in Open University who we were delighted to poach from Warwick University some three years ago, I think Jean. As well as being Professor of Public Leadership at Open University, she's director of the Citizenship and Governance Priority Research Area. Open University has four strategic priority research areas, and that is one of them. She's also director of the Open University Centre for Policing Research and Learning, and it works with 12 UK police forces elsewhere in the UK to create and use research and education to improve policing. So, without further ado, I'd like you to join me in welcoming Professor Jean Hartley, who'll chair this evening.