Sue Clayton
[3][4] She studied photography at Polytechnic of Central London (PCL, now Westminster University) where she met Jonathon Curling and together they started working on an experimental video about women's experiences in the clothing trade."It transformed as, and many like me, from a fairly conservative young woman with still limited work options, into an artist and activist who would traverse music, film and video making, exhibition, writing and political organisation."[4] In 1990 Clayton turned the short story, The Last Crop, by noted Australian author Elizabeth Jolley, into a feature film,[5] starring Kerry Walker and Noah Taylor.Judge Christopher Morgan found them guilty of a terrorism-related offence but gave suspended sentences or community orders after he accepted they were motivated by "genuine reasons".[11][12] Her 2017 documentary Calais Children: A Case to Answer, played a role in the British High Court's determination that some unaccompanied minors had rights to settlement under the Dubs Amendment.