Lead Innovation in Neurorehabilitation for Justice-Involved Individuals
We’re looking for a forward-thinking Principal Psychologist to join a national neurorehabilitation service working with individuals in the criminal justice system. This unique, fully remote role (with some travel) focuses on providing clinical leadership, supervision, research, and service development across a growing specialist brain injury service supporting people in prison and on probation.
This 18-month contract is ideal for someone passionate about driving accessible, evidence-based rehabilitation where it’s needed most.
What You’ll Be Doing
- Provide clinical and neuropsychological supervision to a team of Linkworkers
- Lead on service delivery protocols, quality standards, and research
- Deliver brain injury awareness training to staff across the justice system
- Contribute to strategic growth, clinical governance, and national awareness
- Represent the service at conferences, in publications, and across sectors
- Provide expert clinical consultation and guide best practice within the organisation
- Develop policy and innovation within a neurorehabilitation framework
What We’re Looking For
- HCPC-registered Clinical Psychologist with QiCN or equivalent route
- Postgraduate training in Neuropsychology (e.g. PG Dip)
- Strong background in brain injury rehabilitation
- Significant experience supervising qualified psychologists or clinicians
- Confident in developing strategy, policy, and service innovation
- A collaborative leader, passionate about equity and social change
What’s On Offer
- Competitive salary: £62,215 – £72,293 per annum DOE (FTE)
- 38 days annual leave (inclusive of bank holidays)
- Buy/sell up to 5 days AL each year
- Health Cash Plan (from June)
- Group Life Assurance
- Company pension
- Employee Assistance Programme (EAP)
- Excellent CPD and leadership training
- Eye care vouchers
- Free parking (where applicable)
- Staff awards and long service recognition
This is more than a clinical role — it’s a chance to influence real change and make rehabilitation more accessible for some of society’s most underserved individuals.