...undoubtedly the most scientifically balanced study to focus entirely on victim-oriented expectations and outcomes as a result of restorative justice interventions...an important addition to the empirical and theoretical literature on restorative justice.

Russ Immarigeon, Victim Offender Mediation Association (USA)

...Strang goes beyond the simple assessment of 'satisfaction' to the value of the informal proceedings as well as the outcome... this research shows that while we should not claim too much or raise expectations too far, good quality restorative justice apparently gives victims more of what they want than the conventional process.

Martin Wright, University of Sussex, British Journal of Criminology

This book addresses the role of victims in our criminal justice system and the shortcomings they perceive in the way they are treated. It examines whether restorative justice can offer them more justice than they receive from the formal court-based system. Research into the shortcomings of the court-based system has identified a number of issues that victims want to address. In brief, they want a less formal process where their views count, more information about both the processing and the outcome of their case, a greater opportunity for participation in the way their case is dealt with, fairer and more respectful treatment, and emotional as well as material restoration as an outcome. Over the past three decades, the victim movement worldwide has agitated for an enhanced role for victims in criminal justice. Despite some successes, it appears that structural as well as political factors may mean that victims have won as much as they are likely to gain from formal justice. A series of randomized controlled trials in Canberra, known as the Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE), has provided an opportunity to compare rigorously the impact on victims of court-based justice with a restorative justice program known as conferencing. In these experiments, middle-range property and violent offences committed by young offenders were assigned either to court (as they would normally have been treated) or to a conference. Empirical evidence from RISE examined in this book suggests that the restorative alternative of conferencing more often than court has the capacity to give victims what they say they want in achieving meaningful victim participation and restoration, especially emotional restoration.
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Drawing on a five-year study of the impact of a restorative justice programme on victims of property and violent crime, Strang presents evidence to show that the restorative alternative of conferencing more often than court-based solutions has the capacity to satisfy victims' expectations of delivering restoration.
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1. The Victim in Criminal Justice ; 2. Victims of Crime and the Victim Movement ; 3. The Theory and Practice of Restorative Justice ; 4. The Reintegrative Shaming Experiments: Research Design and Methodology ; 5. The Lived Experience of Victims: How Restorative Justice Worked in Canberra ; 6. Victim Satisfaction with the Restorative Alternative ; 7. Victims and Offenders: A Relational Analysis ; 8. Conclusion
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`...undoubtedly the most scientifically balanced study to focus entirely on victim-oriented expectations and outcomes as a result of restorative justice interventions...an important addition to the empirical and theoretical literature on restorative justice.' Russ Immarigeon, Victim Offender Mediation Association (USA) `...Strang goes beyond the simple assessment of 'satisfaction' to the value of the informal proceedings as well as the outcome... this research shows that while we should not claim too much or raise expectations too far, good quality restorative justice apparently gives victims more of what they want than the conventional process.' Martin Wright, University of Sussex, British Journal of Criminology
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Examines the victim's experience of restorative justice in comparison with the experience of victims whose cases were treated in the courts in the usual way Shifts the focus of discussion from the effectiveness of restorative justice in reducing reoffending to whether it offers the victims of crime advantages over traditional court-centred justice
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Dr Heather Strang is Director of the Centre for Restorative Justice and a Fellow at the Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University.
Examines the victim's experience of restorative justice in comparison with the experience of victims whose cases were treated in the courts in the usual way Shifts the focus of discussion from the effectiveness of restorative justice in reducing reoffending to whether it offers the victims of crime advantages over traditional court-centred justice
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199274291
Publisert
2004
Utgiver
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Vekt
443 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
139 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
320

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Dr Heather Strang is Director of the Centre for Restorative Justice and a Fellow at the Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University.