Short Course Description
Restorative justice is an approach to addressing harm that focuses on healing, accountability, and restoring relationships rather than punishment. It involves victims, offenders, and the community in a collaborative process to repair the harm caused by an offense.
Core Principles:
- Healing and Repair: Prioritizes the needs of the victims and community.
- Accountability: Encourages offenders to take responsibility and understand their impact.
- Inclusion: Involves all stakeholders in finding solutions.
Processes:
- Victim-Offender Mediation: Direct discussions between victims and offenders.
- Restorative Circles: Community discussions to address harm.
- Restorative Conferencing: Structured meetings to agree on reparative actions.
Goals:
- Empowerment: Gives victims a voice.
- Reintegration: Helps offenders reintegrate by addressing root causes.
- Community Strengthening: Fosters collective responsibility and cohesion.
Benefits:
- Reduces Recidivism: Lowers repeat offending.
- Victim Satisfaction: Higher satisfaction compared to traditional justice.
- Cost-Effective: More affordable than incarceration.
Challenges:
- Voluntary Participation: Relies on willing participants.
- Resources: Requires trained facilitators and resources.
- Balancing Needs: Needs careful facilitation to meet all parties' needs.
Restorative justice is used in various contexts to promote a compassionate and holistic approach to conflict resolution.
Reviews
4.7
4.7
11 ratings - 5 stars8
- 4 stars3
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Instructor(s)
Tran
Lecture was fine, although not a fan of the topic. Usually devolves in to how can we help the offender, and “reconciliation” gives the victim homework.