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Narrative Accounts from the Citizens, Victims, and Offenders Restoring Justice Program

Lovell, Madeline L
June 4, 2015

Source: (2002) Contemporary Justice Review. 5(3):261-272

This paper describes the Citizens, Victims, and Offenders Restoring Justice (CVORJ) program, a prison-based program conducted as a pilot study at the Washington State Reformatory. The program brings together offenders and victims-though not involved in the same crime- in the company on interested community members to discuss restorative justice principles. The program focuses on the sharing of personal narratives of crime to explore how the harms resulting from crime can best be addressed and justice achieved. Of interest was how a restorative justice model that highlighted community participation could be incorporated into a correctional setting and whether healing could result from the use of surrogate offenders, victims, and community members. The restorative nature of the program, its method of operation, results from the qualitative evaluation, and key implementaion challenges are presented.

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AbstractCourtsNorth America and CaribbeanPolicePrisonsRJ in SchoolsStatutes and Legislation
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