Justice: The restorative vision — 1 justice: Stumbling toward a restorative ideal.
by Zehr, Howard
June 4, 2015
Source: (2011) Justice Reflection. 26(JR182). What is important is that we recognise the importance of the paradigms we use, and that we free ourselves to question these paradigms. Restorative justice is one possibility which challenges our assumptions. It is, however, hardly a paradigm at...
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After the crime: The power of restorative justice dialogues between victims and violent offenders.
by Miller, Susan L.
June 4, 2015
Source: (2011) New York and London: New York Univeristy Press. In the chapters that follow, I place the Victim Voices Heard program in a context of both its general and specific significance. In chapter 2, I explore the rise in popularity of restorative justice programs in the United States...
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Dealing with emotions in peacemaking.
by Brewer, John D.
June 4, 2015
Source: (2011) n, Susanne Karstedt, et. al., eds, motions, crime and justice.Onati International Series in Law and Society. Oxford and Portland: Hart Publishing. Pp. 295-313. This chapter is devoted to exploring another development of the shame-guilt-reintegration paradigm, namely its...
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Reintegrative ritual: Restorative justice and micro-sociology.
by Rossner, Meredith
June 4, 2015
Source: (2011) In, Susanne Karstedt, et. al., eds, motions, crime and justice.Onati International Series in Law and Society. Oxford and Portland: Hart Publishing. PP. 169-191. I argue that restorative justice theory can be strengthened and the practice improved by examining conferences as an...
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Emotions, crime and justice.
by Karstedt, Susanne
June 4, 2015
Source: (2011) Onati International Series in Law and Society. Oxford and Portland: Hart Publishing. The contributions to this volume span topics from the micro-analysis of emotions in violent encounters, to the paradoxes and tensions that arise with the emotionalisation of criminal justice in...
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Towards a community response to the perpetration of domestic violence.
by Latif, Zahira
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 223-241. This chapter argues that in the UK context, historically, the dominant social discourse of the ideology of the privacy of family-life has influenced...
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Policing sexual offenders in the community: Is it time to move from the invisible to the visible?
by Blanford, Mark
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 203-221. We propose that there is an increasing public appetite for a range of social issues, including crime and anti-social behaviour, to be owned and managed...
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Intolerant or intolerable?: Anti-social youth in asocial communities.
by Hughes, Nathan
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 187-202. This chapter will explore the apparent alienation of youth from the communities they live in. It begins with an examination of accusations of...
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Community justice and the courts: A step forwards, backward, or sideways?
by Raine, John
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 173-185. In recent years in Britain, as in an increasing number of other countries, the concept and ideology of community has taken on a new prominence in the...
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Safer communities and community justice.
by Prior, David
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 159-172. The emergence of community-based strategies and initiatives as a response to local problems of crime and disorder is a relatively recent phenomenon....
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Empowering communities through restorative justice.
by Doolin, Katherine
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 143-157. …he focus of this chapter is to consider the potential for, and challenges to, engaging and empowering communities through restorative justice....
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(In)security, risk, Muslim communities, policing and the ‘new terrorism.’
by Ahmed, Shamila
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 123-139. The chapter explores the complexities of ‘new terrorism,’ detailing how the ‘war on terror’ has produced a disjuncture in...
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Managing risk and changing priorities for probation practice and youth justice.
by Farrow, Kathryn
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 107-122. This chapter will provide an account of how risk-led approaches are operationalised in criminal justice agencies, including an exploration of risk...
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The ASBO: Regulating behaviour and manipulating law.
by Lynch, Theresa
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 87-105. I will question whether the civil status which allows the state to avoid standards of due process traditionally required for criminal intervention can...
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Criminalising the purchase of sexual services: The use of strict liability as a form of risk management.
by Elliott, Jessica
June 4, 2015
Source: (2010) In, Katherine Doolin, et. al, eds., Whose criminal justice? State or community?. Hook, Hampshire: Waterside Press. Pp. 69-85. …his chapter provides an analysis of the strict liability offence provided within section 14 of the PCA — a controversial legislative...
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