Last week I discussed what Retributive Justice was, this
week we are going to go over Restorative Justice. All forms are obviously necessary;
however some people favor a certain one over the other or favor a few and completely
disagree with the other. The point is that all the forms of justice are heavily
criticized and in order to criticize each one, one must first be familiar with
all of them. There are many people who have not given an actual effort to learn
about all of them. Restorative just has fundamental elements, that will truly
help some criminals.
Restorative
justice is “a new movement in the fields of victimology and criminology.
Acknowledging that crime causes injury to people and communities, it insists
that justice repair those injuries and that the parties be permitted to
participate in that process,” (Restorative Justice, 1). In other words, the
main focus is to repair and to restore as much of the damage as they can.
Restorative Justice views criminal behavior and actions as not just lawbreaking,
but also realizes that it they harm done to the victim, community, and
themselves. It also allows for more victims and communities to respond to
crime, rather than just the government and the offender. Additionally, it
measures success by the amount of harm that is repaired or prevented, instead
of how punishment is administered (Restorative Justice, 1). One of the ways
that this form of justice is applied, is by face-to-face meetings.
Having
meetings between the victims, and their offenders, and even the affected members
of the community are influential in understanding and confronting the fact that
crime and justice correlate with one in other. In understanding their correlation,
there is more possibility of crime repair and prevention. These meetings only
occur when the offender has admitted to the crime at hand, and both parties are
willing to participate. One form of the meetings is called Victim Offender
Mediation, it allows for the victim and the offender to meet in a controlled
environment. There is always a mediator present and both the victim and the
offender discuss what happened, the victim talks about the harm that was done
to them and how it affected them (Restorative Justice,2). This internalizes
with the offender and they take responsibility for the damage they have done,
preventing them to want to do it again.
In the
United States, there are only 300 victim offender mediation programs. There has
been some research done on these programs and their result. The research
indicated that there is more satisfaction with the victims and offenders who
participated in the program, their chances of completing their restitution
obligations increase, the victims fear decreases, and offenders are less likely
to reoffend versus their normal court process counterparts (Restorative
Justice,2). Another form of Restorative punishment is group conferencing. In
this activity, the offender, the victim, family of both victim and offender,
and any other support systems of either party come together to discuss the
aftermath of the crime (Restorative Justice, 2).
Conferencing goals are to give the
victim a chance to be involved in the crime response, gives the offender
awareness towards the gravity of their actions, allows the offender to somewhat
make amends, and gives the victim and the offender community support.
Restorative justice also deals with peacemaking. Peacemaking, also known as
sentencing circles, brings in all the affected parties of the crime, judges,
prosecutors, police and court workers, defense counsel, and judge to come up
with a sentencing plan that addresses the concerns of all the people involved
and affected. The idea behind peacemaking is to build a sense of community,
offender may make amends, the cause of criminal behavior, and promote healing
of everybody who was affected by the crime (Restorative Justice,3). Restorative
Justice has many type of programs set up to in a way “punish” criminals. Many
do not like it because they feel it is too lenient.
Sources:
http://www.d.umn.edu/~jmaahs/Correctional%20Assessment/rj%20brief.pdf
No comments:
Post a Comment