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Sexual violence, in all its forms, is a crime for which anecdotal
accounts and scholarly reports suggest victims in their great
majority do not receive adequate 'justice' or redress. The theory
and practice of restorative justice is rapidly developing and
offers some well-argued new avenues for dealings with crime in
general. It has the potential to be extended to cases of sexual
violence and a number of small scale programmes are already
underway across the world. Restorative Responses to Sexual Violence
examines this innovative justice paradigm in more depth in the
particular context of sexual trauma and violence in order to
establish the empirical realities of restorative justice approaches
in cases of sexual violence, and considers how such approaches
could be developed adequately in the future. This book is divided
into two parts, each representing a key area of research and
practice: theoretical and conceptual frameworks, and justice and
therapeutic perspectives. This international collection brings
together leading expert scholars and practitioners to offer both
theoretical and practical perspectives on restorative justice and
sexual violence. This book will be of interest to researchers in
the field of law, criminology, psychology, social science, social
work and psychotherapy, as well as practitioners in the fields of
criminal justice, restorative justice and sex offender and victim
trauma therapies.
Sexual violence, in all its forms, is a crime for which anecdotal
accounts and scholarly reports suggest victims in their great
majority do not receive adequate 'justice' or redress. The theory
and practice of restorative justice is rapidly developing and
offers some well-argued new avenues for dealings with crime in
general. It has the potential to be extended to cases of sexual
violence and a number of small scale programmes are already
underway across the world. Restorative Responses to Sexual Violence
examines this innovative justice paradigm in more depth in the
particular context of sexual trauma and violence in order to
establish the empirical realities of restorative justice approaches
in cases of sexual violence, and considers how such approaches
could be developed adequately in the future. This book is divided
into two parts, each representing a key area of research and
practice: theoretical and conceptual frameworks, and justice and
therapeutic perspectives. This international collection brings
together leading expert scholars and practitioners to offer both
theoretical and practical perspectives on restorative justice and
sexual violence. This book will be of interest to researchers in
the field of law, criminology, psychology, social science, social
work and psychotherapy, as well as practitioners in the fields of
criminal justice, restorative justice and sex offender and victim
trauma therapies.
Conferencing and Restorative Justice: International Practices and
Perspectives offers an analysis of conferencing practices around
the world, examining the range of approaches to different types of
crimes and offender age groups, and assessing their outcomes. First
developed in New Zealand and Australia in the 1990s, conferencing
is a restorative justice practice which has since spread to a
number of other countries as an effective tool in crime reduction.
By encouraging the offender, the victim(s) and family members, and
a facilitator to meet and discuss the crime and its consequences,
and then to find a just and acceptable outcome for all, those
involved hope to repair the harm inflicted upon the victim, the
community and society in general. In this book, the editors have
drawn together some of the leading figures in the restorative
justice community to look at the current condition of such
practices, particularly internationally, and to analyse the
processes and outcomes of conferencing, compared with the
European-favoured, victim-offender mediation. With fourteen
chapters featuring a mix of contributors, including both
practitioners and academics, the book begins with a general and
thematic overview of what conferencing is and how it is developing
theoretically and in practice. This discussion then moves on to
some of the original models of conferencing, such as in New Zealand
and Australia, and examines some of the challenges (sexual assault
cases) and the newer developments found in conferencing in
Latin-America. The final section of the book consists of European
perspectives on conferencing, exploring how some countries have
developed conferencing more extensively (such as into the juvenile
justice system), others are still in a starting-phase, whilst some
have move conferencing outside of the justice system entirely.
Impeccably researched and thoughtfully presented, Conferencing and
Restorative Justice will be of interest to anyone involved in
restorative justice practices, criminal justice and public policy.
Concerned by the high attrition rates for sexual crime and the
secondary victimization experienced by victims during their
participation in the criminal justice system, this book analyses
the extent to which restorative justice can address the justice gap
that exists in current justice provision. Building on clinical
experience and earlier research on sexual crime the authors engage
with the complex dynamics and traumatic impact of sexual crime as a
critical starting point for their research and examine whether
restorative justice can contribute to a more enhanced justice
response. The book presents extensive new data on restorative
justice as applied in sexual violence cases across the globe. It
engages with feminist concerns regarding the traumatic impact of
sexual violence and the power imbalances that characterise these
offences, as well as the potential for re-traumatisation and
re-victimisation during the judicial process. While there is a risk
of coercion of the victim to participate in the process, and
manipulation of restorative justice by the offender, restorative
justice has the potential to lead to the reprivatisation of sexual
crime and ultimately to its decriminalisation. Having examined
these topics in detail, the book concludes there is an important
role for restorative justice in addressing the justice gap that
exists after sexual crime and offers guidance on how this can be
achieved.
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