Juvenile justice reform and restorative justice: theory, policy and practice
معرفی کتاب «Juvenile justice reform and restorative justice: theory, policy and practice» نوشتهٔ Bazemore, Gordon; Schiff, Mara، منتشرشده توسط نشر Willan Publishing (UK) در سال 2013. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This book, based on a large-scale research project funded by the National Institute of Justice and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, provides an overview of the restorative justice conferencing programs currently in operation in the United States, paying particular attention to the qualitative dimensions of this, based on interviews, focus groups and ethnographic observation. It provides an unrivalled view of restorative justice conferencing in practice, and what the people involved felt and thought about it.
The book looks at four structural variations in the face-to-face form of restorative decision making: family group conferences, victim-offender mediation/dialogue, neighborhood accountability boards, peacemaking circles. The authors address two issues that have received limited research emphasis in restorative justice: the lack of clear and consistent standards, and the absence of testable theories of intervention that reflect what has become a rather diverse practice. In response the authors conclude with a proposed structure for principle-based evaluation designed to test emerging theories of restorative decision making.
This book, based on a large-scale research project funded by the National Institute of Justice and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, provides an overview of the restorative justice conferencing programs currently in operation in the United States, based on interviews, focus groups and ethnographic observation. It provides an overview of restorative justice conferencing in practice, and what the people involved felt and thought about it. Four structural variations in the face-to-face form of restorative decision making are examined : family group conferences; victim-offender mediation / dialogue; neighborhood accountability boards; and peacemaking circles. The authors also discuss the current lack of clear and consistent standards, and the absence of testable theories of intervention that reflect what has become a rather diverse practice, and propose a structure for principle-based evaluation designed to test emerging theories of restorative decision making Restorative justice, restorative group conferencing, and juvenile justice Principles to practice: intermediate outcomes, intervention theories, and conferencing tasks Prevalence and scope of restorative decision-making: findings from a national inventory and survey on restorative conferencing for youth Methodology for the qualitative study and description of conference stages and phases Repairing harm in the conferencing environment Stakeholder involvement in the conferencing environment Community/government relationship and role transformation Looking back and moving forward: conclusions, implications, and an agenda for future research. In North Minneapolis, members of the Northside Community Justice committee's peace-making circle project and other invited participants meet with a 17-year-old African American male juvenile offender two months prior to his release from the state's juvenile corrections facility. This book looks at alternative programs aimed specifically at the juvenile justice systems and practices