Addressing Crime and its Effects.
Critically
consider the strengths and weaknesses of restorative justice.
Before we start, I would like to confirm that the following is my own work and it is being shared for one reason. As a poorly paid public servant (Probation Officer) I have decided to share my training, research and essay's on the web to promote my Ink Shop.....Viva Ink so enjoy and use as you will but please buy your ink and toner from my shop. If you need help email: vivainks@yahoo.com
Although
the term restorative justice is contemporary, the principal and practices
relating to it are ancient and based on the family or community dealing
collectively with the wrongdoing of one of it’s members. Any form of conflict
resolution has at it’s centre the victim and offender and relies on the values,
ethics and sense of right and wrong which relate to specific cultures. (www.victimsa.org 2003 pg1). Much of the
work undertaken in support of restorative justice was formulated and based on
North American sentencing circles (Native Indians) and New Zealand (Maori)
justice. Both have contributed to the development of group, family or community
conferencing circles. In recent years it would appear that restorative justice
is emerging as an increasingly important element in mainstream criminological
practice. First discussed in the 1970s by Barnett (1977) and Eglash (1977) when
considering restitution as a concept within the criminal justice system,
restorative justice has now been accepted and integrated into criminological
thinking through the works of Braithwaite (1989), Marshall (1985), Umbreit
(1994) and Zehr (1990).
Victims
today have gradually lost their central role in the pursuit of redress
following a crime or wrongdoing. Most modern western societies through the use
of their statutory agents (police, courts, prisons and probation etc) choosing
to take over the responsibility of investigating, prosecuting, convicting and
punishing offenders on behalf of the victim.
Crime has therefore become a violation of the State rather than the
individual. The victim’s role within the judicial system having been reduced to
that of a witness acting on behalf of the State whenever a case is contested.
Victim’s however do retain the right to pursue their grievances through the
civil courts should they believe the State has not served their interests. “One of the aims of restorative justice
movement is to replace forms of state justice for a wide range of offences and
offenders. This means changing the focus of the term “criminal justice” itself,
away from the assumption that it is a matter concerning only the state and the
defendant/offender, and towards a conception that includes as stake holders the
victim and the community too.” (Ashworth 2002 pg578). State involvement in
the restorative justice process has become a central issue to the debate, as a
consequence this narrative will focus on whether restorative justice should
remain community governed or alternatively, state funded, state managed and
state lead.
Since the 1997 general
election, the Labour government’s policies have displayed mixed messages
surrounding crime and punishment. New Labour, having been elected on the back
of Tony Blair’s message: “tough on crime
and tough on the causes of crime” would now suggest that this country and
its Government have adopted an even more punitive approach to criminal justice.
However Dignan (1999) argues that the government is displaying a significant
shift in at least two areas of contemporary criminal policy. The first, being a
move towards a more inclusive approach to criminal justice policy making. This
has been characterised by a growing emphasis on community safety and a switch
to problem-solving policing (see Thames Valley Police). Above all, there is now
increased support for an alternative approach to the offending of young people.
The second consists of a growing acknowledgement of the disproportionate amount
of effort and resources that continue to be devoted to developing and
strengthening ways of responding to crime. Both themes are reflected in the
Crime and Disorder Act (1998), and are both highly relevant to the future
prospects of restorative justice.
Second, there are new orders
applicable to young offenders who come before the court. Referral orders, introduced by section 1 of the Youth Justice and
Criminal Evidence Act 1999, are mandatory for most young offenders pleading
guilty at their first court appearance. The court must refer them to a youth
offender panel established by the local YOT. In this case the statutorily
stated aim of the programme of behaviour is to prevent re-offending, the means
to be guided by the principles of restorative
justice. Whatever is agreed is confirmed in a youth offender contract.
Section 8(2) provides an indication of what restorative
practices may be included in the contract: direct and indirect reparation,
mediation with the victim, participation in initiatives such as alcohol or drug
awareness programmes. In other words, the state legally retains control of what
constitutes the restorative justice process.
The
theoretical basis for extending the concept of restorative justice into the
wider field of crime prevention strategies is based on Braithwaite’s (1989)
theory of reintagrative shaming. Here it is argued that societies, which
develop effective techniques for shaming offenders reintegratively, will
generally experience less crime than those societies that rely on stigmatised
shaming that is prevalent within the current adversarial judicial processes.
The main difference between the two is that reintagrative shaming attempts to
force the offender to accept his/her actions through discussions and contact
with the victim. This process in theory prevents the offender from minimising
the event and their involvement, by allowing the victim to express their
feelings directly. Under the current system, offenders are stigmatised by the state
and become labelled as outcasts of society. Having little or no contact with
the victim gives the offender the opportunity to dismiss and to a large extent
ignore the feelings of the victim and his or her family. The offenders only
worry being the outcome of the judicial process itself, i.e. their sentence or
penance. However, much of Braithwaite’s work is based on studies of stratified
indigenous groups (Maori’s in New Zealand, Aboriginal groups in Australia and
the Japanese) that do not reflect the cosmopolitan societies that now exist
throughout Western Europe.
There
is an important distinction between tribunals responding in a principled manner
to relevant factual differences between cases and responding on the basis of
their own views or preferences. In other words, who has control during the
mediation process? Who is represented? Should the offender be allowed to
include his/her extended family and possibly outnumber and intimidate the
victim further? Surely this would constitute secondary victimisation on the
grounds that the victim may not wish to be confronted by the offender at any
point in time. By bringing the offender face to face with his/her victim during
the mediation process would imply that the offence that has occurred becomes
negotiable and the victim should in part take some responsibility for being a
“victim”. The latter is then encouraged to help rehabilitate the offender
through reliving the criminal act and exploring his or her own association with
that event. State financial involvement would inevitably lead to bureaucratic
pressures to achieve compliance along with a value for money approach that
would be target lead. On this basis would victims then be pressurised by the
community or state to attend meetings and take part in the process?
The practice of restorative justice is based on the
premise that the appropriate response to a crime requires much more than the
delivery of a “just measure” of pain to individual offenders, which is
epitomised by the current retributive judicial process. Restorative justice is
more concerned with the preservation and restoration of relationships, both at
the individual level and the societal level. However exciting this prospect may
be, the ideology relies heavily on communalization and the voluntary
participation of its members. In other words, to repair the damage done to a
community, it becomes a pre-requisite that a recognised and stratified
community exists to begin with. As previously stated, there is much excitement
and literature surrounding restorative justice. However the production of
statistical data supporting this approach remains scarce, many practical
implementation issues remain ambiguous and unproven. Restorative justice has
now been incorporated into the margins of mainstream criminal justice, its
emergence into this country’s youth justice system is an indication that there
are important lessons to be learned. However, it could be argued that this
governments shift towards restorative justice is based more on faith and
desperation rather than hard empirical evidence. “Restorative Justice will never become a mainstream alternative to retributive
justice unless long-term research and development programs show that it does
have the capacity to reduce crime” (Braithwaite 2003 pg1)
Alder, C & Wundersitz, J (eds) (1994). Family
conferencing and juvenile justice. Australian Institute of Criminology.
Canberra
Asworth, A (2002).
Responsibilities, Rights and Restorative Justice. British Journal of
Criminology, issue 42, 578-595.
Barnett, R (1977).
Restitution: A new paradigm of criminal justice. Ethics 87: 270-301. Cited in:
The Effectiveness of Restorative Justice Practices: A Meta Analysis (2001)
Department of Justice Canada.
Barton, C (2000).
Restorative Justice Empowerment. The Australian Journal of Professional and
Applied Ethics, vol. 2, no. 2, 2000
Bazemore, G & Walgrave, L (1999). Restorative
Juvenile Justice: Repairing the harm of youth crime. Criminal Justice press.
New York.
Braithwaite, J (1979). Inequality,
Crime and Public Policy. Routledge. London
Braithwaite, J (1989). Crime shame and reintegration.
Cambridge University press. Cambridge.
Braithwaite, J (1999). Restorative
Justice: Assessing optimistic and pessimistic accounts. Cited in Tonry, M
(eds). Crime and Justice: A review of research Vol. 25. University of Chicago
press. Chicago
Braithwaite, J (2003). Linking
Crime Prevention to Restorative Justice. Direct versus indirect pursuit of
objectives. http://www.restorativepractices.org/pages/nacc_bra.html
Accessed 13/04/03
Burnside, J & Baker, N (eds)
(1994). Relational justice. Repairing the breach. Waterside press. Winchester.
Crawford, A & Goodey, J (eds)
(2000). Integrating a Victim Perspective within Criminal Justice. Dartmouth
publishing. Aldershot.
Crow, I (2001). The Treatment and
Rehabilitation of Offenders. Sage Publications. London.
Dignan, J (199?). Restorative
crime prevention in theory and practice. Prison service journal issue 123.
Eglash, A (1977).
Beyond Restitution: Cited in: The Effectiveness of Restorative Justice
Practices: A Meta Analysis (2001) Department of Justice Canada.
Haines, K (2000).
Referral orders and youth offender panels: Restorative approaches. Cited in
Goldson, B (eds) The new youth justice. Russell House. Lyme Regis
HORS 187. Home Office Research
Study 187. (1998). Reducing offending. An assessment of research evidence
on ways of dealing with offending behaviour. London,
Home Office
Hudson, B (1998). Understanding
Justice. Open University Press. Buckingham.
Marshall, T (1985). Alternatives
to criminal courts: The potential for non-judicial dispute resolution. Gower
publishing. Brookfield.
Marshal, T (1999). Restorative Justice: An overview.
Research Development and Statistics Directorate. Home Office. London.
Miers, D et al (2001). An Exploratory Evaluation of
Restorative Justice Schemes. Home Office. Policing and Reducing Crime Unit
Research, Development and Statistics Directorate. London.
Morris, A (2002). Critiquing the
critics. A brief response to critics of restorative justice. British Journal of
Criminology, issue 42, 596-615.
Strang, H & Braithwaite, J (eds) (2002). Restorative
Justice and Family Violence. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.
Thames Valley Police (2002). Restorative Justice a
Balanced Approach. www.restorativejustice.org.uk/omtvpol.html
Accessed 27/04/03
Umbreit, MS (1994). Victim meets
offender: The impact of restorative justice and mediation. Criminal justice
press. New York.
Wright, M (1991). Justice for
Victims and Offenders. Open University Press. Buckingham.
Zehr, H (1990). Changing lenses: A
new focus for crime and justice. Scottsdale, Penn: Herald press.
www.victimsa.org/issues/restorative_justice.htm Restorative
Justice – Position Paper. Victim support services. Accessed 13/04/03.
No comments:
Post a Comment