ISBN-13: 9781843920946 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 386 str.
ISBN-13: 9781843920946 / Angielski / Miękka / 2004 / 386 str.
During the 1990s restorative justice emerged as an international movement for criminal justice reform, and a number of countries adopted policies encouraging or requiring the use of restorative justice practices as an alternative or in addition to adversarial court proceedings. By 2001, almost every state in the US had begun to experiment with restorative justice practices. 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 US, paying particular attention to the qualitative dimensions of this, based on interviews, focus groups and ethnographic observation. It provides an unrivaled 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 con