The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective

Restorative justice emerged in the western world as an alternative to the existing retributive penal system. An alternative that no longer relied on lawyers and judges to resolve criminal matters and community disputes, but rather empowered victims, offenders, and community members to do justice the...

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Main Author: Broughton, Christopher M.
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23115
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-231152014-06-12T03:51:05ZThe Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian PerspectiveBroughton, Christopher M.Restorative JusticeNeo-liberalisminstitutionalizationRestorative justice emerged in the western world as an alternative to the existing retributive penal system. An alternative that no longer relied on lawyers and judges to resolve criminal matters and community disputes, but rather empowered victims, offenders, and community members to do justice themselves. Throughout the past thirty years restorative justice has distanced itself from the traditional criminal justice system by focusing on repairing the harm caused by an offence rather than charging an offender for committing a crime against the state. This study focuses on the institutionalization of restorative justice. Specifically, this thesis conducts a content analysis of five Canada institutionalized restorative justice programs with the purpose of answering one primary research question. This question asks: are institutionalized restorative justice programs within Canada structured to reflect the core values of restorative justice? In order to answer this question, this thesis analyzes all the available textual documents pertaining to the five selected restorative justice programs for evidence of core restorative justice values and values associated with the co-opting institution, the retributive criminal justice system. This thesis concludes that yes, the five analyzed restorative programs are structured to reflect the core values of restorative justice. Although, the programs are also structured to reflect the core values of the current political ideology of neo-liberalism.2012-07-26T10:02:54Z2012-07-26T10:02:54Z20122012-07-26Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/23115en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Restorative Justice
Neo-liberalism
institutionalization
spellingShingle Restorative Justice
Neo-liberalism
institutionalization
Broughton, Christopher M.
The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
description Restorative justice emerged in the western world as an alternative to the existing retributive penal system. An alternative that no longer relied on lawyers and judges to resolve criminal matters and community disputes, but rather empowered victims, offenders, and community members to do justice themselves. Throughout the past thirty years restorative justice has distanced itself from the traditional criminal justice system by focusing on repairing the harm caused by an offence rather than charging an offender for committing a crime against the state. This study focuses on the institutionalization of restorative justice. Specifically, this thesis conducts a content analysis of five Canada institutionalized restorative justice programs with the purpose of answering one primary research question. This question asks: are institutionalized restorative justice programs within Canada structured to reflect the core values of restorative justice? In order to answer this question, this thesis analyzes all the available textual documents pertaining to the five selected restorative justice programs for evidence of core restorative justice values and values associated with the co-opting institution, the retributive criminal justice system. This thesis concludes that yes, the five analyzed restorative programs are structured to reflect the core values of restorative justice. Although, the programs are also structured to reflect the core values of the current political ideology of neo-liberalism.
author Broughton, Christopher M.
author_facet Broughton, Christopher M.
author_sort Broughton, Christopher M.
title The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
title_short The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
title_full The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
title_fullStr The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
title_full_unstemmed The Institutionalization of Restorative Justice: A Canadian Perspective
title_sort institutionalization of restorative justice: a canadian perspective
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23115
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