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As restorative justice practitioners, hard work needed regarding victims: Five things to do

January 26, 2010
  1. Stay grounded in the parameters of the process. 
    I decided that the Circle would flow better if we had the offender
    going last.  That’s not what Restorative Justice guides us to do.  You
    let the victim decide, and you give the victim that option….
  2. Convey the intentions and limitations of Restorative Justice…. Is restorative justice going to get to the outcomes that a victim
    really wants?  As practitioners we owe it to everyone involved to fully
    share what the intentions of restorative justice are.  I say the
    “conversation creates the outcome”, that we don’t go in with a detailed
    agenda for others.  But what if the victim wants and needs to see
    remorse in the offender?  Share and disclose the limitations of the
    process, use stories and examples of other victims….
  3. Remind victims about core RJ values.  I try to make
    a point of mentioning that “listening for understanding” does not mean
    “accepting the behavior”.  I try to discuss with each side before a
    meeting, things like body language and eye contact.  Victims can feel
    disrespected for not getting eye contact, yet an offender is feeling
    shame and is embarrassed to make the eye contact.  Its important to meet
    people where they are at….
  4. Negotiate the “owning of the offense”, carefully…. Some offenders still fear getting in trouble, and will “self-preserve”
    over telling the truth.  They acknowledge they caused the harm, but
    full disclosure of the story, the details, the telling of the incident
    from start to finish, doesn’t happen.  Sometimes the anxiety of the
    meeting causes people to not remember or become frightened to speak
    much.  As practitioners, tread lightly, prepare victims for how this
    portion will go, and how they will respond to it going not at well as
    expected….
  5. Accept you can’t meet everyone’s needs…. So when Restorative Justice is victim-centered, guess what, we don’t
    even really know what that means, because we don’t know what the victims’
    wants and needs are.  We don’t really know what they are going to want
    or need as the preparation process evolves.  Victims are humans first,
    and as human beings sometimes we identify our wants and needs and they
    aren’t exactly reasonable….

Do the best you can upholding the principles of restorative justice,
consult with others, co-facilitate and communicate directly.

Read the whole entry, which includes some interesting stories.

Tags:

Blog PostCourtsLimitations of RJPrisonsRestorative PracticesRJ and the WorkplaceRJ in SchoolsRJ OfficeStatutes and LegislationTeachers and StudentsVictim Support
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