Skip to content.
news
You are here: Home articlesdb articles Price, Marty D.. “Crime and Punishment: Can Mediation Produce Restorative Justice for Victims and Offenders?â€?

Summary

Price, Marty D. (1997). “Crime and Punishment: Can Mediation Produce Restorative Justice for Victims and Offenders?â€? Online Journal of Peace and Conflict Resolution. 1(2).

In our society’s justice system, justice equals punishment. Because our society defines justice in this manner, the victims of crimes often seek the most severe possible punishment for their offenders. However, punishment does not address the other important needs of victims such as restoring their losses, answering their questions, relieving their fears, helping them make sense of their tragedy or healing their wound. Regardless of their particular point-of-views, most people agree that our criminal justice system is broken and we don’t know how to fix it. Victim offender mediation, with its focus on restorative justice, cannot provide all the answers to our crime problem, but it is an essential part of the solution. A approach concerned with righting the wrongs to victims and making amends, repairing the harm done (whatever ways possible, including victim compensation) and restoring the lives affected by crime, offers us a much more hopeful vision for the future.

Link: www.trinstitute.org/ojpcr/1_2price1.htm

211

RJ around the World

RJ Around the World

RJ Library

Search 8969 publications on restorative justice
Restorative Justice Continuum
Howard Zehr discusses the need to think in terms of restorativeness.
What is Restorative Justice?
Restorative justice is a theory of justice that emphasizes repairing the harm caused or revealed by criminal behaviour. It is best accomplished through cooperative processes that include all stakeholders. More

Update

 

Sign up for free monthly updates on restorative developments around the world.

 

Submit an article for publication on RJ Online.