Skip to content.
news
You are here: Home articlesdb articles Maloney, Lana and Reddoch, Graham.. Restorative Justice and Family Violence: A Community-Based Effort to Move From Theory to Practice

Summary

Maloney, Lana and Reddoch, Graham. (2002). Restorative Justice and Family Violence: A Community-Based Effort to Move From Theory to Practice Paper presented at the Sixth International Conference On Restorative Justice. Centre for Restorative Justice. 1-4 June. Vancouver BC. Downloaded 21 August 2003.

This presentation is a joint endeavor by the University of Manitoba and the John Howard Society of Manitoba. Work is being undertaken at Winnepeg to assess the potential for expanding a restorative approach to dealing with family violence. It describes the results of focus groups with suvivors, offenders, and family violence practitioners in Winnipeg. The practitioner focus groups included representatives from the University of Manitoba, Departments of Social Work and Sociology; Province of Manitoba-Community and Adult Corrections; Winnipeg City Police and other community organiztions who deal with family violence. The focus groups were convened to consider the use of the Family Group Decision Making model developed by Dr. Gale Burford and Dr. Joan Pennell. (Author's Abstract)

Link: www.sfu.ca/cfrj/fulltext/maloney.pdf

3583

RJ around the World

RJ Around the World

RJ Library

Search 8768 publications on restorative justice
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.