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You are here: Home articlesdb articles Newell, Tim. Restorative Justice in Prisons: The Possibility of Change

Summary

Newell, Tim (2001). Restorative Justice in Prisons: The Possibility of Change Cambridge, U.K.: Cropwood Fellowship Programme, Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge. Downloaded 27 January 2005.

Tim Newell served as a prison governor in England for over three decades. Retired from the Prison Service, he now works as a restorative justice facilitator. In this paper, he reports on a six month project he carried out as a Cropwood Fellow (a program of the Institute of Criminology at Cambridge University) on the potential of restorative practice in prisons. Specifically, through this project he examined the extent to which concepts of restorative justice, developed in community settings, can be applied in custodial settings. After defining restorative justice, he discusses some characteristics of correctional systems, the nature of his project and research method, and key results of his research.

Link: www.crim.cam.ac.uk/research/cropwood/documents/RestorativeJusticeinPrisons.doc

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