Skip to content.
news
You are here: Home articlesdb articles New Zealand Ministry of Justice. Restorative Justice: The Public Submissions

Summary

New Zealand Ministry of Justice (1998). Restorative Justice: The Public Submissions Wellington, New Zealand: Ministry of Justice. Downloaded 1 February 2005.

This document is an analysis of submissions received by the Ministry on restorative justice. The analysis identifies key themes and responses to specific issues, and also considers perspectives in relation to Mäori, Pacific peoples and victims. Overview of submissions. One hundred and thirteen submissions representing diverse interests were received.The views represented ranged from being highly supportive of to highly critical of the idea. Overall, the submissions were supportive of restorative justice. Opposition to restorative justice. Nine submissions were strongly opposed to restorative justice. Reasons included a view that it was too lenient, concern about the return of serious offenders to the community, a belief that it would not improve the situation for victims and the need for criminal justice processes to provide general deterrence. (excerpt)

Link: www.justice.govt.nz/pubs/reports/1998/restorative_justice/index.html

5440

RJ around the World

RJ Around the World

RJ Library

Search 8974 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.