Restorative justice has been criticised for not adequately giving serious consideration to the ‘public’ character of crimes. By bringing the ownership of the conflict involved in crime back to the victim and thus ‘privatising’ the conflict, restorative justice would overlook the need for crimes to be treated as public matters that concern all citizens, because crimes violate public values, i.e., values that are the foundation of a political community. Against this I argue that serious wrongs, like murder or rape, are violations of agent-neutral values that are fundamental to our humanity. By criminalising such serious wrongs we show that we take such violations seriously and that we stand in solidarity with victims, not in their capacity as compatriots but as fellow human beings. Such solidarity is better expressed by organising restorative procedures that serve the victim’s interest than by insisting on the kind of public condemnation and penal hardship that retributivists deem necessary ‘because the public has been wronged’. The public nature of crimes depends not on the alleged public character of the violated values but on the fact that crimes are serious wrongs that provoke a (necessarily reticent) response from government officials such as police, judges and official mediators. |
Search result: 2206 articles
Editorial |
Restorative spaces: how does the organisation of space contribute to the experience of justice? |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2022 |
Authors | David Tait and Munzer Emad |
Author's information |
Conversations on restorative justice |
A talk with Howard Zehr |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2022 |
Authors | Brunilda Pali |
Author's information |
Article |
|
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2022 |
Keywords | public wrongs, R.A. Duff, agent-relative values, criminalisation, punishment |
Authors | Theo van Willigenburg |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Notes from the field |
Living together in the same land: if we, bereaved families, can do it, you can too |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2022 |
Authors | Layla Alsheikh |
Author's information |
Book Review |
Lindsey Pointer, The restorative justice ritual |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2022 |
Authors | Gerry Johnstone |
Author's information |
Editorial |
|
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue Online First 2022 |
Authors | John Braithwaite |
Author's information |
Article |
The case for using culturally relevant values in restorative justice programming for Australian Aboriginal prisoners |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue Online First 2022 |
Keywords | Australia, Aboriginal, prison, values, restorative justice |
Authors | Jane Anderson |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Western Australia is experiencing high rates of recidivism among Aboriginal offenders. This challenge can be partly addressed by delivering culturally relevant programming. Its dearth, however, suggests two questions: what is culturally fit in the context of the prison, and how might such programming be constructed? This article responds to these questions by focusing on one element of culture, ‘values’, that is influential ideas that determine desirable courses of action in a culture. Firstly, a review of the literature and comparative analysis is given to the respective key values of Aboriginal culture and European and Anglo-Australian cultures. It also highlights the importance of repairing Aboriginal values with implications for providing culturally relevant prison programming. Secondly, a report is given on how an in-prison Aboriginal restorative justice programme (AIPRJP) was co-designed by Noongar Elders and prisoners and me, an Anglo-Australian restorativist. Using an ethnographic approach, the project identified a set of Aboriginal values for addressing the harms resulting from historical manifestations of wrongdoing by settler colonialism and contemporary crimes of Aboriginal offenders. Brief commentary is then given to the delivery of the AIPRJP, followed by a summary of findings and recommendations for using culturally relevant programming. |
Article |
Towards a restorative justice approach to white-collar crime and supra-individual victimisation |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue Online First 2022 |
Keywords | restorative justice, white-collar crimes, supra-individual victimisation, spokespersons at restorative meetings, eligibility criteria |
Authors | Daniela Gaddi and María José Rodríguez Puerta |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This work examines the feasibility of extending the implementation of restorative justice to the field of white-collar crime for a specific class of victimisation: that which people experience as a group (i.e. supra-individual victimisation). For this purpose, we analyse some key issues and outline a number of criteria for determining who would be able to speak on behalf of supra-individual victims of white-collar crime in restorative meetings. Some initial proposals are offered, based on four types of supra-individual victimisation, which would provide a framework for the selection of spokespersons who could attend restorative meetings in restoratively oriented criminal proceedings. |
Article |
Preparing Mediators for Text-Based Mediations on ODR Platforms |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | online dispute resolution (ODR), mediation, dispute resolution, alternative dispute resolution (ADR), mediation training, text-based systems |
Authors | Joseph van ’t Hooft, Wan Zhang and Sarah Mader |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The COIVD-19 pandemic has drawn an increasing level of attention to the role of online dispute resolution (ODR) in dispute resolution systems. As ODR becomes increasingly prevalent, unique characteristics of conducting text-based mediations via ODR platforms begin to surface, warranting discussion on modifying mediator practises to adapt to ODR platforms. This article shines a light on the advantages and disadvantages of text-based mediations through interviews with court administrators and mediators with text-based mediation experience. Accordingly, this article proposes recommendations on training mediators to use ODR platforms and modifying their practises to achieve the best outcomes in text-based mediations. Focusing on the qualitative data and information gathered from these conducted interviews, this article seeks to offer practical advice about preparing mediators to participate in text-based mediations. |
Article |
|
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | online dispute resolution (ODR), e-commerce, international dispute resolution, international law, United States, China, European Union, Australia, alternative dispute resolution (ADR), online platforms |
Authors | Teresa Ballesteros |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article will examine Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) from several perspectives to provide a comprehensive understanding of the global efforts to incorporate ODR in the e-commerce scope. Upon examining the nature and growth of both e-commercial activities and ODR, there will be an analysis from an international standpoint, where the article will discuss the relevant bodies and the progression of uniform standards in this regard. This is followed by an analysis of several jurisdictions, namely the United States, China, European Union and Australia. Finally, the essay will provide suggestions andrecommendations for the implementation of ODR. |
Article |
Online Mediation and e-commerce (B2B and B2C) Disputes |
Journal | International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | ODR, online Mediation, e-commerce, business-to business (B2B), business-to consumer (B2C) |
Authors | Mariam Skhulukhia |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Nowadays, electronic commerce plays a significant role in our society as internet transactions continue to grow in the business industry. Electronic commerce mainly refers to commercial transactions, such as business-to-business and business-to-consumer. Disputes are inevitable, part of our lives. Simultaneously by developing technology the need for an effective dispute resolution was obvious. Information communication technology and alternative dispute resolution together created online dispute resolution. Businesses and consumers are actively engaged in online dispute resolution. Therefore, the use of the internet makes business or consumer transactions easier. The online environment is much flexible when it comes to electronic commerce. This article focuses on online mediation, one of the most popular forms of online dispute resolution. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Cosmopolitan solidarity, COVID-19, Health care regulation, Risk society, Argumentative discourse analysis |
Authors | Tobias Arnoldussen |
AbstractAuthor's information |
During the COVID-19 crisis a risk of ‘code black’ emerged in the Netherlands. Doctors mentioned that in case of code black, very senior citizens might not receive intensive care treatment for COVID-19 due to shortages. Sociologist Ulrich Beck argued that palpable risks lead to the creation of new networks of solidarity. In this article this assumption is investigated by analyzing the different storylines prevalent in the public discussion about ‘code black’. Initially, storylines showing sympathy with the plight of the elderly came to the fore. However, storylines brought forward by medical organizations eventually dominated, giving them the opportunity to determine health care policy to a large extent. Their sway over policymaking led to a distribution scheme of vaccines that was favourable for medical personnel, but unfavourable for the elderly. The discursive process on code black taken as a whole displayed a struggle over favourable risk positions, instead of the formation of risk solidarity. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Social solidarity, COVID-19, Religious freedom, Cultural defence, Ultra-Orthodox sects in Israel |
Authors | Miriam Gur-Arye and Sharon Shakargy |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The article discusses the tension between social solidarity and religious freedom as demonstrated by the refusal of the ultra-Orthodox sects in Israel to comply with COVID-19 regulations. The article provides a detailed description of the refusal to comply with the regulations restricting mass prayer services in synagogues and studying Torah in the yeshivas, thus interfering with the ultra-Orthodox religious life. The article suggests possible explanations for that refusal, based on either religious beliefs or a socio-political claim to autonomy, and discusses whether the polity should be willing to tolerate such a refusal on the basis of the cultural defence. The article concludes that despite the drastic restrictions on religious life caused by the social distancing regulations, and the special importance of freedom of religion, reducing the pandemic’s spread called for awarding priority to solidarity over religious freedom, and the enforcement of social solidarity legal duties – the social distancing regulations – on all. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Populism, Liberal democracy, Political representation, Société du spectacle, Theatrocracy |
Authors | Massimo La Torre |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Populism is a somehow intractable notion, since its reference is much too wide, comprising phenomena that are indeed in conflict between them, and moreover blurred, by being often used in an instrumental, polemical way. Such intractability is then radicalized through the two alternative approaches to populism, one that is more or less neutral, rooting in the political science tradition, and a second one, fully normative, though fed by political realism, founding as it does on a specific political theory and project. In the article an alternative view is proposed, that of populism as the politics that is congruent with the increasing role played by ‘screens’, icons, and images in social relationships and indeed in political representation. In this way populism is approached as the specific way politics is done within the context of a digitalized société du spectacle. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Mechanical solidarity, Organic solidarity, Contract, Good faith, Punishment |
Authors | Candida Leone |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The article uses three prominent examples from the Dutch context to problematize the relationship between contractual and social solidarity during the coronavirus crisis. The social science ideal types of ‘mechanical’ and ‘organic’ solidarity, and their typified correspondence with legal modes of punishment and compensation, are used to illuminate the way in which solidarity language in private relationships can convey and normalize assumptions about the public interest and economic order. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Vulnerability, Contingency, Freedom and Anxiety, Solidarity, Legal concept of inclusion |
Authors | Benno Zabel |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The COVID-19 crisis has produced or amplified disruptive processes in societies. This article wants to argue for the fact that we understand the meaning of the COVID-19 crisis only if we relate it to the fundamental vulnerability of modern life and the awareness of vulnerability of whole societies. Vulnerability in modernity are expressions of a reality of freedom that is to some extent considered contingent and therefore unsecured. It is true that law is understood today as the protective power of freedom. The thesis of the article, however, boils down to the fact that the COVID-19 crisis has resulted in a new way of thinking about the protection of freedom. This also means that the principle of solidarity must be assigned a new social role. Individual and societal vulnerability refer thereafter to an interconnectedness, dependency, and a future perspective of freedom margins that, in addition to the moral one, can also indicate a need for legal protection. In this respect, law has not only a function of delimitation, but also one of inclusion. |
Article |
|
Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2021 |
Keywords | Solidarity, Punishment, Legitimacy, Inequality, COVID-19 |
Authors | Rocío Lorca |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The Chilean government called upon ideas of social solidarity to fight the pandemic of SARS-CoV-2 and it relied heavily on the criminal law in order to secure compliance with sanitary restrictions. However, because restrictions and prosecutorial policy did not take into account social background and people’s ability to comply with the law, prosecutions soon created groups of people who were being both over-exposed to disease and death, and over-exposed to control, blame and punishment. The configuration of this overpoliced and underprotected group became so visibly unjust that appealing to social solidarity to justify the criminal enforcement of sanitary restrictions became almost insulting. This forced the Fiscal Nacional to develop a ‘socially sensitive’ prosecutorial strategy, something that we have not often seen despite Chile’s inequalities. The changes in policy by the Fiscal Nacional suggest that perhaps, at times, penal institutions can be made accountable for acting in ways that create estrangement rather than cohesion. |
Article |
|
Journal | East European Yearbook on Human Rights, Issue 1 2021 |
Keywords | Covid-19, vaccine passport |
Authors | Mart Susi and Tiina Pajuste |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This comparative study looks into the proposed “vaccine passport” initiative from various human rights aspects. It was undertaken by the Global Digital Human Rights Network, an action started under the EU’s Cooperation in Science and Technology programme. The network currently unites more than 80 scholars and practitioners from 40 countries. The findings are based on responses to questions put to the network members by the authors of this study in February 2021. |
Article |
|
Journal | East European Yearbook on Human Rights, Issue 1 2021 |
Authors | Matthias C. Kettemann and Martin Fertmann |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This study explores the spread of disinformation relating to the Covid-19 pandemic on the internet, dubbed by some as the pandemic’s accompanying “infodemic”, and the societal reactions to this development across different countries and platforms. The study’s focus is on the role of states and platforms in combatting online disinformation. |
Article |
|
Journal | East European Yearbook on Human Rights, Issue 1 2021 |
Authors | Martin Fertmann and Matthias C. Kettemann |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Terms-of-service based actions against political and state actors as both key subjects and objects of political opinion formation have become a focal point of the ongoing debates over who should set and enforce the rules for speech on online platforms. |