
This Book Explores How Restorative Justice Is Used And What Its Potential Benefits Are In Situations Where The State Has Been Either Explicitly Or Implicitly Involved In Human Rights Abuses. Restorative Justice Is Increasingly Becoming A Popular Mechanism For Responding To Crime In Democratic Settings, And While There Is A Burgeoning Literature On These Contexts There Is Less Information That Focuses Explicitly On Its Use In Nations That Have Experienced Protracted Periods Of Conflict And Oppression. This Book Interrogates Both Macro- And Micro-utilisations Of Restorative Justice Including Truth Commissions, Criminal Justice Reform And The Development Of Initiatives By Communities And Other Non-state Actors. The Central Premise Is That The Primary Potential Of Restorative Justice In Responding To International Crime Should Be Viewed In Terms Of The Lessons That It Provides For Problem-solving, Rather Than Its Traditional Role As A Mechanism Or Process For Responding To Conflict. Four Values Are Put Forward That Should Frame Any Restorative Approach - Engagement, Empowerment, Reintegration And Transformation. It Is Thought That These Values Provide Enough Space For Local Actors To Devise Their Own Culturally Relevant Processes To Achieve Longstanding Peace. This Book Will Be Of Interest To Those Conducting Research In The Fields Of Restorative Justice, Transitional Justice And Criminology In General
This book investigates the potential and practical application of restorative justice mechanisms within nations recovering from protracted periods of conflict and state-sponsored human rights abuses. Author Kerry Clamp, a scholar in the field of criminology, evaluates how restorative practices can move beyond traditional criminal justice roles to serve as tools for societal problem-solving. By proposing a framework centered on the values of engagement, empowerment, reintegration, and transformation, the text argues that local actors can develop culturally relevant processes to foster long-term peace and nation-building.
What You Will Find
Experts and researchers in the fields of transitional justice and criminology identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of post-conflict societal repair. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for scholars examining the intersection of restorative justice and international human rights law.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
Routledge,
ISBN-10:
0415523710
ISBN-13:
9780203715192
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