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Principles of Restorative Justice The 4th Annual Child Placement Conference Partnerships for Children and Families: Building Interagency Alliances Presented by: Dee Bell, Project Administrator, Balanced and Restorative Justice Project, Community Justice Institute, Florida Atlantic University, Ft. Lauderdale, FL Accountability A question? • What is Peace? Another Question? • What is justice? Current System Questions? • Who committed the act and is it a crime? • What laws were broken/what actions must be taken? • How will we punish the offender and protect the victim? What is Restorative Justice? Restorative Justice is a process whereby the parties with a stake in a particular offense come together to resolve collectively how to deal with the aftermath of the offense and its implications for the future.” Tony Marshall Who are the parties? • Victims- those who were harmed • Offenders- those who caused harm • Community- the place where the harm was committed We call the parties- the stakeholders Restorative Justice: • Is not a program. • Is a mission or philosophical framework. • Is a different way of responding to crime and/or harm in families, communities and systems especially the criminal justice system. Crime is harm. Justice should be healing. Crime Is More Than Lawbreaking Crime HARMS: Victims, Communities, and Offenders. It also damages relationships. Mutually Exclusive Interests Offender Interests Victim Interests Community Interests Finding Common Ground Offender Victim Community Van Ness Principles If crime is more than lawbreaking, then: • Justice requires that we work to heal victims, communities, and offenders who have been injured by crime. Principle 2 If crime is more than lawbreaking, then: • Victims, communities and offenders should have opportunities for active involvement in the justice process as early and as fully as possible. Principle 3 If crime is more than lawbreaking, then: • We must re-think the relative roles and responsibilities of the government and the community. Government is responsible for preserving a just order and the community for establishing a just peace. Repairing Harm Stakeholder Involvement Community and Government Role Transformation Zehr’s Questions? • What is the harm? • What needs to be done to repair the harm? • Who is responsible for the repair? What is a “Balance?” Balance is NOT: An equal focus on punishment and treatment. Balancing Stakeholder Needs Restorative Justice Stakeholders Victim and family/support group Offender and family/support group Community Juvenile Justice and Child Welfare Systems Principle 1 - REPAIR Justice requires that we work to heal victims, communities, and offenders who have been injured by crime. THREE RJ PRINCIPLES Defining “REPAIR” Three dimensions: 1. Fixing What Is Broken/Damaged – Compensating Those Harmed 2. Reintegration of Victim and Offender with Community 3. Relationship Building - Connections made or strengthened between victim/offender/community REPAIR AND VICTIM NEEDS “ Victims frequently want longer time for offenders because we haven’t given them anything else. Or because we don’t ask, we don’t know what they want. So [the system] gives them door Number One or Two, when what they really want is behind Door Number 3 or 4.” ~ Mary Achilles REPAIR AND OFFENDER NEEDS Restorative Accountability Definition: The obligation of the offender to “make it right” with victims and victimized communities. Accountability is NOT: Punishment Being responsible to the juvenile justice system or juvenile justice professionals Restorative Accountability “How Do We Know It When We See It?” The sanctioning process produces accountability when it ensures that: Offenders take responsibility for the crime and understand the hurt caused to the victim. Restorative Accountability “How Do We Know It When We See It?” Offenders take action to make amends to the victim by restoring the loss. Victims and communities have an active role in the sanctioning process by recommending obligations and by monitoring, mentoring, and supporting compliance. Restorative Accountability “How Do We Know It When We See It?” Communities support offenders who earn it by taking responsibility for completing obligations. All stakeholders and the system place emphasis on the wrong done and the obligation to make it right. REPAIR AND COMMUNITY NEEDS “…communities should not measure the success of any…community based initiative upon what happens to the offender… (Rather, they should measure)…the impact of community based initiatives on victims, strengthening families, building connections within the community, on enforcing community values, on mobilizing community action to make the community safer…” ~ Judge Barry Stuart Reconnecting… Restorative justice reconnects Offender Crime weakens relationships Offender How Do You Repair The Harm? Asking Different Questions What is the harm? What needs to be done to repair the harm? Who is responsible for this repair? Principle 2 - Involvement Victims, communities and offenders should have opportunities for active involvement in the justice process as early and as fully as possible. THREE RJ PRINCIPLES Restorative Justice Conferencin Models Increasing Stakeholder Decisionmaking Inputs: Family Group Conferencing Reparative or Accountability Boards Sentencing and Peacemaking Circles Victim Offender Dialogue (Mediation) Community Conferencing Merchant Accountability Boards Restorative Justice Theories-inuse Interpersonal Dialogue Empowering and giving “voice” to victims and other Stakeholders Gaining information and reassurance Apology and acknowledgement of harm and wrongdoing Human connection Expression of feeling/emotions – process over outcome Principle 3 – Changing Community/ System Roles & Relationships We must re-think the relative role and responsibilities of the government and the community. Government is responsible for preserving order. The community is responsible for establishing peace. THREE RJ PRINCIPLES “Why Community?” “Crime (control and prevention) should never be the sole, or even primary business of the State if real differences are sought in the well being of individuals, families and communities. The structure, procedures, and evidentiary rules of the formal criminal justice process coupled with most justice officials’ lack of knowledge and connection to (the parties) effected by crime, preclude the state from acting alone to achieve transformative changes.” ~ Judge Barry Stuart “Children grow up in communities, not programs. Development is most strongly influence by those with the most intensive, long-term contact with children and youth – family, informal networks, community organizations, churches, synagogues, temple, mosques and schools. Development is not achieved only through services, but also through supports, networks and opportunities. “if you are dealing with people whose relationships have been built on power and abuse, you must actually show them, then give them the experience of, relationships based on respect…[so]…the healing process must involve a healthy group of people, as opposed to single therapists. A single therapist cannot, by definition, do more than talk about healthy relationships.” What IS “Community”? Geographically defined units (cities, towns) Families and extended families Religious congregations Schools and colleges Workplace Union locals Clubs, lodges, hobby groups Professional groups Political groups or parties Voluntary groups, e.g., youth service organizations Neighborhoods From: John Gardner, On Leadership “Why is the Community Role Important Now?” (Formal justice system procedures) “deprive people of opportunities to practice skills of apology and forgiveness, or reconciliation, restitution, and reparation . . . The modern state appears to have deprived civil society of opportunities to learn important political and social skills. ~ David Moore Defining Community Building Three Objectives: 1. Values Clarification 2. Norm Affirmation 3. Citizens increase skills in repairing harm, informal social control, and social support Participation denied breeds apathy. Apathy breeds suspicion. Suspicion breeds cynicism. Cynicism prevails. Conversely, Participation builds investment. Investment builds a sense of ownership. A sense of ownership builds a sense of personal responsibility. A sense of personal responsibility for the well-being of the community prevails. Community Justice Core Questions 1. What can we do to build a sense of community and prevent crime from happening in the first place? 2. When a community member violates the trust of another, the peace of the community is broken. What can we do to restore the victim, the community, and the offender’s place in the community? “Community Justice”… All variants of crime prevention and justice activities that explicitly include the community in their processes and set the enhancement of community quality of like as an explicit goal. Community justice is rooted in the actions that citizens, community organizations, and the criminal justice system can take to control crime and social disorder. Community Justice Community Building & Prevention Balanced and Restorative Justice Community Justice Core Principles Sense of Community: People who share a strong sense of community are far less likely to violate the trust of other community members. Preventive and corrective measures should, therefore result in citizens gaining stronger sense of being connected to the community. Investment: Participation builds investment. Investment builds a sense of responsibility. People who share a sense of responsibility will go to great effort to see their ideas succeed. Citizens, crime victims, and offenders who participate in building a safer community can be predicted to share a strong investment in the outcome of their efforts. Reparation: Crime breaks the peace of the victim and the community. The justice process should focus on restoring the peace for the victim and the community. The offender carries the burden to repair the harm. The primary role of government should be to ensure that these reparative expectations are fulfilled. Earned Redemption: Offenders who have worked to repair harm to victim and community should be afforded the opportunity to participate as a responsible, productive member of the community. Why IT Works Grounded/Community Theory in the Case of Neighborhood accountability boards “We aren’t getting paid to do this.” “We can exercise the authority that parents have lost.” “We live in their community.” “We give them input into the contract.” “We are a group of adult neighbors who care about them.” “They hear about the harm from real human beings – us and the victims.” “We follow up.” Restorative Justice Theories-inuse Community Healing/Capacity Building Collective responsibility for crime and repair/healing Inclusion and connection important in their own right The resolution and healing lies in the group Sanctioning, rehabilitation, community safety interventions seamless and integrated – blurred distinctions between quality of life, community needs, criminal justice and social justice Emphasis on private and parochial control and mutual support vs. professionals and justice system – “community as driver” Changing the System and Professional Role and Focus Restorative Justice: Redefining the Government’s Role Traditional Justice System Restorative Justice System (Justice Intervention) (Justice Intervention) Offender Services Community Offender Victim Surveillance Facilitation Sanction Community Building Community & The Justice System: The Changing Relationship Justice system operates separately from the community Justice system provides more information to the community about its activities. Justice system provides information to the community about its activities and asks for information from the community. Justice system asks for guidance from the community, recognizes a need for community help, and places more activities in the community. Justice system follows community leadership. “ In nature, nothing grows from the top down.” The Chandler Center of Community Leadership A Model for Restorative Systemic Change • A restorative response to every offense no matter where it is addressed in the system or community • A restorative way of accomplishing core system goals: safety, rehabilitation, sanctioning, victim services, prevention etc. What’s NEW about Restorative Justice? NEW Values NEW Stakeholders New Decisionmaking Processes NEW Performance Objectives NEW Programs and Practices NEW Staff Roles, Resource Allocation, and Management Approaches So how does it work in your job? Let’s talk ! “So we make mistakes – can you say – you (the current system) don’t make mistakes…if you don’t think you do, walk through our community, every family will have something to teach you…By getting involved, by all of us taking responsibility, it is not that we won’t make mistakes… But we would be doing it together, as a community instead of having it done for us. We need to find peace within our lives…in our communities. We need to make real differences in the way people act and the way we treat others…Only if we empower them and support them can they break out of this trap…” ~ Rose Couch, Community Justice Coordinator