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Restorative Justice the New Zealand picture Restorative Justice the New Zealand picture Julia Hennessy Senior Policy Advisor Restorative Justice Unit Ministry of Justice, New Zealand The restorative justice landscape RJ in the adult criminal justice system – 30 community-based providers – Crime Prevention Unit and Courts contracts – Community panels – Victim-offender conferences – and variations Community-based RJ providers – not staff of justice agencies – Mostly small Charitable Trusts – Maori organisations – Iwi (tribe) organisations – may provide a range of services, including health and health promotion, education etc Legislative framework – Sentencing Act 2002 allows, and requires, Judges to take RJ outcomes into account – Parole Act 2002, RJ to be taken into account in decisions about parole of prisoners – Victims Rights Act 2002, agencies to hold meetings between victims and offenders - where parties wish to meet and resources are available – Corrections Act 2004, Parole Board to take RJ process into account when making decisions on release of offenders Principles of Best Practice for Restorative Justice in Criminal Cases Consultation Published along with statement of values 2003 1. Voluntary 2. Full participation of the victim & offender 3. Participants are well-informed 4. Offender held accountable 5. Flexibility and responsiveness 6. Emotional and physical safety 7. Effective process 8. Should only be undertaken in appropriate cases Court-referred restorative justice pilot RJ for serious offences by adults Began September 2001 Moderately serious offences – Max penalty 2 yrs imprisonment – or more – Nothing that can be diverted – Excluded Family Violence, Sexual Offences 4 District Courts – Chosen for volume, judicial attitude, cultural mix Court-referred restorative justice pilot process Offender pleads guilty Offender sentenced Judge refers for restorative justice (& other reports) Court Coordinator assesses offender – willingness, capability 2 facilitators meet victim & offender Judge adjourns for completion of plan Report to Court on completion Restorative justice conference held Offender sentenced Judge adjourns for reports (probation/ psych) Restorative justice not possible Returned to Court Victim / offender unwilling or unsuitable Evaluation Objectives Increased victim involvement Increased victim satisfaction Reduced re-offending Results for victims • Positive experience • Would recommend to others • Would participate again • Satisfied with agreements, conferences and sentences • Low uptake by victims < 40% referrals went to conference Victim satisfaction declined over time Results for offenders • reduced reconviction 32% compared with 36% • more involved in addressing offending behaviour • satisfied with process & agreements • reduced imprisonment 14% compared with 19% • reduced length of imprisonment 444 days compared with 533 days Effective interventions Prison population - the defined problem inmate population significantly exceeds forecasts March 2006 - New Zealand >7,000 in prison by 2010 will be 9,000 New Zealand will have 2nd highest rate of imprisonment in western world Exceeding capacity & forecasts Recorded crime has shown a steady decrease over two decades Māori • 17% of population • 51% of prison population • 3 times more likely than non-Māori to be arrested for criminal offence • more likely to be prosecuted, convicted and receive prison sentences • 1/3 more likely to be victim of crime • twice as likely to be victims of violence • higher rate of domestic violence Pacific Island peoples • 8 % of population • 11% of prison population • over-represented in violent offending statistics • higher risk of being victims of violence than any other ethnic group Effective interventions project • Justice sector agencies – Police, Justice, Corrections (ie, probation and prisons), Social Development, Treasury: strategies to manage the inmate population options to reduce the pressure on prisons initiatives to address causes of crime and offending behaviour The evidence base Evidence from court-referred restorative justice pilot Fewer and shorter sentences compared with matched offenders Offenders more likely to be granted leave to apply for home detention Small reduction in re-offending - measured over 2 years Shorter prison sentences – 444 days compared with 533 days. The next step – national expansion of restorative justice The next step Aims: 1. restorative justice available nationally at 3 key points 2. replicate results of court-referred restorative justice – less use of imprisonment, reduction in re-offending 3. ensure quality of restorative justice provision Developments: Budget bid 2007/08 • National quality assurance framework – initial work underway • Diversion • Pre-sentence • Prisoner reintegration Performance framework • Quality of RJ provision – outcome focused • Regional support structures and staff • Build providers’ capacity and capability - to meet identified need • Provide resources to enable providers to meet quality standards – includes national training and assessment programme • Standards - contracts To ensure consistent high-quality outcomes from restorative justice processes Extension of RJ in diversion Restorative justice as option in Police Adult Diversion • new provision in 20+ areas – over 3 yrs • 1st focus – high Maori & PI offender areas • Evaluation • re-offending • outcomes for Maori and PI Extension of RJ pre-sentence – serious offences Restorative justice pre-sentence service in serious offending • New provision in up to 9 new areas – over 3 yrs • Guilty plea, victim involvement required • Evaluation – can we repeat results of pilot? • re-offending • outcomes for Maori and PI RJ in reintegration • 100+ RJ conferences annually from 2 prison regions • RJ Coordinators based in prison reintegration team • RJ process spot-purchased from community-based providers – quality standards • 3 years initially – staged rollout if successful re victim satisfaction & reduced re-offending Cost benefits • Prison beds: – 25 beds annually at $70,000 pa – total saving of $175,000 annually • Increased number of offenders given leave to apply for home detention – Suggests increased use of home detention as a sentence • Other $$ savings small Other benefits • Increased capacity and capability of local RJ providers • Benefits for Maori and Pacific Island people • Victims and offenders have increased access to restorative justice at all stages in the criminal justice system While the new developments have been driven by financial and other pressure on the prison system, the benefits will be felt by victims, the families of offenders, and all those affected by offending. The new landscape • 60+ community-based RJ providers – 3 years • Local interagency advisory groups to ensure provision continues to meet needs • National training and assessment of practitioners • Monitoring and support of quality standards by Ministry of Justice • RJ Unit – Ministry of Justice – national and field roles • RJ Centre – Auckland University of Technology – multidisciplinary, tertiary centre for training, education and research into RJ theory and practice • Restorative Justice Aotearoa – new national body for RJ practitioners Challenges how to be victim-centred in an offenderfocused system how to create quality standards that allow for flexibility and growth of process how to recognise and build on traditional Maori and PI processes – and allow flexibility www.justice.govt.nz