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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper looks at the concept of restorative justice and attempts to define it. How it has been implemented in Canadian society, and its result, is cogently discussed. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA344cjc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
punishment. Criminologist Jean-Paul Brodeur suggests that the political process in addition to more conservative attitudes in respect to offenders have blunted true reform and created harsher criminal
law (Marquis, 2001). On the other hand, there are alternative measures of justice included into the Canadian justice system. Still, there are particular questions regarding women and prisons because they
are often mothers and have responsibilities on the outside that are unique. Prison renders them helpless in a system that sees few other alternatives. Other issues concern youth and the
treatment of youth as adults. Acknowledging that there is a difference between youth and adult offenders suggests that there should be a differential in terms of treatment or at least
the juvenile justice system should be altered to accommodate new lines of thinking. But then there is restorative justice, a new way of looking at criminal justice that some claim
takes care of problems such as racism or sexism. It can also perhaps give a youthful offender a bit of a break. While it is not a panacea, it does
seem to be a sensible system of retribution. According to DuPont (2001), restorative justice has been entrenched in three areas which are offender accountability, victim restoration, and the reintegration
of the offender into daily life once again. While not as harsh as traditional justice methods, restorative justice seems to work. A large percentage of crime victims are willing to
go along with the program, particularly when it involve juveniles (2001). While restorative justice has become more popular and many Canadians believe it is good for society, there is less
of a consensus on exactly what it is. In fact, the definition is elusive (Elliott, 2002). Coward-Yaskiw (2002) adds that "there is no clear consensus on what restorative justice really
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