04940nam 2200649Ia 450 991082744070332120240417231921.01-281-12487-797866111248781-906534-61-6(CKB)1000000000790728(EBL)3416279(SSID)ssj0000308272(PQKBManifestationID)11239987(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000308272(PQKBWorkID)10257678(PQKB)10438709(MiAaPQ)EBC3416279(Au-PeEL)EBL3416279(CaPaEBR)ebr10696127(CaONFJC)MIL112487(OCoLC)923509311(EXLCZ)99100000000079072820060227d2006 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrRestorative justice in prisons a guide to making it happen /Kimmett Edgar and Tim Newell ; foreword by Erwin James1st ed.Winchester Watersidec20061 online resource (136 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-904380-25-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.""Cover ""; ""Acknowledgements""; ""Foreword Erwin Jallles""; ""Contents ""; ""1 Introduction and Background""; ""DEFINING RESTORATIVE JUSTICE""; ""VARIETIES OF RESTORATIVE PRACTICES""; ""EMPOWERMENT AND PARTICULARITY""; ""WHAT IS, AND IS NOT, RESTORATIVE JUSTICE?""; ""RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN THE UK""; ""RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AND PRISONS""; ""2 Restorative Values""; ""THE CORE VALUES OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE""; ""PROGRAMME INTEGRITY""; ""PRESSURE POINTS IN THE DEFINITION""; ""PARADIGM SHIFT OR EVOLUTION?""; ""3 Organizational Culture""""INTRODUCING RESTORATIVE CULTURE INTO PRISONS""""ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE""; ""THE CULTURAL WEB OF PRISONS""; ""RESTORATIVE INFLUENCES ON THE CULTURAL WEB""; ""A RESTORATIVE SYSTEM OF BUILDING SOCIAL ORDER""; ""4 Resistance to Change""; ""CONFLICTING PARADIGMS""; ""WHAT MATTERS IN PRISON""; ""VALUES, RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AND CONFLICT""; ""SOCIAL ORDER IN PRISON""; ""VALUES INHERENT IN PRISON SERVICE POLICIES""; ""CULTURAL RESISTANCE WITHIN THE POLICE""; ""A MODEL FOR THE RESTORATIVE PRISON""; ""5 What a Restorative Justice Prison Would Look Like""; ""THE FOUNDATIONS OF A RESTORATIVE PRISON""""OPERATIONAL APPLICATIONS OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE""""PRE-RELEASE, ANTI-BULLYING AND COMPLAINTS""; ""CONCLUSION""; ""6 The Restorative Sentence""; ""RESPONSIBILITY IN SENTENCING""; ""SOME FURTHER THOUGHTS""; ""PRISONS, RESTORING OFFENDERS AND THE HARMS OF SOCIAL EXCLUSION""; ""NATIONAL ACTION PLAN TO REDUCE RE-OFFENDING""; ""THE ROLE OF THE PRISON OFFICER""; ""PROMOTING SOCIAL RE-INCLUSION""; ""COMMENTS ON THE ACTION PLAN""; ""7 Conclusion""; ""GUIDANCE FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE AGENCIES""; ""EXPERIENCE OF RESTORATIVE METHODS IN PRISONS""; ""NEXT STEPS""; ""Appendix: Two Case Studies""""Glossary of Terms""""References""; ""Index""; ""Diagrams, Figures, Tables and Boxes""Restorative Justice in Prisons was launched at Brixton Prison in 2006. Prison as an institution is sometimes taken to represent the opposite of restorative justice. The culture of prisons includes coercion, highly structured and controlled regimes, banishment achieved through physical separation, and blame and punishment - whereas restorative justice values empowerment, voluntarism, respect, and treating people as individuals.Recent developments in some prisons demonstrate a far more welcoming environment for restorative work. Examples such as reaching out to victims of crime, providing prisoners with a range of opportunities to make amends and experimenting with mediation in response to conflicts within prisons show that it is possible to implement restorative justice principles in everyday prison activities.Guided by restorative justice, prisons can become places of healing and personal transformation, serving the community as well as those directly affected by crime: victims and offenders. This new book advocates the further expansion of restorative justice in prisons. Building on a widespread interest in the concept and its potential, the authors have produced a guide to enable prisons and the practitioners who work in and with them to translate the theory into action.ImprisonmentRestorative justiceCriminalsRehabilitationImprisonment.Restorative justice.CriminalsRehabilitation.345.42001Edgar Kimmett938785Newell Tim1619596MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910827440703321Restorative justice in prisons4113849UNINA