NCJ Number
177563
Date Published
1998
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This paper considers the potential dangers and benefits of police-facilitated conferences.
Abstract
The recent development of police officers conducting community conferences for juvenile offenders has created concern among restorative justice advocates. Evaluation of restorative policing and criminal mediation programs in the US and Canada demonstrates that police are capable of conducting such programs in a highly restorative manner. Police conferences were rated higher than mediation programs on participant satisfaction and sense of fairness. Police-operated restorative programs include direct access to cases and feature a lower operational cost than other programs. Police can become important stakeholders in the restorative justice movement. Findings suggest that concerns raised about community conferences pose a greater threat to some criminal mediation programs than to police-facilitated conferencing programs. Figures, notes, references, tables
Date Published: January 1, 1998
Downloads
No download available
Related Datasets
Similar Publications
- A Novel Two-Step Method for the Detection of Organic Gunshot Residue for Forensic Purposes: Fast Fluorescence Imaging Followed by Raman Microspectroscopic Identification
- Discoveries From the Forensic Anthropology Data Base: Modern American Skeletal Change & the Case of Amelia Earhart
- The Application of Amplicon Length Heterogeneity PCR (LH-PCR) for Monitoring the Dynamics of Soil Microbial Communities Associated With cadaver decomposition