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Experiments in Restorative Policing: A Progress Report to the National Police Research Unit on the Canberra Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE)

NCJ Number
173184
Author(s)
L W Sherman; H Strang; G C Barnes; J Braithwaite; N Inkpen; M Teh
Date Published
1998
Length
168 pages
Annotation
This report describes the results of the first 3 years of research on Australia's Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE), comparing standard court processing with the effects of a diversionary conference for four kinds of cases: drunk driving, juvenile property offending with personal victims, juvenile shoplifting offenses detected by store security officers, and youth violent crimes.
Abstract
The diversionary conferences consisted of a meeting between the offender and at least some family or friends of the offender; the victim or, in the case of drunk driving, a community representative; and a police officer, who facilitated the meeting. The conferences focused on what the offender did, the harm caused, worse harm it could have caused, ways to repair the harm, and a written agreement between police and offender regarding what the offender will do to repair the harm. This report focuses on whether both offenders and victims found conferences to be fairer than court. The evaluation involved direct observations of conferences and offender and victim interviews. Findings show that most victims believed conferences were fairer than court, and offenders reported the same view. Other findings were that the experimental sample was a highly active group of repeat offenders, and they used alcohol and marijuana at high rates. Also, findings indicate that victims suffered substantial harm, and conferences treated them better than court. Offenders found conferences more stressful than court. Extensive tables