ABSTRACT

To what extent is restorative justice able to ‘restore’ the harm suffered by victims of crimes of interpersonal violence? Restorative justice is an innovative, participatory and inclusive reaction to crime that permits victims and offenders to engage in a communication process about the consequences of the offence. It looks to the future, actively involving parties to find, agree and implement ways to repair the harm.

Restoring Harm analyses the restoration process from a psychosocial point of view and discusses the role of victim–offender mediation within such a process. It brings together literature from the fields of restorative justice, victimology and psychology, and shares original findings from victims who were interviewed in Belgium and Spain. This book not only offers descriptive findings but also provides a theoretical and comprehensive model that elucidates several possibilities for why victim–offender mediation may or may not play a role in victims’ processes of emotional restoration.

Well informed and well documented, this volume brings together evidence from different regions and develops a detailed discussion of the ‘effectiveness’ of restorative justice with regard to victims. Providing new and solid evidence thanks to a quasi-experimental methodological design, theory and practice come together to offer relevant reflections for researchers and practitioners who are concerned about the victim’s position within victim–offender mediation and desire to develop a victim-sensitive restorative justice practice.

chapter |29 pages

Prologue

From satisfaction to restoration – a mixed-method and quasi-experimental study

chapter Chapter 1|51 pages

Victims, restoration and restorative justice

Findings, debates and gaps

chapter Chapter 2|69 pages

Victims’ perspectives on harm and restoration

chapter Chapter 4|69 pages

Restoring victims

The role of victim–offender mediation

chapter Chapter 5|31 pages

Towards a psychosocial model of restorative justice

chapter |26 pages

Epilogue

The challenge of a victim-sensitive restorative justice practice