ABSTRACT

This book reflects on the institutionalisation of restorative justice over the last 20 years and offers a critical analysis of the qualitative consequences generated by such a process on the normative structure of restorative justice, and on its understanding and uses in practice. Bringing together an international collection of leading scholars, this book provides a range of context-sensitive case studies that enhance our understanding of the development of international, national and institutional policy frameworks for restorative justice, the mainstreaming of practices within the criminal justice system, the proliferation of cultural, social and political co-optations of restorative justice and the ways in which the formalisation of the restorative justice movement have affected its values, aims and goals.

chapter 2|29 pages

Restorative Justice in Australia and New Zealand

A Faustian Bargain with the State?

chapter 3|21 pages

Restorative Justice for Wrongful Convictions

A Quasi-institutional Approach 1

chapter 5|26 pages

Innovative and Transformative Effects of Restorative Justice

Reflections on the Recent Reform Adopted in Italy

chapter 7|22 pages

Beyond Lawmaking

Restorative Approaches in Governance

chapter 9|24 pages

Congruent or Contradictory?

What Isomorphism Teaches Us about the Relationship between Restorative Justice and the Mainstream Criminal Justice System

chapter 11|24 pages

Victim Offender Mediation in the Danish Police

The Dancing and Wrestling of Organisation Culture and Programme Purpose