Restorative justice in diverse and unequal societies
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Abstract
Daly considers the role that restorative justice may play in unequal societies, with a focus on racial and ethnic inequalities. The literature that has emerged around restorative justice often claims that restorative justice delivers more effective justice, partly because it offers community members and organisations a far wider role than conventional courthouse justice. Daly argues that restorative justice may have the potential to do so if properly resourced and linked to offences that are susceptible to imprisonment. However, she also warns that in extending and developing programs of this kind, we should be careful not to assume equality of outcomes from equality of treatment, and advocates a form of restorative justice directed to relations of group inequality as well as individual criminality.
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Law in Context
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17
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1
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© 2000 Federation Press. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Use hypertext link to access journal website.
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Law