Civilising Criminal Justice :An International Restorative Agenda for Penal Reform
Civilising Criminal Justice :An International Restorative Agenda for Penal Reform
paperback
Published:
3 June, 2013
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781904380047 |
| ISBN10 | 1904380042 |
| Number Of Pages | 568 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Waterside Press |
| Format | paperback |
Media Reviews
'Eighteen original contributions... steer restorative justice into critical territory. In the process, they make a very good effort at examining the ability of restorative justice to challenge criminal justice as we know it. Overall [the articles] present a lively interaction on international practices that actually establish "a kind of justice that serves the interests and needs of victims, offenders, and society in a balanced, just and effective way"': International Journal of Community Corrections (USA). 'An ambitious collection from a wide range of international commentators... offers sounds sound international theoretical, practical and procedural considerations for the student, academic, practitioner and policy maker. An essential companion to anyone interested in restorative justice': Prison Service Journal. 'A fine collection... international from cover to cover': restorativejustice.org. 'Deserves to be the key book in resourcing and shaping the future debate about restorative justice': Terry Nowell.
Author's Bio
David Cornwell, John Blad and Martin Wright are three of the leading international experts on this topic with many publications to their names individually. Contributors: Serge Gutwirth and Paul De Hert (Belgium), Federico Reggio (Italy), Bas van Stokkom (The Netherlands), Lode Walgrave (Belgium), Susan Easton and Christine Piper (UK), Louis Blom-Cooper QC (UK), Tapio Lappi-Seppala (Finland), Thomas Trenczek (Germany), Jean-Pierre Bonafe-Schmitt (France), Per Andersen (Norway), Claire Spivakovsky (Australia), Ann Skelton (Republic of South Africa), Borbala Fellegi (Hungary), Judge Fred McElrea (New Zealand); and the editors.