Restorative Justice (Not Yet Finished.)
Restorative Justice (Not Yet Finished.)
Restorative Justice (Not Yet Finished.)
1
Department of Justice (Philippines) Official Website. (Date of Publication is Unknown). Retrieved on 18
September 2019 from http://probation.gov.ph/restorative-justice/
2
Jeza Mae Sarah C. Sanchez. (Date of Publication is Unknown). Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from
https://www.unafei.or.jp/publications/pdf/RS_No101/No101_17_IP_Philippines.pdf
3
John Braithewaite (2002), Restorative Justice and Responsive Regulation. Retrieve on 18 September 2019
from https://www.anu.edu.au/fellows/jbraithwaite/_documents/Articles/Restorative_Justice_2002.pdf
4
Ibid.
5
Boyes-Watson, C. (2014). Suffolk University, College of Arts & Sciences, Center for Restorative Justice
6
Kidder, D. L. (2007). Restorative justice: Not "rights", but the right way to heal relationships at work.
International Journal of Conflict Management.
7
Daniel W. Van Ness and Karen Heetderks Strong (2002), Restoring Justice (2nd ed,), p 38.
soothed by discussing the events, their effects and what the offender might do to
make amends.8
Victims include not only those directly affected by the offense, but also
family members and members of the affected community. The safety, support,
and needs of these victims are the starting points for any restorative justice
process. Thus a primary objective is to attend to victims' needs: material,
financial, emotional, and social.14 Addressing these needs and the needs of the
community is necessary if public demands for severe punishment are to be
quelled.
8
Ibid p 55–78.
9
Supra. at Note 1
10
Norton, (2007) "The Place of Victims in the Criminal Justice System", Irish Probation Journal, VOL (4)
11
Rebecca Webber, "A New Kind of Criminal Justice", Parade, October 25, 2009, Reteived on 18
September 2019 from https://parade.com/38506/parade/091025-a-new-kind-of-criminal-justice/
12
Lawrence W. Sherman & Heather Strang (2007), "Restorative Justice: The Evidence" (PDF). University
of Pennsylvania
13
Michelle Maiese (October 2003), Updated by Heidi Burgess and Sarah Cast (June 2013), Restorative
Justice. Retrieve on 18 September 2019 from https://www.beyondintractability.org/essay/restorative_justice
14
Ibid.
retribution by the state against the offender. Instead of continuing and escalating
the cycle of violence, it tries to restore relationships and stop the violence. 15
Healing is crucial not just for victims, but also for offenders. Both the
rehabilitation of offenders and their integration into the community are vital
aspects of restorative justice. Offenders are treated respectfully and their needs
are addressed. Removing them from the community, or imposing any other
severe restrictions, is a last resort. It is thought that the best way to prevent re-
offending is re-integration.17
The justice process in this way strengthens the community and promotes
changes that will prevent similar harms from happening in the future. It is
generally thought that restorative justice should be integrated with legal justice as
a complementary process that improves the quality, effectiveness, and efficiency
of justice as a whole. Because they focus on the needs of the victim, the
offender, and the community, restorative processes can help to determine how
the law should be applied most fairly.18
Many western nations confront a crisis of access to justice. Legal aid for
the poor is declining. For civil disputes, only the rich effectively have access to
the courts. In criminal cases, the poor are the dominant presence as the court's
victim; courts continue to be utterly uninterested in that part of the crime problem
15
Ibid.
16
Ibid.
17
Ibid.
18
Ibid.
19
Official International Institute of Restorative Practices Website. Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from
https://www.iirp.edu/defining-restorative/history
20
David C. Vogt (2012), The Aims of Restorative Justice: Some philosophical remarks on the challenges of
integrating restorative justice into the criminal justice system. Reconciling the irreconcilable? Chapter in
the book "Restorative Justice and Criminal Law" (eds. Jørn Jacobsen & Linda Gröning), Santérus Förlag,
Stockholm.
which is highest in volume and most serious in impact, white-collar crime. 21 A
revolution is needed in our legal system that substantially replaces adversarial
legalism with Restorative Justice, where the role of the court is substantially
relegated to oversight of the injustices of restorative processes, which do the real
work of access to justice.22
21
Supra. note at 3
22
Christine Parker, Just Lawyers: Regulation and Access to Justice (1999).
23
See Paul McCold, (2001), ‘Primary Restorative Justice Practices’ in Allison Morris and Gabrielle
Maxwell (eds), Restorative Justice for Juveniles: Conferencing, Mediation and Circles p. 41
24
Howard Zehr, (2005). Changing Lenses: A New Focus for Crime and Justice (3rd ed.)
25
James Dignan, (2005) , Understanding Victims and Restorative Justice
26
Heather Strang, (2002), Repair or Revenge: Victims and Restorative Justice
27
Supra. note at 16
28
Supra. note at 7
29
Ibid.
30
Supra. note at 17
31
Ibid.
Restorative justice asserts that the current justice system does not
adequately address victims’, offenders’ and the community’s restoration needs.
By reinterpreting harmful behavior as wrongs against the state rather than
wrongs against victims and by investigating, prosecuting and punishing offenders
in the current judicial manner, the state has excluded the victim and offender
from having principal roles in dealing with the harm’s aftermath. Deterrence,
punishment and rehabilitation currently outweigh more comprehensive values of
restoration.32
The International Institute for Restorative Practices (IIRP) grew out of the
Community Service Foundation and Buxmont Academy, which since 1977 have
provided programs for delinquent and at-risk youth in southeastern Pennsylvania,
USA. Initially founded in 1994 under the auspices of Buxmont Academy, the Real
Justice program, now an IIRP program, has trained professionals around the
world in restorative conferencing. In 1999 the newly created IIRP broadened its
training to informal and proactive restorative practices, in addition to formal
restorative conferencing. Since then the IIRP, an accredited graduate school, has
developed a comprehensive framework for practice and theory that expands the
restorative paradigm far beyond its origins in criminal justice. Use of restorative
practices is now spreading worldwide, in education, criminal justice, social work,
counseling, youth services, work place and faith community applications. 36
32
Ibid.
33
Ibid.
34
Supra. note at 12
35
Ibid.
36
Ibid.
The forerunner of victim−offender mediation was an experiment in
Kitchener, Ontario, where a probation officer and the Mennonite Central
Committee, with the sanction of the court, arranged for offenders to visit the
victims of their vandalism offences and offer to pay restitution. The success of
this case led to the development of victim−offender mediation processes. Such
programs have since become popular in much of the western world. Where
parties do not wish to meet in person but still wish to participate in mediation, a
shuttle or indirect form of mediation is used where communication is facilitated
through a mediator. 37
37
King, Michael S --- "Restorative Justice, Therapeutic Jurisprudence and the Rise of Emotionally
Intelligent Justice" [2008] MelbULawRw 34; (2008) 32(3) Melbourne University Law Review 1096.
Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/MULR/2008/34.html#fn55
38
Ibid.
39
Ibid.
40
Ibid.
problems. In Australia, circle processes have been adapted for use in the justice
system in the form of Aboriginal sentencing courts (such as Koori courts in
Victoria), in circle sentencing in New South Wales and in various courts in
Western Australia.41
Restorative justice has been part of Canada’s criminal justice system for
over 40 years. Restorative justice is commonly defined as an approach to justice
that focuses on addressing the harm caused by crime while holding the offender
responsible for their actions, by providing an opportunity for the parties directly
affected by the crime – victims, offenders and communities – to identify and
address their needs in the aftermath of a crime. 42
For Ireland,44 Restorative Justice focuses on the harm when a crime has
been committed, rather than looking at what laws or rules have been broken.
Participation is on a voluntary basis.
The main legislation covering children and the criminal justice system in
Ireland is the Children Act 2001. This Act focuses on preventing criminal
behavior, diversion from the criminal justice system and rehabilitation. The use
of detention for a child is to be a last resort: the Act requires that all avenues be
explored before it is used.
41
Ibid.
42
Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from https://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/cj-jp/rj-jr/index.html
43
Sabha Macmanus and Sophie C. Millner, (2010), Reflections on Restorative Justice in the Philippines
44
Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from https://www.iprt.ie/restorative-justice/
45
Retrieved on 18 September 2019 from https://www.dcya.gov.ie/docs/The_Children_Act_2001/166.htm
• Any child who accepts responsibility for his/ her offending behavior
should be diverted from criminal proceedings, where appropriate.
• Children have rights and freedoms before the law equal to those enjoyed
by adults and a right to be heard and to participate in any proceedings affecting
them.
46
Supra. note at 42
47
Ibid.
Philippines guarantees the protection of the best interests of the child in
accordance with the standards provided for by these international laws. 48
The main features of R.A. No. 9344 are the diversion and intervention
programmes. During the diversion process, the responsibility and treatment of
Child in Conflict with Law (CICL) will be determined on the basis of his/her social,
cultural, economic, psychological or educational background without resorting to
formal court proceedings. If the CICL is found to be responsible for an offence,
he/she will be required to undergo diversion programmes without resorting to
formal court proceedings. During the intervention programmes on the other hand,
they will undergo a series of activities to address issues that caused them to
commit an offence. These may take the form of counselling, skills training, and
education. The bigger the role these diversion and intervention programmes play
in child behaviour development, the more acceptance and social legitimacy these
programmes are likely to enjoy in resolving problems with CICL.
R.A. No. 9344 likewise raises the age of criminal responsibility from nine
years of age under Presidential Decree 603 to a minimum of 15 years old. CICLs
aged 15 and above are also exempted from criminal liability unless the
prosecution proves that they acted with discernment — the capacity to
distinguish right from wrong. These child offenders are also afforded all the rights
of a CICL until he/she is proven to be eighteen (18) years old or older under the
“presumption of minority” rule. In all proceedings, law enforcement officers,
prosecutors, judges and other government officials concerned are mandated to
exert all efforts at determining the age of the CICL. 49
One more thing the Ireland and the Philippines have in common is there
strive to have Restorative Justice System involving adult criminal offenders.
52
Restorative Justice in the Community (RJC) (formerly Nenagh Community Reparation Project) is a
restorative justice project supported and funded by the Probation Service.
Restorative Justice brings together everybody affected by a crime to decide how to repair the harm
caused. It allows the person affected by the crime to say how they have been affected and allows those who
have committed the crime the opportunity to accept responsibility and to make amends.
Restorative justice approaches try to provide ways of dealing with the aftermath of crime which are more
satisfactory for victims of crime, more constructive for communities and society and more re-integrative for
offenders. A widely recognised definition of Restorative Justice is: “a process whereby all parties with a
While here in the Philippines,53 The Commission on Crime Prevention and
Criminal Justice, of which the Philippines is a member-country, through a draft
resolution, recommended to the Economic and Social Council of the United
Nations Organization (UNO), the adoption of the “Basic Principles on the Use of
Restorative Justice Programmes in Criminal Matters”. The said document is a
formulation of UN Standard in the field of mediation and restorative justice. The
Philippines, being a signatory member-country should ensure adoption of this
resolution.
stake in a specific offence resolve collectively how to deal with the aftermath of the offence and its
implications for the future” (Marshall I, 1999)
53
Supra. note at 1
54
Supra. note at 42
55
Ibid.