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“Restorative Justice: Justice that Heals” RODOLFO D. DIAMANTE RODOLFO D. DIAMANTE Executive Secretary Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines- Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care CBCP-ECPPC Asia’s Representative International Commission of Catholic Prison Pastoral Care (ICCPPC) International Prison Chaplains Association (IPCA)

“Restorative Justice: Justice that Heals”

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“Restorative Justice: Justice that Heals”. Executive Secretary Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines- Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care CBCP-ECPPC Asia’s Representative International Commission of Catholic Prison Pastoral Care (ICCPPC) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

“Restorative Justice: Justice that Heals”

RODOLFO D. DIAMANTERODOLFO D. DIAMANTE Executive Secretary

Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines- Episcopal Commission on Prison Pastoral Care

CBCP-ECPPCAsia’s Representative

International Commission of Catholic Prison Pastoral Care (ICCPPC)

International Prison Chaplains Association (IPCA)

Page 2: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

I. Introductory Remarks CBCP-ECPPC Thrusts Plights of Offenders and Victims II. What is Restorative Justice Comparison of 2 Paradigms Scriptural Basis

III. Restorative Justice Core Values

Page 3: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

IV. Restorative Justice - Fundamental Principles

V. The Way Restorative Justice Works

VI. Working Together for Restorative Justice

VII. Conclusion

Page 4: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

CBCP-ECPPC Current Major Thrusts

Promotion and Organization of Restorative Justice Advocates

Advocacy of Enlightened Legislation

Linkages, Networking and Partnerships

Deepening Commitment and Understanding of Justice That Heals and Alternatives to Imprisonment

Page 5: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

The Commission in 2000 in celebration of the Jubilee for Prisoners articulated a new vision for Prison Ministry -the Restorative Justice (Justice That Heals)

Page 6: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Plight of Prisoners

- Subhuman living conditions- congested and dilapidated jails and prisons, inadequate daily food allowance, beds, toilets and other sanitary facilities.

-Human rights violation- Corporal punishment and other acts of humiliation .

-Slow judicial process and lopsided administration of justice.

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- Lack of rehabilitation program in penal institutions

- Failure to attend to prisoners with special needs namely the mentally ill, the handicapped, young, the old and the sick

- Inadequate training of underpaid personnel

- Graft and Corruption

Page 8: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Plight of Victims

Have little say and participation

Needs not attended too

Denied of power

Peripheral in the process

Lack of closure

Page 9: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Restorative Justice - process whereby those affected by criminal behavior , victims, offenders, the families involved or the community have a part in resolving the issues which flow from the offending.

What is Restorative Justice

Restorative justice - a philosophy that embraces a wide range of human emotions - healing, mediation, compassion, forgiveness, mercy and reconciliation

Page 10: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

COMPARISON OF 2 PARADIGMS

RETRIBUTIVE RESTORATIVE

An approach focused on determining

what law was broken

who broke it

How they should be punished

A valued-based approach focused on determining

harm resulting from crime

what needs to be done to repair the harm

who is responsible for repairing the harm

Page 11: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

STATE AND COMMUNITY

RETRIBUTIVE RESTORATIVE

Crime - act against the State, a violation of law

Control - lies in the criminal justice system

Community- sideline, represented by the State

Crime - act against another person and the community

Control - lies in the community

Community- facilitator in the restorative process

Page 12: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

OFFENDER AND VICTIM

RETRIBUTIVE RESTORATIVE

Dependence on proxy professionals

Victims - peripheral to the process

Focus - establish blame, guilt, on past.

Response- focused on offender’s past behavior

Direct involvement by participants

Victims- central to the process

Focus- problem solving, obligations, future

Response- focused on consequences of offender’s behavior; emphasis on the future

Page 13: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

RELATIONSHIP

RETRIBUTIVE RESTORATIVE

Emphasis on adversarial relationship

Emphasis on dialogue and negotiation

Page 14: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

ACCOUNTABILITYRETRIBUTIVE RESTORATIVE

Crime- individual act with individual responsibility

Offender accountability - taking punishment

Punishment is effective, deters crime and changes behavior

Crime - both individual and social responsibility

Accountability - assuming responsibility and taking action to repair harm

Punishment - not effective in changing behavior, disruptive to community harmony and good relationships

Page 15: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

The concept of lex talionis, the law of proportionality- If property worth 100 gold coins is stolen, then you cannot claim 200 coins in return. .

The emphasis in Scripture was on restitution and restoration, not vengeance and punishment.

Justice should be based on principles of forgiveness and reconciliation

Scriptural Basis

Page 16: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Jesus specifically rejects 'an eye for an eye' . 'If anyone hits you on the right cheek, offer him the other one as well

Jesus called on followers to love their neighbors and enemies too.

Jesus called for unlimited love and said our forgiveness should be beyond calculation.

Page 17: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Core Values

Retributive justice is focused on the offender. Laws and punishment are the core values.

Restorative Justice is focused on the offender, victim, and community. Values are:

offender- apology or shaming and reintegration

victim- opportunity for forgiveness community- relationships.

Page 18: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Restorative Programs Key Values

1. ENCOUNTER : Create opportunities for victims, offenders and community members who want to do so to meet to discuss the crime and its aftermath.

2. AMENDS: Expect offenders to take steps to repair the harm they have caused.

Page 19: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

4. INCLUSION: Provide opportunities for parties with a stake in a specific crime to participate in its resolution.

3. REINTEGRATION: Seek to restore victims and offenders as whole, contributing members of society.

Page 20: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Restorative Justice - Fundamental Principles

1. Justice requires that we work to restore those who have been injured: victims, communities and offenders.

2. Those most directly involved and affected by crime should have the opportunity to participate fully in the response if they wish.

3. The government is responsible for preserving a just public order and the community establishes peace.

Page 21: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Community- creates the conditions for the restoration of both offender and victim..

Victim- examines feelings and take full advantage of any support network that will facilitate healing.

Restorative Justice Conference (RJC), chaired by a facilitator, to which victims and offenders and appropriate support people are invited

Offender - acknowledges responsibility for the crime committed and express honest regret.

Way Restorative Justice Works

Page 22: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

RESTORATIVE JUSTICE PROGRAMS

Victim Offender Mediation

Family or Community Group Conferencing

Peacekeeping or Sentencing Circles

Circle of Support

Page 23: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

Working Together for Restorative Justice

UN Congress on Crime Prevention and Treatment of Offenders urged all its member nations to increase the use of restorative interventions in addressing the problem of criminality.

The CBCP-ECPPC, the Philippine Action for Youth offenders , the Integrated Correctional Association of the Philippines and the Coalition Against Death Penalty are working together to:

Page 24: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

disseminate information about restorative justice

develop and promote agreed standards and principles for evaluating and guiding restorative justice programs

encourage more research on restorative justice programs and their effectiveness

Seek alternatives to imprisonment or non-custodial treatment of persons deprived of their liberties

Page 25: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

A system that gives a better deal to victims, that promotesapology, healing, understanding, accountability, personal andcollective responsibility, forgiveness and even reconciliation.

A system that practice compassion and mercy in dealings withone another.

A system that uses imprisonment as a final resort.

Restorative justice provides of these to happen. The current criminal justice system does not.

Conclusion

Page 26: “Restorative Justice:  Justice that Heals”

References:

1. Consedine, Jim , Restorative Justice: A Gospel Response to Crime, Pagkalinga-25 Years of Prison Pastoral Care,2000

2. Cavanagh, Tom, Adopting New Core Values for Justice: Exploring Restorative Values

3. Claassen,Ron, Restorative Justice-Fundamental Principles,1995 4. Van Ness, Daniel and Strong, Karen Heethderks, Restoring Justice,

1997 5. Zehr, Howard, Changing Lenses, 1990 6. Hadley, Michael, The Spiritual Roots of Restorative Justice, 2001 7. McHugh, Gerald Austin, Christian Faith and Criminal Justice,

1978