The philosophical, legal, theological and anthropological origins of restorative justice and the programmes inspired by it are premised on a model of ‘doing justice’, which places the individual at its heart. This fact — which is revolutionary in that it marks a sea change from the criminal law perspective focusing solely on the perpetrator of the offence, and incorporates both the victim and the community into the handling of conflicts — has enabled restorative justice to be viewed as a kind of humanism of justice. The article explores the reasons for.

Towards a ‘humanism of justice’ through restorative justice: a dialogue with history

Mannozzi, Grazia
2017-01-01

Abstract

The philosophical, legal, theological and anthropological origins of restorative justice and the programmes inspired by it are premised on a model of ‘doing justice’, which places the individual at its heart. This fact — which is revolutionary in that it marks a sea change from the criminal law perspective focusing solely on the perpetrator of the offence, and incorporates both the victim and the community into the handling of conflicts — has enabled restorative justice to be viewed as a kind of humanism of justice. The article explores the reasons for.
2017
restorative justice, criminal justice, humanism, victims' rights, dignity, language, time, kronos, kairos
Mannozzi, Grazia
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2068188
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