If policymakers have the objective of bettering justice responses for young people, then Theo Gavrielides’ (2012) edited volume, Rights & Restoration within Youth Justice is a must read. It makes an important contribution to youth justice. 1) It bridges a growing divide between evidence-based research and practice; 2) It promotes a participatory framework for doing democracy that necessitates youth voice; 3) It allows for complex issues – serious crimes, like domestic violence – to be responded to in complex – imaginative yet careful – ways. Gavrielides does all this by judiciously connecting the disciplines of restorative justice and human rights. The key question of the book is: how can these two fields work collaboratively to accomplish the above goal? Contributors are a blend of scholars, policymakers, and practitioners.
Book Review of: Gavrielides, T. (2012) Rights & Restoration within Youth Justice
To cite this book review: Oudshoorn, J., (2013). Review of “Theo Gavrielides, Editor (2012) ‘Rights & Restoration within Youth Justice’. De Sitter Publications, Canada, ISBN 978-1-897160-62-6, $56.95 US (paperback), 482 pages.”, Internet Journal of Restorative Justice, ISSN (online): 2056-2985.
Corresponding author
Judah OudshoornProfessor, Bachelor of Community & Criminal JusticeConestoga College Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning
p: 519.748.5220 x 2757e: joudshoorn@conestogac.on.ca
t: @judahoudshoorn