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Professor Theo Gavrielides, PhD

Founder and Director of the IARS International Institute, Co-Director of the Restorative Justice for All institute (RJ4All), Adjunct Professor at the Centre for Restorative Justice of Simon Fraser University and Visiting Professor at Buckinghamshire New University.

 

"At the time of writing, the UK is experiencing an unprecedented spike in hate incidents following the EU referendum. Reports to the police increased by 42% in the week before and after the vote. The decision to leave the EU seems to have given to some groups “the licence to behave in a racist or other discriminatory way”, chief constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland said[1]. As politicians and criminal justice agents try to calm public opinion down, they react with tougher policies and sentences. To some extent, this punitive reaction can be seen as a natural consequence against actions of pain and injustice. Only rarely we see actions of kindness and generosity against actions of evil and hate. And yet, we know that pain brings pain and that the punitive and adversarial foundations of our justice system have brought us nothing but evidence of disproportionality, further injustice, spiralling costs and increasing incarceration numbers with unexplained reoffending rates. Therefore, a book whose “impetus arose from the proposition that conventional justice measures fail to address effectively both the causes and consequences of hate crime” (page 236) is welcome indeed..."

 

Book Review of: Walters, M.A. (2014). Hate crime and Restorative Justice

0,50£Preço
  • To cite this book review: Gavrielides, T. (2016). Review of Walters, M.A. (2014). Hate crime and Restorative Justice. Oxford University Press, ISBN: 978019968449-6, pages 314, RRP £68.00 GBP, Internet Journal of Restorative Justice, ISSN (online): 2056-2985.

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