CRIM 315 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Retributive Justice, Solitary Confinement, Procedural Justice

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Individuals: means to an end: restorative, who has been hurt, what are their needs, whose obligation are these, relationship concern: offender/victim. Interdependence we rely on each other: measuring interdependence, collectivist societies, high interdependence, collective harmony, vrs. Low interdependence: self-sufficiency, framing relationships in retributive justice paradigm, the individual (offender) is the root of the problem. How do they do this: restorative justice theories: relationship, these theories work to explain what restorative justice is, and how rj work, normative, zehr. Llewellyn: explanatory, social identity, procedural justice, shame, zehr: justice as relationship, normative, crime = interpersonal conflict, e. g. Chris ducharme: relationships are key, why are value important, they bind our relationships together sort of the glue that hold them together, crime is a violation of people and relationships. Justice is an ongoing process, not an end goal there is (cid:374)o (cid:858)e(cid:374)d pla(cid:272)e(cid:859: explanatory theories of relationship, social identity, the self as a social entity.

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