Abstract
This article reports on the uses of police-led restorative justice (RJ) for female offenders by one constabulary in England from 2007 to 2012. The study consisted of (1) quantitative analysis of administrative police data on 17,486 participants, including 2,586 female offenders, and (2) qualitative analysis of twelve narrative interviews with female offenders sampled from the database. Quantitative data demonstrated that the majority of female offenders committed low-level offences and that the majority of participants experienced street RJ. Female offenders reported mixed experiences with RJ in qualitative interviews. On the whole, women did not understand what RJ was, leading to complications as many felt their victims were mutually culpable. Some felt that the police forced them to apologise and treated them like criminals while others felt the police gave them a second chance. The study raises questions about what the police can bring to RJ in relation to vulnerable women.
Original language | English |
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Journal | International Journal of Restorative Justice |
Volume | 2018 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2018 |
Profiles
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Birgit Larsson
- School of Social Work - Associate Professor in Social Work and Sociology
- Centre for Research on Children and Families - Member
- Child Protection & Family Support - Member
Person: Research Group Member, Research Centre Member, Academic, Teaching & Research
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Gillian Schofield
- School of Social Work - Emeritus Professor
- Centre for Research on Children and Families - Member
- Child Protection & Family Support - Member
Person: Honorary, Research Group Member, Research Centre Member