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Paper Title

Expanding a Community’s Justice Response to Sex Crimes Through Advocacy, Prosecutorial, and Public Health Collaboration: Introducing the RESTORE Program

Keywords

  • Community-Based Restorative Justice
  • Collaboration
  • Restorative Justice Models
  • Sexual Assault
  • Rape
  • Advocacy
  • Prosecutorial Collaboration
  • Public Health Approach
  • RESTORE Program
  • Victim-Driven Justice
  • Offender Accountability
  • Criminal Justice Reform
  • Trauma-Informed Response
  • Reoffense Prevention
  • Face-to-Face Dialogue
  • Harm Redress Plan
  • Compliance Monitoring
  • Sex Crime
  • Sexual Violence
  • Consent Violation
  • Non-Consensual Acts
  • Sexual Coercion
  • Perpetrator Behavior
  • Psychological Impact
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Intimate Partner Violence
  • Sexual Misconduct
  • Abuse in Relationships
  • Victim Blaming
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Rape Culture
  • Victim Support
  • Trauma Recovery
  • Sexual Predators
  • Victim Empowerment
  • Sexual Assault Laws
  • Non-Consensual BDSM
  • Psychological Trauma
  • Coercion in Relationships
  • Consent Education
  • Sexual Violence Prevention
  • Safe Words
  • Criminal Justice System

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 19 | Issue : 12 | Page No : 1435-1463

Published On

December, 2004

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Abstract

Problems in criminal justice system response to date-acquaintance rape and nonpenetration sexual offenses include (a) they are markers of a sexual offending career, yet are viewed as minor; (b) perpetrators are not held accountable in ways that reduce reoffense; and (c) criminal justice response disappoints and traumatizes victims. To address these problems, a collaboration of victim services, prosecutors, legal scholars, and public health professionals are implementing and evaluating RESTORE, a victim-driven, community-based restorative justice program for selected sex crimes. RESTORE prepares survivors, responsible persons (offenders), and both parties’ families and friends for face-to-face dialogue to identify the harm and develop a redress plan. The programthen monitors the offender’s compliance for 12 months. The article summarizes empirical data on problems in criminal justice response, defines restorative justice models, and examines outcome. Then the RESTORE program processes and goals are described. The article highlights community collaboration in building and sustaining this program.

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