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Paper Title

The RESTORE Program of Restorative Justice for Sex Crimes: Vision, Process, and Outcomes

Keywords

  • RESTORE Program
  • Restorative Justice RJ
  • Sex Crimes
  • Sexual Assault
  • Justice Satisfaction
  • Conferencing Program
  • Victim Impact
  • Offender Accountability
  • Re-Dress Plan
  • Program Evaluation
  • Safety Monitoring
  • Criminal Justice
  • Alternative Justice
  • Victim Support
  • Legal Reform
  • Outcome Assessment
  • Prosecutor Referred Cases
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Rape
  • Sexual Harassment
  • Sexual Exploitation
  • Child Sexual Abuse
  • Incest
  • Sexual Violence
  • Consent Violation
  • Domestic Sexual Violence
  • Sexual Coercion
  • Non-Consensual Sex
  • Rape Culture
  • Victim Blaming
  • Criminal Sexual Behavior
  • Intimate Partner Violence
  • Human Trafficking
  • Sexual Offenders
  • Perpetrator Accountability
  • Consent Education
  • Legal Framework
  • Sex Offender Laws
  • Abuse Prevention
  • Gender-Based Violence
  • Sex Crime Investigation
  • Psychological Impact of Sexual Violence
  • Trauma-Informed Care
  • Rape Recovery
  • Psychological Trauma
  • Sexual Predators
  • Forensic Evidence
  • Survivor Advocacy

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 29 | Issue : 9 | Page No : 1623-1660

Published On

February, 2014

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Abstract

The article reports empirical evaluation of RESTORE, a restorative justice (RJ) conferencing program adapted to prosecutor-referred adult misdemeanor and felony sexual assaults. RESTORE conferences included voluntary enrollment, preparation, and a face-to-face meeting where primary and secondary victims voice impacts, and responsible persons acknowledge their acts and together develop a re-dress plan that is supervised for 1 year. Process data included referral and consent rates, participant characteristics, observational ratings of conferences compared with program design, services delivered, and safety monitoring. Outcome evaluation used 22 cases to assess (a) pre–post reasons for choosing RESTORE, (b) preparation and conference experiences, (c) overall program and justice satisfaction, and (d) completion rates. This is the first peer-reviewed quantitative evaluation of RJ conferencing for adult sexual assault. Although the data have limitations, the results support cautious optimism regarding feasibility, safety, and satisfactory outcomes. They help envision how conferencing could expand and individualize justice options for sexual assault.

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