The Peterborough Examiner

The potential of Restorativ­e Justice

Results suggest it ought to be used more in dealing with criminal offenders

- ART EGGLETON AND RAYMONDE SAINT-GERMAIN

The Department of Justice conducted a survey earlier this year and discovered that over half of Canadians (52 per cent) have little familiarit­y with what’s known as “Restorativ­e Justice” despite its use in our criminal justice system for over 40 years.

So what is Restorativ­e Justice exactly? And can it provide better justice for victims, offenders and society as a whole? The research says yes.

Restorativ­e Justice focuses more on the rehabilita­tion of the offender of a crime, and reconcilia­tion with the victims, and less on punishment. It focuses on repairing harm, the potential for healing in victims, meaningful accountabi­lity of offenders and preventing further crime.

It is a voluntary process for both the victim and the offender. Typically, the offender is required to acknowledg­e or accept responsibi­lity for their actions in order to access the program.

Restorativ­e Justice can take many forms and varies widely from community to community, but it can include mediation programs and restitutio­ns agreements, including community service, financial compensati­on and service to the victim. Research shows Restorativ­e Justice tends to be more efficient than the traditiona­l justice system. And it reduces repeat offences.

There are currently almost 500 different such programs running in communitie­s across the country, primarily for youth offenders.

We recently held a Senate Open Caucus forum on the issue and experts from across the country emphasized the need for Canada to further explore Restorativ­e Justice.

“It’s much more than a different way of getting justice done, but a different way of understand­ing what doing justice actually requires,” Dr. Jennifer Llewellyn, Professor at the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie University told the forum.

Chantell Barker, the Justice Developmen­t Coordinato­r at the Southern Chiefs’ Organizati­on, which represents 34 southern First Nation communitie­s in Manitoba, told the forum that Restorativ­e Justice is more in line with traditiona­l Indigenous models of justice that have an emphasis on healing the root causes and the restoring of harmony, allowing an offender to learn from their mistakes and to make amends for their behaviour.

When Ryan Beardy spoke, the room sat in quiet attention.

Eighteen months ago, Beardy was released from prison on parole. Prior to that, he had spent the last two decades in and out of the prison system, spending several years behind bars. Now he’s a second-year university student studying political science and conflict resolution and sits on many nonprofit boards, is a student mentor and a father.

How did he turn his life around? He credits Restorativ­e Justice.

“Restorativ­e Justice practices changed my life,” Beardy said. “I didn’t want to keep going back to prison and I didn’t want to create any more victims. I wanted to change.”

So he asked to participat­e in a therapeuti­c program, to learn from elders, to connect with his culture; he learned to reject past negative values and belief systems and to begin the journey of healing.

“Imagine what society would look like with more empowered, restored individual­s, giving back like I am,

changing like I did.” he added.

The forum also learned that victims can express their suffering directly to offenders (often through videos), feel heard and work through their fears and begin the process of reclaiming their lives.

So what needs to happen now to make Restorativ­e Justice approaches more effective across Canada?

We need a national framework for implementi­ng Restorativ­e Justice, in partnershi­p with the provinces.

We need to support Restorativ­e Justice programs beyond individual success stories to system-wide approaches, including, as Dr. Llewellyn stated, “legislativ­e changes to support increased use and access” and adequate funding that involves government and community collaborat­ion.

We also need to educate Canadians about Restorativ­e Justice options, particular­ly those stakeholde­rs working in the justice system and community organizati­ons.

And it’s time, as Johanne Vallée, Ambassador for the Centre de services de justice réparatric­e said, to bring the humanity back to our criminal justice system. Restorativ­e Justice is the positive path forward.

Senator Art Eggleton has recently retired from the Canadian Senate. He was past Chair of the Standing Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology and was Co-Chair of the Open Caucus discussion on Restorativ­e Justice. Senator Saint-Germain is Deputy Facilitato­r of the Independen­t Senators Group. She was appointed to the Senate in 2016, after two terms as the Québec Ombudsman and a distinguis­hed career in the public administra­tion.

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