All Stories

  1. Ambitions and Critiques of Restorative Justice Post COVID-19
  2. Restorative Justice: Promoting Peace and Wellbeing
  3. Power, Race, and Justice
  4. Challenging race
  5. Challenging justice
  6. Challenging restorative justice
  7. Introduction and acknowledgements
  8. Power and policing – USA
  9. Power through bullying – England1
  10. Power through rape – Denmark
  11. Power in whiteness – England
  12. Power through race – USA
  13. Power, fear and security
  14. Fault lines, mermaids and sirens
  15. Preamble to the case studies
  16. Comparative Restorative Justice
  17. Introduction
  18. Editorial
  19. Editorial
  20. Editorial
  21. Editorial
  22. Editorial
  23. Editorial
  24. Editorial
  25. Editorial
  26. Editorial
  27. Routledge International Handbook of Restorative Justice
  28. Epilogue
  29. Beyond restorative justice
  30. Victims and offenders’ perceptions and experiences of restorative justice
  31. Victims and the restorative justice ambition: a London case study of potentials, assumptions and realities
  32. Editorial
  33. Restorative Justice
  34. Editorial
  35. Moving beyond the labels of victim and offender when preventing and restoring harm
  36. Editorial
  37. Editorial
  38. Therapeutic Jurisprudence and Overcoming Violence Against Women
  39. Editorial
  40. The Death of Democracy and the Forces of Power and Control: The Case of Europe
  41. Editorial
  42. Reconstructing restorative justice philosophy
  43. Editorial
  44. Latest cutting edge research on restorative justice
  45. Repositioning Restorative Justice in Europe
  46. Editorial
  47. Editorial
  48. The Victims’ Directive and What Victims Want From Restorative Justice
  49. Editorial
  50. Moving Beyond ‘Frail’ Democracy: A Youth-Led Youth Studies
  51. Editorial
  52. Reconciling the Notions of Restorative Justice and Imprisonment
  53. Bringing Race Relations Into the Restorative Justice Debate
  54. Editorial
  55. Chris Cunneen and Carolyn Hoyle,Debating restorative justice
  56. Contextualizing Restorative Justice for Hate Crime
  57. Clergy Child Sexual Abuse and the Restorative Justice Dialogue
  58. Review of Husband, C. and Y. Alam (2011), Social Cohesion and Counter Terrorism
  59. Restorative Justice and Violence Against Women: Comparing Greece and The United Kingdom
  60. Chakraborti, N (2010) Hate crime: concepts, policy, future directions, Devon: Willan Publishing, ISBN 978-1-84392-779-2, £22.99 (paperback), 264 pages
  61. Human rights in health and social care
  62. Restorative practices and hate crime: Opening up the debate
  63. The new politics of community cohesion: making use of human rights policy and legislation
  64. A Review of Representations of Justice edited by Antoine Masson and Kevin O'Connor
  65. Restorative justice--the perplexing concept: Conceptual fault-lines and power battles within the restorative justice movement
  66. Human Rights and Customer Satisfaction with Public Services: A Relationship Discovered
  67. Setting the philosophical foundations of restorative justice
  68. Restorative Justice: Are we there Yet?: Responding to the Home Office's Consultation Questions
  69. Restorative Justice
  70. Introduction and Acknowledgments
  71. Clergy Child Sexual Abuse: The Restorative Justice Option
  72. Reconciling Restorative Justice with the Law for Violence Against Women in Europe
  73. On the Finite Element Modelling of RHS Gap K-Joints: Parametric Analysis