Full title in original language:
Four decades of victim-offender mediation research and practice: The evidence
Education level:
University University (18+ years)Topic / subtopic:
Crime prevention and criminal justice Restorative justice Criminal justice systemTarget audience:
Students,
Teachers / Lecturers
Type of resource:
Publication / Article
Languages:
English
Region of relevance:
Global
Access:
open access
Individual authors:
Toran Hansen, Mark Umbreit
Publication year:
2018
Published by:
Conflict Resolution Quarterly
Copyright holder:
© Conflict Resolution Quarterly
Contact name and address:
Wiley
Contact website:
Key themes:
cpcj, criminal justice, justice, crime, restorative justice, mediation, research, practice, evidence
Links:
Short description:
This paper provides an overview of 40 years of victim‐offender mediation evaluation research. This research demonstrates that victims and offenders are more satisfied with the process and outcomes than with the courts, they are more likely to draft and complete restitution agreements, they derive psychosocial benefits, the process is less expensive, crime victims are more likely to receive apologies from offenders, and offenders are less likely to recidivate. These benefits are not necessarily uniformly distributed. This “first wave” research provides a platform for the second wave, currently underway. To contextualize these findings, current and future victim‐offender mediation practices are outlined.