Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice

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Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice Potential pitfalls and dangers. Based on the research by Umbreit & Coates

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Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice. Potential pitfalls and dangers. Based on the research by Umbreit & Coates. The Office of Victims Advocates. Victims decide whether or not to particpate Both victim and offender must both be treated with respect. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice

Page 1: Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice

Multicultural Implications of Restorative Justice

Potential pitfalls and dangers. Based on the research by Umbreit

& Coates

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The Office of Victims Advocates

• Victims decide whether or not to particpate

• Both victim and offender must both be treated with respect

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Victims are granted a choice in:

• Location

• Timing

• Structure of session

• A right to stop participating at any stage in the process

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People from different cultures & world views have different ways of:• Speaking

• behaving

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Natural cultural differences can easily lead to:

• Misunderstandings

• Destroy the best efforts at conflict resolution

• End the hopes of restoring and repairing relationships

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The key to progress in RJ is:

• Increased sensitivity to cross-cultural issues

• Dynamics that affect RJ programs

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• Often the cultural background of victim, offender and program staff member are different

• Great danger can occur with overgeneralizations

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Proximity – comfortable with standing closer together:

Africans Arabs

Black Americans South Americans

Indonesians The French

Latin Americans

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Body Movements:

• Posture

• Smiling

• Eye contact

• Laughing

• Gestures

• And many others…..

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Examples:

• Asians may by puzzled or offended by a White person who smiles or grimaces

• Whites may conclude that an Asian person has no emotion.

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Eye contact

• American Indians: Disrespectful to look an elder or person of authority in the eye

• Blacks make more frequent eye contact when speaking than when listening

• Whites tend to make eye contact when listening than when speaking

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Paralanguage

• Hesitations

• Inflections

• Silences

• Volume

• Pace of speaking

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Silence

• To American Indian culture it is valued as sacred

• Each human must have the opportunity to:• Reflect• To translate into words• Shape the words

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What silence means to others:

• French = agreement

• Asian = token of respect or politeness

• Whites= time for them to talk

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Volume

• Asians – speak softly

• Whites – founder than Asians

• Arabs – prefer higher volume

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Density of language

• Blacks – sparse and concise

• Asians & American Indians – will use many more words to say the same thing

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Other defining characteriestics that can have an impact

• Race

• Socioeconomic status

• Ethniticy

• Gender

• Religion

• Sexual orientation

• Rural vs. urban residence

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Characteristics of culturally rskilled Restorative Justice Practictioners

• There are a total of five

• All are necessary for RJ

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#1

• CSRJ is aware and senstivie to his or her cultural heritage

• Values and respects differences in culture

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#2

• CSRJ is aware of their own values and biases

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#3

• CSRJ is comfortable with the differences that exist

• Between themselves and clients

• In terms of race & beliefs

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#4

• CSRJ is senstivie to circumstances that may dictate referral of a minority client to a member of their own race/culture

• Or to another CSRJ

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#5

• CSRJ acknowledges and is aware of their own racist attitudes, beliefs and feelings

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Other things to remember:

• Do not make quick assumptions about others

• Look at the world through the eyes of another

• Listen to key informants

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Meaningful mediation requires:

• Anticipating possible problems

• CSRJ may need to help other participants understand eiach other’s viewpoints

• Communication styles

• Prior to mediation session