Topics include key principles; program ideas and practices; effects on victims; offenders and the community, and future prospects. John Braithwaite and Christine Parker are Australian authors.
Introduction: Restorative Justice and the International Juvenile Justice Crisis 1(14) Gordon Bazemore Lode Walgrave Part One: Key Principles 15(112) Rehabilitation, Retribution and Restorative Justice: Alternative Conceptions of Juvenile Justice 17(28) Barry C. Feld Restorative Juvenile Justice: In Search of Fundamentals and an Outline for Systemic Reform 45(30) Gordon Bazemore Lode Walgrave The History of Restorative Justice 75(28) Elmar G.M. Weitekamp Restorative Justice Is Republican Justice 103(24) John Braithwaite Christine Parker Part Two: Process, Programs and Practices 127(108) Community Service as a Cornerstone of a Systemic Restorative Response to (Juvenile) Crime 129(26) Lode Walgrave After Shaming, Whither Reintegration: Restorative Justice and Relational Rehabilitation 155(40) Gordon Bazemore Protecting Community: The Public Safety Role in a Restorative Juvenile Justice 195(18) Susan Guarino-Ghezzi Andrew Klein Avoiding the Marginalization and ``McDonaldization of Victim-Offender Mediation: A Case Study in Moving Toward the Mainstream 213(22) Mark S. Umbreit Part Three: Implementation Issues 235(50) Implementing Restorative Youth Justice: A Case Study in Community Justice and the Dynamics of Reform 237(26) Curt Taylor Griffiths Ray Corrado Legal Issues of Restorative Justice 263(22) Daniel W. Van Ness Part Four: Research --- Impact on Victim, Offender and Community 285(72) Punitive Attitudes of the Public: Reality and Myth 287(18) Klaus Sessar Restorative Justice, Juvenile Offenders and Crime Victims: A Review of the Literature 305(22) Russ Immarigeon The Impact of Restorative Interventions on Juvenile Offenders 327(30) Mara Schiff Part Five: Toward the Future 357(2) Reflections on the Future of Restorative Justice for Juveniles 359 Lode Walgrave Gordon Bazemore