Law, Religion, and Restorative Justice in New Zealand

A former police chief and a criminologist confirm a famous remark by Margaret Mead when they write: "The initiation of restorative reforms is often based upon the conversion of one key professional in a criminal justice agency."New Zealand district court judge Fred W.M. McElrea personalize...

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Published in:Journal of law and religion
Authors: Shriver, Donald W. 1927- (Author) ; Shriver, Peggy L. 1931- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 2013
In: Journal of law and religion
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Summary:A former police chief and a criminologist confirm a famous remark by Margaret Mead when they write: "The initiation of restorative reforms is often based upon the conversion of one key professional in a criminal justice agency."New Zealand district court judge Fred W.M. McElrea personalized this rule in his account of how he stumbled on a restorative procedure in the case of a young man in Auckland, who was a Maori and son of a bishop, and who confessed to the crime of robbing a woman's purse. She happened to be a Quaker, and she appeared in court as a gesture of friendship for the offender. When the time came for sentencing, McElrea wondered out loud if there were a way for the young man to be monitored, without imprisonment, by some competent person who knew him. At that, Douglas Mansil, local Presbyterian minister, also present in the courtroom, stood and volunteered his services. Mansil had been the longtime "streetwise" pastor of a congregation in that Auckland neighborhood, known for furnishing the courts with more than a few youth offenders. Together with the Quaker victim of the crime, he kept track of the young man and reported regularly to the court. It was the beginning of McElrea's dedication to restorative justice (RJ) for young offenders in New Zealand. He and other judiciary leaders pay tribute to the influence of Howard Zehr's visit to New Zealand (NZ) in 1994 and Zehr's book, Changing Lenses, which McElrea first read during a sabbatical leave at Cambridge University. Zehr's book and his work in the U.S. had great impact on New Zealand legal officials, many of whom, like McElrea, often give him credit for inspiring shifts to RJ in their thinking about law, judicial process, and ethics.
ISSN:2163-3088
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of law and religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1017/S0748081400000266