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What is Community Justice?
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What is Community Justice?
Case Studies of Restorative Justice and Community Supervision

  • David R Karp - Skidmore College, USA
  • Todd R. Clear - John Jay College, USA, Rutgers State University of New Jersey, USA, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York, USA


192 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Past methods of probation and parole supervision have largely relied on caseworkers who monitor their "clients" as well as they can. But, as numbers of "clients" increase, studies indicate that this model is ineffectual. The time has come to significantly rethink the approaches to community supervision.

As described in What Is Community Justice?, the aim of the new efforts is to explicitly integrate the community and the criminal justice process in probation programs. There are five key goals that this book addresses to achieve this end:

· The building of partnerships between community supervision agencies and the community

· Expanding the "client" definition to include the victim of crime, the family of the offender, and the community itself

· Focus on places: agencies must take into account important local differences in neighborhoods

· Preventing problems between the community and the client rather than reacting to them

· Adding value to community life

This book addresses the specific ways of achieving these goals by presenting six case studies of probation programs that represent a practical side of the community justice ideal. What emerges is a provocative and enlightening new approach to the problems of probation and parole.

 
1. Preface
D.R. Karp, J. Lane, & S. Turner
2. Ventura and the Theory of Community Justice
 
3. Preface to Maricopa
T.R. Clear & J. Cannon
4. Neighborhood Probation Offices in Maricopa County
 
5. Preface to Vermont
D.R. Karp
6. The Offender/Community Encounter: Stakeholder Involvement in the Vermont Reparative
 
7. Preface to Tallahassee
E. Zellerer & J. Cannon
8. Restorative Justice, Reparation, and the Southside Project
 
9. Preface to Boston
R.P. Corbett Jr.
10. Reinventing Probation and Reducing Youth Violence
 
11. Preface to Deschutes
T.K. Martin
12. Deschutes County, Oregon: Community Justice in Action
S. Maruna
13. Afterword: In the Shadows of Community Justice

Not going to teach the course.

Dr Gary Kowaluk
Criminal Just Sociology Dept, Cameron University
December 16, 2012

An interesting addition to the RJ library

Dr Carol Borland Jones
Natural and Social Sciences, Gloucestershire University
April 20, 2010

David Reed Karp

David Karp, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York, where he teaches courses in criminology and criminal justice. He conducts research on community-based responses to crime and has given workshops on restorative justice and community justice nationally. Currently, he is engaged in a qualitative research study examining Vermont’s community reparative probation boards and is a member of the New York State Community Justice Forum. He is the author of more that 30 academic articles and technical reports and two previous books—Community Justice: An Emerging Field and The Community Justice... More About Author

Todd R. Clear

SAGE Knowledge is the ultimate social sciences digital library for students, researchers, and faculty. Hosting more than 4,400 titles, it includes an expansive range of SAGE eBook and eReference content, including scholarly monographs, reference works, handbooks, series, professional development titles, and more.

The platform allows researchers to cross-search and seamlessly access a wide breadth of must-have SAGE book and reference content from one source.