| Retributive Justice Crime is defined as an act against authorities. A crime is a violation of a law; an abstract system of rules. The offender is accountable to the authorities for the crime. As a result, the authority figures and the offender are in an adversarial relationship.
Accountability is equated with suffering. If an offender is made to suffer enough (i.e. long expulsion, suspension) they have then been accountable.
Victims are peripheral to the process of responding to and resolving the criminal behavior. Offenders are defined only by their deficits (the crime) and the victim is defined only by material and psychological losses
Crime is entirely the result of individual choice with individual responsibility.
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Restorative Justice Crime is defined as an act against victims and the community. Crime is an injury, which violates people and community trust. The offender is accountable to the victim and the community. Authorities help insure that the offender is held accountable to the victim and community, and the process is fair and equitable.
Accountability is defined as taking responsibility for behaviors and repairing the harm resulting from those behaviors. The outcomes of the system are measured by how much reparation was achieved.
Victims and community are directly involved and play a key role
in response to crime. Offenders are defined by their capacity to take responsibility for their actions and change behavior. Victims are defined by losses and capacity to participate in the process of recovering losses and healing.
Crime has both individual and social dimensions. Crime is defined by individual choice in a context of conditions, which lead to criminal behavior.
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