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Iwi community justice panels reduce harm from re-offending
Authors:Darren Walton  Samara Martin  Judy Li
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealandd.walton@cnr.co.nz darren.walton@canterbury.ac.nzORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6420-1301;3. Independent Researcher, Crow’s Nest Research, Wellington, New Zealand;4. Research and Evaluation, New Zealand Police, Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The effect of iwi community justice panels is assessed using data from seven years of implementation. Panel participants of 1013 are compared to a control group drawn from 73,000 offenders charged with similar offences and propensity-matched by age, gender, ethnicity, offending history and location. The dependent measure is re-harm from offending calculated using the NZ Crime Harm Index. Panel participants did not reduce their rate of offending compared to matched controls. However, there is a significant reduction in harm from post-panel offending, on average by 26.9 ± 21.05 equivalised prison days. The relative reduction is 22.25% of the harm committed by matched controls. Iwi panels are an effective alternative justice resolution. Panel participants are found to re-offend with minor offences and thus any focus on rates of offending would miss the complexity of the restorative justice process that reduces the harm of re-offending.
Keywords:Restorative justice  community justice panels  crime harm index  police data  indigenous justice
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