Showing posts with label restorative justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label restorative justice. Show all posts

Tuesday, 9 April 2013

Sorry doesn't have to be so hard...





Would you like the chance to apologise in person for mistakes you’ve made in the past?

Are you longing to say thank you to someone who helped turned your life around?

A new BBC One programme can help.

The Gift’ is an inspiring new programme that will track down the person you want to apologise to or thank, whether it be the victim of a crime you’ve committed, someone affected by behaviour you regret or the person whose kindness changed your life forever.

Our team of restorative justice practitioners, search experts and psychologists will support you as you prepare to meet them face to face and help you find a gift or gesture that encapsulates your feelings.

 If you have a long overdue debt of gratitude, or if you’ve felt burdened by the need to apologise and make amends and feel that saying sorry in person could end years of guilt and help you move on with your life, then we’d love to hear from you.

Please click here for more information, or contact us directly on 020 7424 7703 or thegift@walltowall.co.uk

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Mental Health Friday by Farah Damji

Friday afternoon, I took a tour to easternmost (well almost)   Bow to the old Victorian Cemetary  to see one of our customers (they're tenants but they're so much more, tenant / landlord relationship has the connotations of modern day Rachmanism and I prefer the word customer or client to service user, blame our CEO Viv Ahmun,  for inducting me into this customer friendly language) fulfilling the volunteering requirement that we ask all of them to complete, as part of their residence in one of our properties. The minimum is five hours a week and we have racked up a few thousand hours, putting good will and hard graft back into the local communities where our customers live.

She is volunteering at the Providence Row  Housing Association  horticultural therapy project, Ecominds. Seen that amazing eco bar on the top of the Queen Elizabeth Hall at the South Bank Centre? That's the fruit of this talented lot's endeavours.

I didn't really know what to expect  but the walk through the peaceful but neglected cemetary allowed me some space away from the hustle and the bustle of my day-to-day. There, nestled away in a corner of the rambling plot with spectacular views of the Gherkin, Canary Wharf and the neighbouring crawling council estate, just over the ten foot high stone wall,  were a dozen or so people dressed in gardening gear and steel capped boots busily chopping down trees, planting wildflowers and moving logs of wood. On a portable gas stove there was a   vegetable curry  / spicy chilli bubbling over and some eager stirring  meant the scent rose up into the warm early spring air.  Here,  a real life diorama,  depicted the disparity which is Tower Hamlets Borough,  so much potential and so much wealth, yet such deprivation. Recent reports confirmed that 58% of Tower Hamlets young people lived below the poverty line, so on  10 pounds  or less a day, for an entire family, a world away from the glass cages and luxury penthouses along the river in Wapping.



Paul, one of the founders who was formerly homeless (picture below, third from right, standing)  started Ecotherapy Grounded, and looks like a weathered Jesus, skin worn and sundried with the healthy gleam of  hope in his sparkling blue eyes. Kelvin Barton (left), a former social worker joined Paul and together they run a project on Friday afternoons for people experiencing mental distress  who seek some company and to feel useful and the combination of camaraderie and physical labour  appears to have direct positive results. The project is now in its sixth year with some  volunteers attending consistently over a number of years and all had a good word to say about their experiences on the project, brimming over with a sense of pride and ownership.

I get lots of background noise from various agencies and my colleagues about insisting upon the volunteering aspect of the Kazuri model but this is what makes it different and (touch wood) successful. No other social lettings agency which  rehouses ex offenders, vulnerable women and people from supported housing embeds the community aspect in the offering. By being supported by and interconnected with the local community at the grassroots level, projects which work for the hardest to reach group are primed to succeed, they engage a sense of stakeholder-ship and stewardship at the micro level. This breaks away from the dependency  model  and stigma of social housing and empowers people to feel more confident, straight away.  

This part of the tenancy is made very clear before we offer any propective clients a tenancy and we help identify a local volunteering scheme, in which they are interested  and which doesn't feel like a burden. It looks great on their CV and doesn't affect their welfare benefits, as long as the unpaid work is declared.

Part of the process of desistance is a sense of belonging and being a contributing, participating member of society (a steady job and the love of a good woman), and we've watched our customers evolve and blossom as they reaffirm their social bond through this simple gesture of restorative justice. Volunteering work has lead to paid work and sustainable employment, through increased self confidence and self worth.

I was truly impressed by the team spirit, the real sense of equality and the obviously great sense of achievement which has manifested itself in the corner of that tumbledown graveyard. Trees are being cleared away so that butterflies and other insects will pollinate the area and the life cycle is restored by repairing broken links in the food chain. Many of the service users have been chronically homeless, have multiple needs and  can suffer from a dual diagnosis. Some have long histories of offending behaviour. Something about a good bit of hard graft and being around people who also want to move into an empowered, authentic self has more than ticked the statutory boxes of reducing depression and reoffending. I left feeling pleased that I had taken the time out to go and visit our customer on the project and we are actively looking at how we can refer more of our clients, particularly those in Tower Hamlets, into this patently effective way of boosting health, self esteem and well-being.

Rt Hon Mr Iain Duncan Smith, take note, this is not compulsory, it is volunteering into community projects in return for a clear, contractual benefit ( housing and supported tenancy). Dump the failing Work Fare  Program and try this instead!





For more information please contact Ecominds directly on kbarton@prha.net

Thursday, 15 September 2011

Restorative Justice, a deconstructionalist approach to pure justice.

13 September 2011
More offenders will face the consequences of their actions with the launch of the first-ever register of restorative justice practitioners.
Funded by the Ministry of Justice and implemented by the Restorative Justice Council (RJC), the register lists all qualified practitioners of restorative justice - a process where offenders meet their victims and hear about the pain they have caused.
Justice Minister Crispin Blunt said: 'Restorative Justice demands criminals take an active role in acknowledging the harm they have caused, as well as making amends.
'The register we are launching today will encourage the increased use of restorative justice by making it quicker and easier to find a local practitioner, as well as acting as the first-ever benchmark of quality and professionalism that ensures victims are safeguarded.'
Restorative justice, already used in England and Wales, empowers victims and communities to overcome the negative impact of crime - with 85 per cent of victims who have taken part reporting a positive experience.
Reformed offender Scott said: 'When I heard about the pain I caused I couldn’t understand why I did it and I felt sick hearing that.'
'I can’t do burglaries now, because I keep hearing Michelle’s words in my head and it stops me doing it.'
For more information on RJ
http://www.restorativejustice.org/

Friday, 2 September 2011

Rioters, ordinary criminals not special cases

by , Mary Riddell and Christopher Hope

In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, Keir Starmer says those convicted of involvement in the riots should not be seen as a “separate category”, as some judges have argued.
Instead, he says, the Crown Prosecution Service and other legal authorities “need to keep our feet on the ground” and “remind ourselves that we are dealing with ordinary criminal cases”.
Surveys have suggested that courts have handed down sentences to those involved in the riots that are about a quarter longer than normal. Some people have been incarcerated for months for stealing low-value items.
Mr Starmer makes clear that he is not commenting on individual sentencing. However, his warning that disorder cases should be treated like all others will be taken as a signal that he opposes the tough line taken by many, the Prime Minister included.
His remarks raise the prospect that many of the sentences will be reduced by the appeal courts. “We should not treat these cases as a separate category,” he says. “We should treat them as we do any other case.”

Saturday, 6 August 2011

Making ex-offenders pay, ex-offenders pay back society through conservation work


Offenders supervised by Northumbria Probation Trust took on vital conservation work in a national park.
The 12 offenders worked for a week at Snowdonia doing construction work with the National Trust and Charity Mobex North East. They also built dams to help re-establish the wetland, improve vegetation for wildlife and stop erosion.
During the week the offenders improved their communication skills, increased their self esteem while also paying something back to society by helping with this important conservation work.
Nick Hall, acting chief executive for Northumbria Probation Trust said: 'I am very impressed with the work the offenders completed and the impact this has had on them.
'I had met some of the group on a previous occasion and was amazed at the transformation in them. The conservation work has helped them to believe in themselves and realise that they can achieve other things in life without offending.'
The offenders who took part in the conservation work were subject to licence supervision on release from prison and living in Approved Premises in Northumbria.


First published on  http://justice.gov.uk/

 

Sunday, 5 June 2011

Men getting all bendy.

 
This is a guest post by  James Fox, the founder of Prison Yoga.

There are currently 7.3 million Americans under correctional supervision in the criminal justice system, 2.25 million warehoused in U.S. prisons. Prisons are located away from where the rest of us live, usually not where we can see them. Yes, out of sight, out of mind. We’re out of touch with the fact that huge numbers of us are behind bars. Usually it’s just families who care…and the remote locations of most prisons make it harder on families to reunite.
 
The U.S. criminal justice system is fundamentally about punishment. It’s retributive justice. Do the crime, do the time. Prisoners aren’t made to come face to face with their crimes, to take responsibility for damage they’ve done to their victims or themselves. On average it costs $29,000 a year to imprison an adult, $45,000 in New York, more in California. Yet prisoners are released with little rehabilitative improvement, social or life skills. It’s no wonder 67% of them re-offend in California (60% US average). We have to ask ourselves, after release, what kind of person do we want coming back into our communities? At the grocery store. In a restaurant. At the park?

We believe in restorative justice. Prison Yoga Project provides a cost-effective method of improving prisoner health and behavior. We believe in addressing the damage done and providing tools for self rehabilitation. We’ve helped hundreds of prisoners by instilling self-control and fostering accountability. While they’re ‘doing the time,’ we focus on violence prevention, impulse control, mood disorders, depression, despair, addiction and PTSD. Prisons are dumping grounds for people afflicted with trauma and addictions.
The need for yoga and mindfulness training in prisons is critical. There is an ever-growing and unmet demand for programs and the teachers who run them. These volunteers need special training to effectively deal with at-risk populations. And there are so many prisons we haven’t yet reached. At San Quentin alone there are waiting lists to enter the current program. As you can see from the prisoners’ own letters, one of the most important things this program does is to put free books into their hands. This takes money. And this says nothing about the need for office and other support and supplies. The list is long.

Thanks for believing, as we do, in the healing power of yoga and the worthiness of all human beings to receive this healing. We appreciate your support. If you need further information or wish to arrange a program in your community, please contact me directly at james@prisonyoga.com.

~ James Fox MA, Founder and Director, Prison Yoga Project
You must be the change you want to see in the world. ~ Mohandas Gandhi