Adverse peer pressure is a long‐established contributing factor in the explanation for youth crime. There is also some evidence that positive peer influence is capable of having the opposite effect. In the US, efforts are made to exploit this process in ‘teen courts’, a voluntary alternative to the traditional criminal justice system for younger offenders charged with less serious offences. The aim is to divert them from further involvement in offending. An adapted version of this model is being piloted in Preston, Lancashire, in restorative peer panels. Restorative justice is at the heart of this diversionary initiative for young people at risk of offending. This article, written by members of the evaluation team for the peer panel project, considers the principles, practice and impact of teen courts, and offers some thoughts on implications from the Lancashire pilot.
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22 July 2009
Review Article|
July 22 2009
Peer panels: an innovative approach to restorative justice? Available to Purchase
Laura Heywood;
Laura Heywood
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Graham Smyth
Graham Smyth
Manchester Metropolitan University
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8774
Print ISSN: 1757-8043
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2009
Safer Communities (2009) 8 (3): 39–47.
Citation
Heywood L, Smyth G (2009), "Peer panels: an innovative approach to restorative justice?". Safer Communities, Vol. 8 No. 3 pp. 39–47, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/17578043200900028
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