I just read this story on the ABC and thought it makes a really good case for why restorative justice may be preferable to the criminal justice system in nearly every respect: healing for victims, accountability for perpetrators and a system that potentially works rather than allowing many cases to fall through the cracks thanks to technicalities or the burden of proof: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-08-14/ ... /104212862
When a victim-survivor of sexual assault enters the criminal justice system, they expect it to deliver them a sense of justice, an apology or some acknowledgement, says Ms Handsaker, who is also the practice lead at restorative justice service Open Circle, at RMIT's Centre for Innovative Justice.
"Actually, what [the system] does is just pit people against each other and re-traumatise [victim-survivors] and ask them to defend their story over and over again," Ms Handsaker says.
"Your story gets taken from you … You're powerless. You're not in a position of being able to consent to what happens next.
"It replicates the conditions of the original assault."
[...]
In instances of sexual assault, the needs of a victim-survivor might include being able to tell their story in their own words or having their experience validated.
Or the need might relate to accountability; for someone to demonstrate they've understood the impacts of their harm.
Another need regularly expressed by victim-survivors is prevention; they want to ensure that the harm they experienced doesn't happen to anyone else.
Ms Handsaker argues these needs typically "won't be met through a criminal justice response".