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31 J. Quantitative Criminology 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/jquantc31 and id is 1 raw text is: J Quant Criminol (2015) 31:1 24
DOI 10.1007/s10940-014-9222-9
Are Restorative Justice Conferences Effective
in Reducing Repeat Offending? Findings
from a Campbell Systematic Review
Lawrence W. Sherman - Heather Strang - Evan Mayo-Wilson
Daniel J. Woods - Barak Ariel
Published online: 25 March 2014
© The Author(s) 2014. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com
Abstract
Objectives This paper synthesizes the effects on repeat offending reported in ten eligible
randomized trials of face-to-face restorative justice conferences (RJCs) between crime
victims, their accused or convicted offenders, and their respective kin and communities.
Methods After an exhaustive search strategy that examined 519 studies that could have
been eligible for our rigorous inclusion criteria, we found ten that did. Included studies
measured recidivism by 2 years of convictions after random assignment of 1,880 accused
or convicted offenders who had consented to meet their consenting victims prior to random
assignment, based on intention-to-treat analysis.
Results Our meta-analysis found that, on average, RJCs cause a modest but highly cost-
effective reduction in the frequency of repeat offending by the consenting offenders ran-
domly assigned to participate in such a conference. A cost-effectiveness estimate for the
seven United Kingdom experiments found a ratio of 3.7-8.1 times more benefit in cost of
crimes prevented than the cost of delivering RJCs.
Conclusion RJCs are a cost-effective means of reducing frequency of recidivism.
L. W. Sherman - H. Strang (E) - B. Ariel
Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK
e-mail: hs404@cam.ac.uk
L. W. Sherman
University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
H. Strang
Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia
E. Mayo-Wilson
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA
D. J. Woods
Police Executive Research Forum, Washington, DC, USA
B. Ariel
Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel

Springer

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