

Working Definition of Community Justice
Community justice is a strategic method of crime reduction and prevention,
which builds or enhances partnerships within communities. Community justice policies
confront crime and delinquency through proactive, problem-solving practices aimed at
prevention, control, reduction and reparation of the harm crime has caused. The goal is to
create and maintain vital, healthy, safe and just communities and improve the quality of
life for all citizens.
Position Statement
APPA believes that, at times, traditional criminal and juvenile justice
policies and practices have not been able to attain genuine peace and safety and may have
alienated and ignored citizens and victims. Community justice principles of crime
prevention plus victim and community reparation offer greater hope of securing genuine
peace and justice and of gaining community satisfaction with its justice system.
APPA therefore resolves that the principles of community
justice will guide the work of the organization in keeping with its proclaimed motto of
"Community Justice and Safety for All." The vision of APPA is a community
justice vision. This vision will guide the organization in promoting adult and juvenile
probation and parole policies and practices that are grounded in community justice
principles and values.
Principles of Community Justice
The community is the nexus of community justice; therefore, each individual
community must ultimately define the concept and practice of community justice. The work
must nonetheless remain true to an ideal as expressed by the following guiding principles:
- The
community, including individual victims and offenders, is the ultimate customer, as well
as partner of the justice system.
- Partnerships
for action, among justice components and citizens, strive for community safety and well
being.
- The
community is the preferred source of problem solving and citizens work to prevent
victimization, provide conflict resolution and maintain peace.
- Crime
is confronted by addressing social disorder, criminal activities and behavior, and by
holding offenders accountable for the harm they cause to victims and the community.
Core Values
The justice system benefits the community by:
- striving
to repair the harm caused by crime to individual victims and communities;
- working
to prevent crime and its harmful effects;
- doing
justice by addressing problems rather than merely processing cases; and
- promoting
community protection through proactive, problem-solving work practices plus interventions
aimed at changing criminal behavior.
These efforts help to create and maintain vital,
healthy, safe and just communities where crime cannot flourish.
The Relationship Between Community Justice and
Restorative Justice
Community justice and restorative justice often are used as synonymous terms. While
the terms are complementary, they are not interchangeable. Community justice is a
strategic method to control and reduce crime and therefore impacts the system in which we
work. Restorative justice is a process of responding to criminal acts and impacts how we
do our work. In other words, community justice seeks to transform the justice system to
one that is inclusive and works in partnership with the community in order to impact the
community environment. Restorative justice practices promote healing, reparation
and reconciliation of all parties harmed by criminal acts. The desired results are
peaceful, harmonious and just relationships among individual victims, offenders and
their communities. Positive human relationships contribute to a positive community
environment. Restorative justice is therefore crucial to the success of a community
justice strategy.
Community Justice Strategy
A comprehensive community justice strategy:
- includes
restorative justice practices and processes;
- includes
both adult and juvenile offenders;
- focuses
on creating safer communities rather than on doing things to or for
offenders;
- pursues
the goal of pubic safety within a scope of preventing victimization;
- places
a high priority on the rights and needs of victims and the community;
- seeks
harmonious working relations among all justice components and practices, citizens,
community and social service organizations, educational systems, and faith communities;
- focuses
on problems causing as well as caused by crime; and
- promotes
correctional programming that is based on sound research and measurable for effectiveness.
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