Restorative justice is a judicial approach focusing on the needs of victims and criminals rather than meeting legal rules and needs.
Illegal acts of illegal acts / illegal acts of retaliatory justice restorative justice are targeted to the authorities and they violate laws or policies.
Illegal acts / illegal actions are defined as actions against victims and local communities that violate the trust of people and communities.
Accountability is the same as pain. They are accountable if they are suffering enough (ie banishment or pause).
Definition of accountability is responsible for action and repairs damages caused by these actions. Success depends on how much rewards are realized
Violations are defined by cheating / crime. Victims are defined as material and psychological losses
Criminal definition is the ability to take responsibility for their behavior and change behavior. Victims are the ability to participate in the recovery of the process of loss and healing.
Bad behavior / crime is a result of situations that have personal and social levels, leading to personal choice and behavior.
The main way used by the rebel judicial government to cope with criminal offenses is legal retaliation. The retaliatory judicial tradition rooted in moral and utilitarian inference requires accountability for criminal misconduct through indictment and punishment. According to the theory of retaliatory justice, when a criminal commits a crime against another, they destroy basic moral and legal equality among people. In order to restore the broken relationship between the victim and the victim and restore their moral equality, the criminals are reduced by public denunciation and the victims must restore their previous moral status It will not. Retaliation is the process of recovering this basic equality. Therefore, if a country does not prosecute criminals, it will escape punishment and destroy the moral foundation of political society.
It is important to understand that the US criminal justice system is functioning under the retaliatory judicial system in order to understand the differences in the methods brought by restorative judicial system. Retaliatory justice is based on the concept of punishment and the theory behind it is the ability to punish people who believe the state is the ultimate victim of crime and therefore believe to be a criminal. This type of judicial trial is one of the foundations for severely punishing drug-related crime and other 'innocent crimes'. Under the theory of retaliatory justice, the country is positioned as a victim
The most important way in restorative criminal justice is the result of a process different from retaliatory and rehabilitation justice. Retaliable justice often saves criminals from confessing and repaying victims and communities. By contrast, restorative justice corrects mistakes made and attempts to repair damages suffered by victims, criminals and communities. But when demanding public safety to be imprisoned, it should be part of a resolution. Examples of the results of restorative trials include compensation, community service, victims - criminal reconciliation and so on.