What is at stake in restorative justice for juvenile?
I. Principles of restorative justice
1. Restorative justice. variations on a theme
2. Restorative justice : a question of legitimacy
3. Victim / offender conferencing : the need for safeguards
4. Some principled objections to a restorative justice approach to working with juvenile offenders
5. The nature of responsibility and restorative justice
6. The importance of shame to restorative justice
7. An ethical and social interpretation of crime through the concepts 'linkedness' and 'integration - disintegration'. application to restorative justice
II. Restorative justice in formal settings
8. Mediation and community service in the juvenile justice legislation in Europe
9. Restorative justice and the scottish children's justice system
10. Italian experiences of victim - offender mediation in the juvenile justice system
11. Mediation and community service within the Belgian law on juvenile protection
12. Restorative justice trajectory in Quebec
13. Victim - offender mediation in Sweden
14. The development of victim / offender mediaton in the German juvenile justice system
III. Restoratice justice in practice
15. Restorative justice in native communities in Canada
16. A case study of restorative justice : the vermont reparative probation program
17. Criminal conflicts involving minors : problems and perspective of victim - offender mediation
18. The recidivism rate of community service as a restorative judicial sanction in comparison with the traditional juvenile justice measures
19. Critical assessment of community service and mediation for juvenile offenders in brussels
20. The juvenile mediatoin project in Leuven
Conclusion
1. Some reflections on the paradigm of restorative justice and its viability for juvenile justice
Addendum
1. Declaration of Leuven 'on the advisability of promoting the restorative approach to juvenile crime'