Mediation in Criminal Misdemeanor Cases

Diversion of criminal misdemeanors to mediation by district attorneys has been practiced since the 1970s, but research on its impact on critical outcomes like recidivism is scant and outdated. This quasi-experimental study compares 78 mediated cases from a county that diverts cases to mediation with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Criminology, criminal justice, law & society criminal justice, law & society, 2021-12, Vol.22 (3), p.14-29
Hauptverfasser: Charkoudian, Lorig, Walter, Jamie, Harmon-Darrow, Caroline, Bernstein, Justin
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container_title Criminology, criminal justice, law & society
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creator Charkoudian, Lorig
Walter, Jamie
Harmon-Darrow, Caroline
Bernstein, Justin
description Diversion of criminal misdemeanors to mediation by district attorneys has been practiced since the 1970s, but research on its impact on critical outcomes like recidivism is scant and outdated. This quasi-experimental study compares 78 mediated cases from a county that diverts cases to mediation with 128 cases in a similar neighboring county that does not, using phone surveys and case review to ask whether recidivism in mediated cases differs from cases prosecuted or treated as usual over the subsequent year. Controlling for case factors and attitudes toward conflict, a case that is not mediated was five times more likely to result in judicial action, five times more likely to result in jury trial demand, and ten times more likely to result in supervised probation or jail time, and mediated cases were almost five times less likely to return to criminal court in the subsequent year than those that were not mediated.
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subjects Acquittals & mistrials
Conflict resolution
Criminalization
Imprisonment
Mediation
Mediators
Neighborhoods
Recidivism
Restorative justice
Trials
Violence
Volunteers
title Mediation in Criminal Misdemeanor Cases
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