The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders

This is a Master of Social Work thesis looking at the use of restorative justice with Aboriginal offenders. The individual offenders have been diverted from sentences of incarceration to community based conditional sentences. The current literature on the sentencing of Aboriginal offenders indicate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Parris, Diane
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3813
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-3813
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-38132014-03-29T03:42:51Z The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders Parris, Diane This is a Master of Social Work thesis looking at the use of restorative justice with Aboriginal offenders. The individual offenders have been diverted from sentences of incarceration to community based conditional sentences. The current literature on the sentencing of Aboriginal offenders indicates that Aboriginal Canadians are 8.5 times more likely than non-Aboriginal offenders to receive terms of incarceration (Daubney, 2002, p.38). In response to this, the federal government enacted Bill C-41 in 1996. This Bill introduced two pieces of "special considerations" legislation, section 718.2 and section 742.1 into the Criminal Code. This legislation was intended to address the over use of incarceration, the unique circumstances of Aboriginal offenders and to introduce a diversion sentencing option of conditional sentencing. This thesis research is a case study analysis of ten Aboriginal offenders serving conditional sentences in the community. Readers will find that the findings present how participants felt about their different levels of 'connectedness' or distance from their Aboriginal heritage. Participants shared their thoughts on whether or not they felt that their heritage should have been considered during their sentencing process. Readers will listen to participants' stories of their sentencing process and as they described their conditional sentences, how they felt about serving their sentence in the community, and how they felt about their conditional sentence in comparison to terms of incarceration. The findings then allow the reader to hear how participants' felt about the principles of restorative justice. Participants also described their feelings about 'repairing the harm' and making restitution, reparation, and rehabilitation. Discussion surrounding the participants' descriptions, perceptions, thoughts and feelings are connected to the literature in regards to the use of conditional sentencing and the use of restorative justice principles in repairing the harm. Recommendations are given for further study, and services to better address the overrepresentation of Aboriginal offenders. 2009-12-09T16:46:00Z 2009-12-09T16:46:00Z 2006-08-01-01:09T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3813 en_US The reproduction of this thesis has been made available by authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research, and may only be reproduced and copied as permitted by copyright laws or with express written authorization from the copyright owner.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description This is a Master of Social Work thesis looking at the use of restorative justice with Aboriginal offenders. The individual offenders have been diverted from sentences of incarceration to community based conditional sentences. The current literature on the sentencing of Aboriginal offenders indicates that Aboriginal Canadians are 8.5 times more likely than non-Aboriginal offenders to receive terms of incarceration (Daubney, 2002, p.38). In response to this, the federal government enacted Bill C-41 in 1996. This Bill introduced two pieces of "special considerations" legislation, section 718.2 and section 742.1 into the Criminal Code. This legislation was intended to address the over use of incarceration, the unique circumstances of Aboriginal offenders and to introduce a diversion sentencing option of conditional sentencing. This thesis research is a case study analysis of ten Aboriginal offenders serving conditional sentences in the community. Readers will find that the findings present how participants felt about their different levels of 'connectedness' or distance from their Aboriginal heritage. Participants shared their thoughts on whether or not they felt that their heritage should have been considered during their sentencing process. Readers will listen to participants' stories of their sentencing process and as they described their conditional sentences, how they felt about serving their sentence in the community, and how they felt about their conditional sentence in comparison to terms of incarceration. The findings then allow the reader to hear how participants' felt about the principles of restorative justice. Participants also described their feelings about 'repairing the harm' and making restitution, reparation, and rehabilitation. Discussion surrounding the participants' descriptions, perceptions, thoughts and feelings are connected to the literature in regards to the use of conditional sentencing and the use of restorative justice principles in repairing the harm. Recommendations are given for further study, and services to better address the overrepresentation of Aboriginal offenders.
author Parris, Diane
spellingShingle Parris, Diane
The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
author_facet Parris, Diane
author_sort Parris, Diane
title The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
title_short The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
title_full The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
title_fullStr The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
title_full_unstemmed The use of conditional sentencing in Manitoba : a snapshot of ten Aboriginal offenders
title_sort use of conditional sentencing in manitoba : a snapshot of ten aboriginal offenders
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/3813
work_keys_str_mv AT parrisdiane theuseofconditionalsentencinginmanitobaasnapshotoftenaboriginaloffenders
AT parrisdiane useofconditionalsentencinginmanitobaasnapshotoftenaboriginaloffenders
_version_ 1716658056727625728