Indigenous Courts, Self-Determination and Criminal Justice

£34.99

Indigenous Courts, Self-Determination and Criminal Justice

Anthropology Crime and criminology Comparative law Legal aspects of criminology International law Criminal justice law Social law and Medical law

Author: Valmaine Toki

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Collection: Indigenous Peoples and the Law

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 9 April 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 973 Kb

ISBN: 9781351239608


Introduction

In New Zealand, as well as in Australia, Canada and other comparable jurisdictions, Indigenous peoples comprise a significantly disproportionate percentage of the prison population. For example, Maori, who comprise 15% of New Zealand’s population, make up 50% of its prisoners. For Maori women, the figure is 60%. These statistics have, moreover, remained more or less the same for at least the past thirty years.

Focus of the Book

With New Zealand as its focus, this book explores how the fact that Indigenous peoples are more likely than any other ethnic group to be apprehended, arrested, prosecuted, convicted and incarcerated, might be alleviated. Taking seriously the rights to culture and to self-determination contained in the Treaty of Waitangi, in many comparable jurisdictions (including Australia, Canada, the United States of America), and also in the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the book makes the case for an Indigenous court founded on Indigenous conceptions of proper conduct, punishment, and behavior.

Proposed Solutions

More specifically, the book draws on contemporary notions of ‘therapeutic jurisprudence’ and ‘restorative justice’ in order to argue that such a court would offer an effective way to ameliorate the disproportionate incarceration of Indigenous peoples.

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