How do survivors find healing? Chum Mey, a survivor of the Khmer Rouge regime, walks past a portrait of Nuon Chea, a former Khmer Rouge leader.
AP Photo/Heng Sinith
The accounts of survivors of Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge show how they were able to find justice and healing by breaking their silence and speaking on behalf of those who were killed.
Six memorial candles are lit during a Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony at Sharkey Theater on board Naval Station Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class James E. Foehl
Remembrance days and memorials provide people the opportunity to share stories with a community. An expert explains how that can make a difference.
Australian governments have too often succumbed to perceived community pressure to limit parole authorities’ independence and powers.
AAP/Samantha Manchee
Government and judicial interventions into the decisions of parole boards display a progressive loss of faith in these independent bodies.
Lucy Francineth Granados, a Montréal community organizer advocating for the rights of undocumented workers was forcibly and violently arrested at her home by the Canadian Border Security Agency on March 20, 2018. Community protests like this one on March 23 sprang up all over the city.
(Ion Extebarria)
What kind of a country is Canada? One which truly welcomes and respects immigrants and their lives and safety? Or one which just says it does but brutally detains and deports them?
George Pell emerges from court during his committal hearing on historical sexual offences.
AAP/Stefan Postles
George Pell’s current committal hearing engages the principle of ‘open justice’ and some of its most important exceptions.
The detail of the government’s reforms remains elusive four months after commissioners Margaret White and Mick Gooda handed down their final report.
AAP
Implementing the Don Dale royal commission’s recommendations will test the capacity to redress the ‘systemic and shocking failures’ it identified.
In a 2016 ABS survey, one in two women reported having experienced sexual harassment, but 90% of them did not contact the police.
Cindy Zhi/The Conversation NY-BD-CC
Critics say that #MeToo has turned the legal principle of innocent until proven guilty on its head, but such comments privilege the rights of perpetrators over justice for victims.
Colten Boushie’s uncle Alvin Baptiste raises an eagle’s wing as demonstrators gather outside of the courthouse in North Battleford, Sask., on Saturday, Feb. 10, 2018.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Matt Smith
In the acquittal of Gerald Stanley we must remember how one-sided systematic remembering in Canada has been. We must remember how Canadian-state law created the myth of the homesteader as Wheat King.
Shutterstock
A succession of leaders have failed to address problems in England and Wales.
Speaking with: Professor David Field about unusual crimes that have changed the law
CC BY-ND 27.2 MB (download)
Sleepwalking murders and 'battered wife' syndrome are unique precedents set by extraordinary cases. David Field talks about unusual cases that have shaped Australian law.
Special Counsel Robert Mueller.
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File
America’s understanding of justice may be compromised, which is a more fundamental issue than enforcing the law.
A royal commission has recommended that the Don Dale detention centre be closed.
Neda Vanovac/AAP
The Don Dale royal commission’s capacity to make lasting change lies with the government implementing its recommendations.
Plans for an industrial school in Feltham, England.
Charles William Sheeres, Banks and Barry via Wellcome Images
The reconviction rates of children put in institutions was lower than it is today, new research shows.
This sculpture in London commemorates Nelson Mandela, who set up the African National Congress’ armed wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), in 1961 when he lost hope that passive and non-violent resistance to the apartheid government would bear fruit.
(Creative Commons)
Seeking justice, not peace, in our world changes the conversation about conflict. Conflict has proven integral to achieving a more equitable and secure society.
Under UK law, children’s anonimity is not entirely guaranteed.
271 EAK MOTO/Shutterstock
A loophole robs children of their right to privacy, exposing them to long-term consequences.
Rainer Fuhrmann/Shutterstock.com
Humans aren’t alone in wanting to take revenge – some animals like to get their own back too.
Young people are experiencing patterns of oppressive policing that are harmful to them, their families and the community.
AAP/Dan Himbrechts
Children as young as ten have been targeted for intensive policing under the NSW Police’s secretive Suspect Targeting Management Plan.
Victoria’s Sentencing Advisory Council has recommended increasing the judicial monitoring of family violence offenders.
AAP/Darren England
The enthusiasm around swift, certain and fair approaches to sentencing offenders may not be backed by evidence.
For all offences in the higher courts, the proportion of Victorians sent to prison is actually higher than the national average.
AAP/Paul Miller
An overriding focus on increasing sentences may not necessarily be the best means of redressing the harm caused by sex offences.
In sentencing, judges usually consider and balance four main purposes of punishment.
AAP/Darren England
In historic cases the potential for a sentence to rehabilitate, incapacitate or deter the offender is largely insignificant – leaving the focus solely on retribution.