探索受害者与犯罪者之间的调解实践:继续还是挽回?加纳案例

Peter Apuko Awuni, Nana Ama Agyapong
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摘要

以国家为中心的观点以刑事法学为基础,认为犯罪的主要当事方是国家而不是受害者。受害者-犯罪者调解(VOM),又称恢复性司法或变革性司法,旨在友好地解决一些刑事犯罪。在严格的刑事司法系统中,国家似乎无视受害者的需求、恢复、利益、恐惧和愿望,以其认为合适的方式进行起诉来解决争端。结果有时会让受害者、罪犯、家庭和公众感到不满意。本文从全球和加纳的角度对暴力侵害妇女行为进行了理论和历史研究。尽管存在一些小的困难,但本文指出,暴力侵害妇女行为已被世界上许多国家所接受,因为它的益处远远大于弊端。此外,报告还指出,加纳的司法系统支持使用 VOM。特别是 1993 年《法院法》、2010 年《非诉讼纠纷解决法》和 2010 年《与法院相关的非诉讼纠纷解决实务手册》都呼吁鼓励、促进和推动对不构成重罪和不属于严重犯罪的犯罪行为进行友好解决。在加纳,暴力侵害妇女行为的做法不仅帮助受害者获得了恢复性司法和情感治愈,改善了穷人和弱势群体诉诸司法的机会,而且还有助于减轻法院的案件负担和压力,从而使司法之轮缓慢转动。因此,在加纳,与其消除暴力侵害妇女行为,不如努力加强暴力侵害妇女行为并使之制度化。
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Exploring the Practice of Victim-Offender Mediation, to Proceed or Retrieve: The Case of Ghana
In contrast to the State-centred perspective, which is based on criminal jurisprudence and holds that crime is committed against the State  rather than the victim, the primary party. Victim-Offender Mediation (VOM), also known as restorative justice or transformative  justice, aims to resolve some criminal offenses amicably. It appears the State is ignoring the victim's needs, restoration, interests, fears,  and desires in order to proceed with the prosecution as it sees fit to settle its disputes in the strict criminal justice system. Outcomes  sometimes appears unsatisfactory to victims, offenders, families, and the public. The paper conducts a theoretical and historical  examination of VOM from a global as well as a Ghanaian viewpoint. Despite a few minor difficulties, it notes that VOM has been embraced by many states all over the world because the benefits far outweigh the drawbacks. Additionally, it has been noted that  Ghana's judicial system supports the use of VOM. In particular, the Courts Act, 1993, the Alternative Dispute Resolution Act, 2010, and the  Court- Connected ADR Practice Manual, 2010 call for the encouragement, promotion, and facilitation of amicable settlements of offenses  that do not amount to felonies and do not qualify as serious offenses. The practice of VOM in Ghana has not only helped victims receive  restorative justice and emotional healing, improving access to justice for the poor and vulnerable, but has also contributed to reducing  the load and pressure of cases placed on the courts, which causes the wheel of justice to turn grind slowly. As a result, rather than  eliminating VOM in Ghana, efforts must be made to strengthen and institutionalize it.  
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