In the last 20 years, the related phenomena of honour-based violence and forced marriages have received increasing attention at the international and European level. Punitive responses towards this type of violence have been adopted, including ad hoc criminalisation and legislation containing direct references to the concepts of honour, culture, and tradition. However, criminal law-based responses present several shortcomings and have often disregarded the specific needs that victims of such crimes might encounter. This book examines the possibility of using alternative programmes to address cases of honour-based violence and forced marriages. After reviewing previous existing literature, it presents new empirical data. Introducing a case study from the United Kingdom, the book recalls the debate on Sharia Councils and the Muslim Arbitration Tribunal, but examines instead other community-based secular programmes. By comparison, a study from Norway on the work of the National Mediation Agency and the so-called Cross-Cultural Transformative Mediation model is investigated as part of a larger multi-agency approach. Ultimately, in an attempt to reconcile pluralism and the rule of law, the book proposes effective ways to tackle honour crimes based on cooperation and individualisation of the proceedings, and capable of improving women’s access to justice and reducing secondary victimisation.
The book will be essential reading for researchers and academics in Law, Criminology, Sociology, and Anthropology and for policy-makers and practitioners working with honour-based violence cases.
Author(s): Clara Rigoni
Series: Law, Crime and Culture
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 284
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Part I Theoretical and Conceptual Framework
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Honour-Based Violence and Forced Marriages
Chapter 3 The Accommodation of Normative Plurality within European Legal Systems
Chapter 4 The Accommodation of Normative Plurality through Extra-Legal Instruments: Alternative Dispute Resolution Mechanisms and Restorative Justice
Part II Case Studies
Chapter 5 Methodology
Chapter 6 The United Kingdom
Chapter 7 Norway
Part III Findings and Conclusions
Chapter 8 Comparative Overview of the Findings
Chapter 9 Discussion of Findings and Conclusions
Index