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Just Law

We all want to feel safe and secure in our communities and as we go about our lives. But most of us feel vulnerable to crime in its many manifestations: theft, violence assault, fraud, hate crimes and abuse. Christians have a tradition of bringing our theological heritage into dialogue with politics on a variety of issues: what kinds of sentences to mete out to wrong-doers; how those sent to prison should be treated; how those who have paid the price for their wrongdoing should be welcomed back into society. But the questions are ongoing: what might the theological concepts of ‘justice’ and ‘mercy’ have to say in our current social context? Who are the vulnerable and the weak? When perpetrators of crime are victims of other kinds of injustice, does that make a difference to our perspective on how they should be treated?

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Useful links and contact details for organisations working in Criminal Justice
Posted in Just Law on 30th June 2006
 
Sharing Broken Lives : Crime and the Community: Who Cares?
Posted in Just Law on 9th June 2006
We all know that crime is a fact of life in every community but how can or should we respond as a society, as individuals and as people of faith living within specific communities?
Sharing Broken Lives : Crime and the Community: Who Cares?
Offenders in the church
Posted in Just Law on 7th April 2006
Advice on offenders in church life, Criminal Records Bureau checks, reporting offences and the management of risk.
 
The Inclusion of Ex Offenders within the Christian Community
Posted in Just Law on 7th April 2006
A guidance paper by the Criminal Justice Issues Group of the Diocese of Oxford
 
  Conference on Crime and the Community
Posted in Just Law on 24th January 2006
Saturday 13 May, 10am-4pm, West Oxford Community Centre, Botley Road, Oxford
 
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