Second Panel of the Public Security and Human Rights course: A Restorative Look discusses community policing, penal transaction and conciliation, among other themes

The Second Panel of the Public Security and Human Rights course: A Restorative Look approached themes, such as: The 1988 Federal Constitution: the adequacy of equal conflict treatment to minorities; Conflict Theory Mediation; Penal Transaction and Conciliation and Community Policing and Restorative Approach. The program continues with six more weekly panels, starting on April 6th.

When opening the debates, the table coordinator, judge Rosa Maria Rodrigues Gazire Rossi, thanked the presence of all participants and emphasized: "This course is the result of a human look by magistrate Antônio Dantas. I never get tired of repeating: "This course is a reference of the Court of Justice of the State of Tocantins", she emphasized.

The first panel was presented by magistrate Umbelina Lopes Pereira, who talked about community policing and restorative approach. In the second panel, Judge André Felipe Gomma de Azevedo, from the Court of Justice of the State of Bahia, spoke about the theory of conflict, mediation, criminal transaction and conciliation on the concepts of public value applied under the perspective of the justice system and the need to create projects that encompass all groups.

In his speech, the magistrate highlighted the initial discussions of the implementation of Restorative Justice in the country. "I bring here an argument that I think is fundamental when we think of Restorative Justice. In 2005, the Ministry of Justice emphatically tried to have only one model for Brazil of Restorative Justice, and I said that it was not possible to think in only one model. They wanted to implement the non-violent communication model, but not all jurisdictions think the same way, there are people who love to sit in a circle on the floor and talk, and there are people who hate it. The circle may work for one group, but probably not for another. In other words, we, the managers, need to think about creating measurement mechanisms", he explained.

Following that, magistrate Catarina de Macedo Nogueira Lima e Correia, from the Court of Justice of the Federal District and Territories, presented the third panel: A more Restorative Public Security, followed by the last one: The Federal Constitution of 1988: the adequacy of equal conflict treatment to minorities, given by magistrate Julianne Freire Marques.

Composed of eight panels, the course takes place through Esmat's Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), with activities that promote interactivity among the students, by means of chat and access to the lectures and other tools that will help in the teaching-learning process.


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