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Counter piracy programming and potential barriers to reintegrating Somali pirates: An African restorative justice critique
International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice ( IF 1.250 ) Pub Date : 2019-07-20 , DOI: 10.1016/j.ijlcj.2019.07.002
Brittany V. Gilmer , Britanee E. Kane

Since 2009, more than 300 Somali pirates have been prosecuted and imprisoned in East Africa using the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime “regional model for prosecuting pirates”. The vast majority of these piracy prisoners have been repatriated to Somalia and are slated to complete their sentences and return home within the next five years. However, members of Somalia's coastal communities continue to express anger and resentment towards former pirates—raising questions about the feasibility of reintegration. Drawing from African Criminology literature, this paper seeks to unpack how previous counter piracy programming helped foster an anti-piracy environment that also may have inadvertently created barriers to the eventual reintegration of former pirates. In doing so, we locate points of intervention and theorize how themes from African restorative justice can help decolonize counter piracy programming and inform a more Somali-driven approach to achieving justice for victims of piracy.



中文翻译:

打击海盗活动方案和使索马里海盗重新融入社会的潜在障碍:非洲恢复性司法评论

自2009年以来,在东非,有300多名索马里海盗被联合国毒品和犯罪问题办公室“起诉海盗的区域模式”起诉和监禁。这些海盗囚犯中的绝大多数已被遣返索马里,并计划在未来五年内完成刑期并返回家园。但是,索马里沿海社区成员继续对前海盗表示愤怒和不满,从而对重新融合的可行性提出了疑问。本文从非洲犯罪学文献中汲取灵感,力图揭示以前的反盗版计划如何帮助营造一个反盗版环境,这也可能无意中为最终的前海盗重新融入社会创造了障碍。在这样做,

更新日期:2019-07-20
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