Article
Spanish
ID: <
oai:doaj.org/article:c2327de9b7024b9ba41ca74130b7e254>
·
DOI: <
10.24215/25916386e030>
Abstract
En This work will first examine the origins and development of new collisions that, in our view, constitute an epistemological break in the way “criminal matter” and criminology (s) are conceived. We will refer to the concept of social harm, to emerging science aimed at quantifying and dimensioning this harm (Zemiology), and to problems that have been raised by prominent authors, with regard to its limits or dangers in relation to the fact that, by taking new harmful behaviour, the scope of punitive penalties could be widened. In view of this, it will be considered that the restaurative paradigm has a central role to play in responding to this type of behaviour, putting victims at the centre, and the vital need for reparation.