Anonymising Restorative-Justice Case Files – UK GDPR-compliant anonymisation per UK GDPR Art. 10
Restorative-justice case files record the offender's criminal background, victim impact statements, conference preparation notes, and outcome agreements — combining criminal-conviction data under UK GDPR Art. 10 with sensitive personal narratives from both offender and victim. anonym.legal pseudonymises all personal identifiers, enabling restorative-justice practitioners and training bodies to review case quality without retaining unnecessary personal data.
When this applies
This task applies when restorative-justice case files or conference records are reviewed by quality-assurance assessors, training supervisors, or researchers studying restorative-justice outcomes, and those reviewers require the case content but not the personal identifiers of the offender, victim, or support persons.
How anonym.legal handles it
- Upload the restorative-justice case file — including referral documents, victim impact statement, preparation notes, and outcome agreement.
- The engine identifies all named individuals: offender, victim(s), support persons, and named facilitators.
- Each individual is assigned a distinct, consistent pseudonym applied throughout the case file.
- Offence summary, impact description, outcome-agreement terms, and compliance monitoring records are preserved.
- A reversible mapping table is produced with UK data residency.
- The pseudonymised file is released for quality-assurance or research review.
What you provide
- Restorative-justice referral document
- Victim impact statement or preparation notes
- Conference record and outcome agreement
Limitations & cautions
- Victim impact statements carry special sensitivity — even pseudonymised versions should be shared only within a strictly limited quality-assurance or training cohort with appropriate data-processing agreements.
- Outcome agreements may impose obligations on named individuals; pseudonymised versions must not be used as the basis for enforcement or compliance monitoring.
FAQ
Are support persons — such as a family member accompanying the victim — also pseudonymised?
Yes. All named natural persons appearing in the case file — including support persons for both offender and victim — are detected and pseudonymised with distinct pseudonyms.
Can pseudonymised restorative-justice files be used in facilitator training programmes?
Yes. This is a primary use case. The pseudonymised file preserves the case dynamics, outcome-agreement terms, and facilitation challenges needed for training without exposing the identities of real offenders or victims.
How does pseudonymisation interact with victim-consent requirements in restorative justice?
Victim consent governs participation in the restorative-justice process itself, not the subsequent quality-assurance or training use of pseudonymised records. Ensure your organisation's data-sharing policy covers training use of pseudonymised case files.