“…In Chile, the movement for Judicial Reforms that has spread in South America 13 since the 1990s, meant that the new adversarial system was the ‘fresh air’ that put an end to centuries of the inquisitorial system. This contrasts with the situation experienced in the United States and other European countries where RJ emerged as a critique to an adversarial system that had been operating for decades (if not centuries) (Díaz Gude, 2010), and had entered into a crisis of legitimacy and/or effectiveness (Crawford, 2000: 44; Shapland, 2011: 454–456; Zehr, 1990: 94), or a ‘general dissatisfaction’ with the system (Braithwaite, 1999; Pavlich, 2005, cited in Hayes et al, 2014: 111). Since RJ posits a fundamental critique to adversarial justice, one could hypothesize that its ideological message would be weaker in countries undergoing justice changes such as Chile (Díaz Gude, 2010: 61).…”