Restorative Justice

Duane Ruth-Heffelbower

Editor's Links for Restorative Justice



Duane Ruth-Heffelbower
Duane Ruth-Heffelbower
Duane Ruth-Heffelbower practiced law before becoming a Mennonite pastor, and later a member of the graduate faculty at Fresno Pacific University, where he is currently Director of Training and Services for the Center for Peacemaking and Conflict Studies. Duane is Webmaster for Victim Offender Mediation Association, an Advanced Practitioner member of the Association for Conflict Resolution, a member of the American Society of Victimology, and Administrator of Victim Offender Reconciliation Program of the Central Valley, Inc., founded in 1982.

Restorative Justice is more a way of looking at justice than it is a progam or a set of practices. Who should decide what justice is in a particular case? Should it be a prosecutor who never met the victim or offender? Should it be a judge who only knows what the prosecutor and defense attorney decide to tell? Should the victim have anything to say about it? Restorative Justice principles say that the victim and offender should have central roles in determining what justice is, and that if the victim's needs aren't addressed, there is no justice.

Many different practices have grown up around this simple idea, notably victim offender dialogue as a way for deciding how to make things right. There is no perfectly restorative practice. All we can do is look at our search for justice and ask how it can be more restorative. Any method that gives victims a voice is probably more restorative. Any method that invites offenders to voluntarily accept responsibility for what they have done is probably more restorative. The search for restorative practices is what brings all the writings in this section together.

You will find a very few basic types in these writings, and most writings about practices will speak of victim offender dialogue. Where you see actual quantitative research Mark Umbreit's name won't be far away. Where you see the beginnings of modern restorative justice mentioned, Howard Zehr's name will be nearby. Where "making things right" or "the peacemaking model" is intoned, Ron Claassen will be noted.

Three basic models of community justice or family group conference have been tried: Wagga Wagga (Australia) where a police officer facilitates the meeting, the New Zealand model where a social worker leads, and the Fresno model where a trained community volunteer guides the process. Your editor currently leads the Fresno program. Ted Wachtel has marketed the Wagga Wagga model as RealJustice and has created a movement under that banner, with research support provided by Paul McCold. The New Zealand model, which has the most substantial track record, has not been marketed.

Several indigenous peoples groups have recognized their traditional practices as falling within the rather large Restorative Justice tent. You will find them in the Yukon, Arizona and a few other places.

Restorative Justice is a worldwide movement. When trying to grasp it you will come across this Website and several others which, when taken together, are comprehensive. For a quick peek at everything see CRInfo.org, euforumrj.org, restorativejustice.org, voma.org, restorativejusticeproject.org, and restorativepractices.org. It is a rare piece of importance which won't be noted on one of these sites. Association for Conflict Resolution (acrnet.org) has a restorative and criminal justice section, and Victim Offender Mediation Association (voma.org) is an international membership organization devoted to victim offender dialogue. Other regional groups have members and programs.

The field has passed beyond anyone's ability to be completely current. You can watch it develop here.

 
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