TY - JOUR
T1 - The Transformative Potential of Restorative Justice
T2 - What the Mainstream Can Learn from the Margins
AU - Rossner, Meredith
AU - Taylor, Helen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2024 by the author(s).
PY - 2024/1/26
Y1 - 2024/1/26
N2 - Restorative justice is an idea and a practice that has had a significant impact on criminology over the past four decades and has proliferated throughout the criminal justice system. Yet from the beginning of this movement, there have been worries that the mainstreaming of restorative justice will lead to its dilution, or even corruption, and undermine its transformative potential. Developing alongside the growing institutionalization of restorative justice has been a transformative justice movement that has arisen from larger movements for racial and gender justice, drawing on similar foundational values to restorative justice. This review interrogates the relationship between restorative and transformative justice by examining a flourishing of ideas and experiments at the margins of the restorative justice movement in three key areas—responses to racial injustice, sexual violence, and environmental harm—and finds that restorative justice has the capacity to work at multiple levels to respond to harm, transform relationships, and prevent future injustices.
AB - Restorative justice is an idea and a practice that has had a significant impact on criminology over the past four decades and has proliferated throughout the criminal justice system. Yet from the beginning of this movement, there have been worries that the mainstreaming of restorative justice will lead to its dilution, or even corruption, and undermine its transformative potential. Developing alongside the growing institutionalization of restorative justice has been a transformative justice movement that has arisen from larger movements for racial and gender justice, drawing on similar foundational values to restorative justice. This review interrogates the relationship between restorative and transformative justice by examining a flourishing of ideas and experiments at the margins of the restorative justice movement in three key areas—responses to racial injustice, sexual violence, and environmental harm—and finds that restorative justice has the capacity to work at multiple levels to respond to harm, transform relationships, and prevent future injustices.
KW - freedom
KW - relational justice
KW - restorative justice
KW - transformative justice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85183998081&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1146/annurev-criminol-030421-040921
DO - 10.1146/annurev-criminol-030421-040921
M3 - Review article
SN - 2572-4568
VL - 7
SP - 357
EP - 381
JO - Annual Review of Criminology
JF - Annual Review of Criminology
ER -