Restorative practices explained

Restorative practices (or RP) is a social science field concerned with improving and repairing relationships and social connections among people.[1] Whereas a zero tolerance social mediation system prioritizes punishment, RP privileges the repair of harm and dialogue among actors.[2] In fact, the purpose of RP is to build healthy communities, increase social capital, decrease crime and antisocial behavior, mend harm and restore relationships.[3] It ties together research in a variety of social science fields, including education, psychology, social work, criminology, sociology, organizational development and leadership. RP has been growing in popularity since the early 2000s and varying approaches exist.[4]

Overview

The social science of restorative practices offers a common thread to tie together theory, research and practice in diverse fields such as education, counseling, criminal justice, social work and organizational management. Individuals and organizations in many fields are developing models and methodology and performing empirical research that share the same implicit premise, but are often unaware of the commonality of each other's efforts.

In education, restorative practices, such as circles and groups, provide opportunities for students to share their feelings, build relationships and solve problems, and when there is wrongdoing, to play an active role in addressing the wrong and making things right.[5] Schools that implement restorative practices (RP) have been found to provide safe school environments through building quality relationships and a supportive community.[6] Further, urban educators who carry out RP have observed a decrease in disciplinary issues and absenteeism, a heightened sense of community, as well as an increase in school safety and instructional time.[7]

For example, in criminal justice, restorative circles and restorative conferences allow victims, offenders and their respective family members and friends to come together to explore how everyone has been affected by an offense and, when possible, to decide how to repair the harm and meet their own needs.[8] In England's Criminal Justice System (CJS), prisons use RP to stimulate positive social interactions and decrease tension when situational challenges arise.[9] Introduced in the 1990s in some of Europe's CJS, RP has improved relationships between the prisons' residents and their relatives through restorative family interventions.

In social work, family group decision-making (FGDM) or family group conferencing (FGC) processes empower extended families to meet privately, without professionals in the room, to make a plan to protect children in their own families from further violence and neglect or to avoid residential placement outside their own homes.[10]

These various fields employ different terms, all of which fall under the rubric of restorative practices: In the criminal justice field the phrase used is "restorative justice";[11] in social work the term employed is "empowerment";[12] in education, talk is of "positive discipline"[13] or "the responsive classroom";[14] and in organizational leadership "horizontal management"[15] is referenced. The social science of restorative practices recognizes all of these perspectives and incorporates them into its scope.

Functions

The use of restorative practices has the potential to:

History

Restorative practices has its roots in restorative justice, a way of looking at criminal justice that emphasizes repairing the harm done to people and relationships rather than only punishing offenders.

In the modern context, restorative justice originated in the 1970s as mediation or reconciliation between victims and offenders. In Elmira, Ontario, Canada, near Kitchener, in 1974 Mark Yantzi, a probation officer, arranged for two teenagers to meet directly with their victims following a vandalism spree and agree to restitution. The positive response by the victims led to the world's first victim-offender reconciliation program, in Kitchener, with the support of the Mennonite Central Committee and collaboration with the local probation department.[17] The concept subsequently acquired various names, such as victim-offender mediation and victim-offender dialogue as it spread through North America and to Europe through the 1980s and 1990s.[18]

Restorative justice echoes ancient and indigenous practices employed in cultures all over the world, from Native American[19] [20] and First Nations[21] to African,[22] Asian,[23] Celtic, Hebrew,[24] [25] Arab and many others.

Eventually modern restorative justice broadened to include communities of care as well, with victims' and offenders' families and friends participating in collaborative processes called conferences and circles. Conferencing addresses power imbalances between the victim and offender by including additional supporters.[26] In the 2010s, federal and local governments in the US, as well as community organizations, requested schools decrease suspension rates. To provide an alternative to disciplinary measures like suspension, large urban school districts, like New York City Public Schools and the Los Angeles Unified School District, started implementing RP.[27]

A major aspect of any restorative practice is neutrality. Though restorative practice aim to resolve issues within a group, the facilitation of the resolution is supposed to remain impartial. It is, therefore, important that facilitators of any restorative practice are neutral to the situation at issue.[28] Some researchers also classify the study of restorative practice through the concept of process and values. In this framework, process refers to the specific actions taken to repair harms and/or build community. Values refer to the overarching principals that guide those actions and that differ from more traditional justice that may be punitive.[29]

Terminology

Family group conference

The family group conference (FGC) started in New Zealand in 1989 as a response to native Māori people's concerns with the number of their children being removed from their homes by the courts. It was originally envisioned as a family empowerment process, not as restorative justice.[30] In North America it was renamed family group decision making (FGDM).[31]

Restorative conferences

In 1991 the FGC was adapted by an Australian police officer, Terry O'Connell, as a community policing strategy to divert young people from court, into a restorative process often called a restorative conference. It has been called other names, such as a community accountability conference[32] and victim-offender conference.[33] In 1994 Marg Thorsborne, an Australian educator, was the first to use a restorative conference in a school.[34]

Circles

A "circle" is a versatile restorative practice that can be used proactively, to develop relationships and build community or reactively, to respond to wrongdoing, conflicts and problems. Circles give people an opportunity to speak and listen to one another in an atmosphere of safety, decorum and equality. The circle process allows people to tell their stories and offer their own perspectives.[35]

The circle has a wide variety of purposes: conflict resolution, healing, support, decision making, information exchange and relationship development. Circles offer an alternative to contemporary meeting processes that often rely on hierarchy, win-lose positioning and argument.[36]

Circles can be used in any organizational, institutional or community setting. Circle time[37] and morning meetings have been widely used in primary and elementary schools for many years and more recently in secondary schools and higher education.[38] [39] [40] In industry, the quality circle has been employed for decades to engage workers in achieving high manufacturing standards.[41] In 1992 Yukon Circuit Court Judge Barry Stewart pioneered the sentencing circle, which involved community members in helping to decide how to deal with an offender.[42] In 1994 Mennonite Pastor Harry Nigh befriended a mentally challenged repeat sex offender by forming a support group with some of his parishioners, called a circle of support and accountability, which was effective in preventing re-offending.[43]

Circles can be both proactive and reactive. Proactive circles aim to create a positive classroom or environmental climate as facilitators solicit the expression of opinions and ideas in a safe environment.[44] Reactive circles, often called restorative circles, work in conjunction with proactive circles. When a specific behavior or incident impacts individuals in the class or group, restorative circles aim to restore the climate and culture of the group through conflict resolution. Sometimes specific restorative conferences may transpire, which are direct and individual conferences between specific parties to discuss and resolve troubling behaviors and emotions.[45]

Difference between restorative justice and restorative practices

The notion of restorative practices evolved in part from the concept and practices of restorative justice. But from the emergent point of view of restorative practices, restorative justice can be viewed as largely reactive, consisting of formal or informal responses to crime and other wrongdoing after it occurs. Restorative practices also includes the use of informal and formal processes that precede wrongdoing, those that proactively build relationships and a sense of community to prevent conflict and wrongdoing.

Other terminology

The term restorative practices, along with terms like restorative approaches, restorative justice practices and restorative solutions, are increasingly used to describe practices related to or derived from restorative conferences and circles. These practices also include more informal practices (see Restorative Practices Continuum).

Use of restorative practices is now spreading worldwide, in education,[46] criminal justice,[47] social work,[48] counseling,[49] youth services,[50] workplace,[51] college residence hall[52] and faith community[53] applications. Notably, restorative practices can and do serve as reactionary tools in these settings but have also been successful when implemented as proactive pedagogy.[54]

Restorative practices continuum

Restorative practices are not limited to formal processes, such as restorative conferences or family group conferences, but range from informal to formal. On a restorative practices continuum,[55] the informal practices include affective statements that communicate people's feelings, as well as affective questions that cause people to reflect on how their behavior has affected others. Impromptu restorative conferences, groups and circles are somewhat more structured but do not require the elaborate preparation needed for formal conferences. Moving from left to right on the continuum, as restorative practices become more formal, they involve more people, require more planning and time, and are more structured and complete. Although a formal restorative process might have dramatic impact, informal practices have a cumulative impact because they are part of everyday life.[56]

The aim of restorative practices is to develop community and to manage conflict and tensions by repairing harm and building relationships. This statement identifies both proactive (building relationships and developing community) and reactive (repairing harm and restoring relationships) approaches. Organizations and services that only use the reactive without building the social capital beforehand are less successful than those that also employ the proactive.[57]

Social discipline window

The social discipline window is a concept with broad application in many settings. It describes four basic approaches to maintaining social norms and behavioral boundaries. The four are represented as different combinations of high or low control and high or low support. The restorative domain combines both high control and high support and is characterized by doing things with people (collaboratively), rather than to them (coercively) or for them (without their involvement).

The social discipline window also defines restorative practices as a leadership model for parents in families, teachers in classrooms, administrators and managers in organizations, police and social workers in communities and judges and officials in government. The fundamental unifying hypothesis of restorative practices is that "people are happier, more cooperative and productive, and more likely to make positive changes when those in positions of authority do things with them, rather than to them or for them."[58] This hypothesis maintains that the punitive and authoritarian to mode and the permissive and paternalistic for mode are not as effective as the restorative, participatory, engaging with mode.[59]

The social discipline window reflects the seminal thinking of renowned Australian criminologist John Braithwaite, who has asserted that reliance on punishment as a social regulator is problematic because it shames and stigmatizes wrongdoers, pushes them into a negative societal subculture and fails to change their behavior.[60] The restorative approach, on the other hand, reintegrates wrongdoers back into their community and reduces the likelihood that they will reoffend.

Implementations of restorative practices

Educational system

There has been an accumulation of RP experiences in schools. Research on these seems to validate that RP has led to a decrease in disciplinary measures and slight diminishment in racial exclusionary gaps. [61] One goal of RP has been to close the racial disciplinary gap since students of color, especially African American children, are suspended more frequently than white students.[62] According to a 2018 US Office of Civil Rights study of the 2015-16 school year, Black boys made up approximately one twelfth (8%) of enrolled students but one fourth (25%) of suspended students.[63]

In a 2020 survey of fifth and eighth graders, students found RP's restorative circles (RC) as a valuable method of expression and of sharing perspectives about problems. Students use RP as a way to express their thoughts and feelings, and encourage intercommunication. Schools have used classroom conferencing to address disruption that has had an effect on learning. In such a situation, RP has helped teachers and students discuss behavioral expectations from one another. In New Zealand, schools have experienced best restorative outcomes when all parties actively participate and understand how the problem originated, what should be done, and how the parties can reach a shared commitment that the issue not repeat itself.[64]

Prison system

RP has served to attend concerns of legitimacy, fairness, and accountability. Restorative conversations and circles, and family interventions, have played a positive role in building relationships between residents, officers, and families. In one of England's prisons, residents and officers made use of a restorative circle to resolve a kitchen issue. Since the residents left the kitchen untidy on repeated occasions, the officers punitively closed the kitchen for a couple of days. However, the closing of the kitchen created bitterness among the residents, one of whom proposed to carry out a restorative circle to establish a kitchen code of conduct. Initially hesitant to participate, the officers eventually helped mediate the residents' agreement; the officers' presence provided a sense of security to the prisoners.

Criticisms

There have been criticisms of RP from different perspectives. RP interventions among elementary-aged school children seem to be more impactful than among early teens or teenaged children. The effectiveness of interventions across grade levels must be examined. Additionally, RP expectations may be unrealistic. Out of numerous RP components, schools may only implement RP circles yet await a shift in school climate. In prison systems, RP is viewed as a soft option and counter to prison values by some officers.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Restorative Practices: Explained . April 5, 2024 . International Institute for Restorative Practices.
  2. Dhaliwal . Tasminda K. . Daramola . Eupha Jeanne . Alonso . Jacob D. . Marsh . Julie A. . January 2023 . Educators' Beliefs and Perceptions of Implementing Restorative Practices . Education and Urban Society . en . 55 . 1 . 88–118 . 10.1177/00131245211048439 . 0013-1245.
  3. Web site: Restorative Practices: Explained . April 5, 2024 . International Institute for Restorative Practices.
  4. Zakszeski . Brittany . Rutherford . Laura . 2021-07-03 . Mind the Gap: A Systematic Review of Research on Restorative Practices in Schools . School Psychology Review . en . 50 . 2–3 . 371–387 . 10.1080/2372966X.2020.1852056 . 234038288 . 2372-966X.
  5. Riestenberg, N. (2002, August). Restorative measures in schools: Evaluation results. Paper presented at the Third International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
  6. Book: Hansberry, Bill . A practical introduction to restorative practice in schools : theory, skills and guidance . Jessica Kingsley Publishers . 2016 . 9781784502324 . 27–28 . en.
  7. Dhaliwal . Tasminda K. . Daramola . Eupha Jeanne . Alonso . Jacob D. . Marsh . Julie A. . January 2023 . Educators' Beliefs and Perceptions of Implementing Restorative Practices . Education and Urban Society . en . 55 . 1 . 88–118 . 10.1177/00131245211048439 . 0013-1245.
  8. McCold, P. (2003). A survey of assessment research on mediation and conferencing. In L. Walgrave (Ed.), Repositioning Restorative Justice (pp. 67–120). Devon, UK: Willan Publishing.
  9. Web site: Calkin . Charlotte . 2021 . AN EXPLORATORY STUDY OF UNDERSTANDINGS AND EXPERIENCES OF IMPLEMENTING RESTORATIVE PRACTICE IN THREE UK PRISONS . 2024-03-10 . British Journal of Community Justice . en.
  10. American Humane Association (2003). FGDM Research and Evaluation. Protecting Children, 18(1–2).
  11. Zehr, H. (1990). Changing Lenses: A New Focus for Crime and Justice. Scottdale, PA: Herald Press.
  12. Simon, B. (1994). The Empowerment Tradition in American Social Work. New York, NY: Columbia University Press.
  13. Nelsen, J. (1996). Positive Discipline (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Ballantine Books.
  14. Charney, R. (1992). Teaching Children to Care: Management in the Responsive Classroom. Greenfield, Massachusetts: Northeast Foundation for Children.
  15. Denton, D. (1998). Horizontal Management. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
  16. Web site: Wachtel . Ted . Defining Restorative . 11 July 2012 . International Institute for Restorative Practices.
  17. Peachey, D. (1989). The Kitchener experiment. In M. Wright and B. Galaway (Eds.), Mediation and Criminal Justice. Victims, Offenders and Community. London, UK: Sage.
  18. Office for Victims of Crime (1998). Recovered from U.S. Government website. National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS). Retrieved from https://www.ncjrs.gov/ovc_archives/reports/96517-gdlines_victims-sens/guide4.html
  19. Eagle, H. (2001, November). Restorative justice in native cultures. State of Justice 3. A periodic publication of Friends Committee on Restorative Justice.
  20. Mirsky, L. (2004, April & May). Restorative justice practices of Native American, First Nation and other indigenous people of North America: Parts One & Two. Restorative Practices eForum. Retrieved from http://www.iirp.edu/article_detail.php?article_id=NDA1
  21. Haarala, L. (2004). A community within. In Restorative Justice Week: Engaging Us All in the Dialogue. Ottawa, ON, Canada:. Correctional Service of Canada.
  22. Mbambo, B., & Skelton, A. (2003). Preparing the South African community for implementing a new restorative child justice system. In L. Walgrave, (Ed.), Repositioning Restorative Justice. (pp. 271–283). Devon, UK: Willan Publishing.
  23. Roujanavong, W. (2005, November). Restorative justice: Family and community group conferencing (FCGC) in Thailand. Paper presented at the Seventh International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Manchester, UK.
  24. Goldstein, A. (2006, October). Restorative practices in Israel: The state of the field. Paper presented at the Eighth International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Bethlehem, PA, USA.
  25. Wong, D. (2005) Restorative justice for juveniles in Hong Kong: Reflections of a practitioner. Paper presented at the Sixth International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Penrith, NSW, Australia.
  26. McCold, P. (1999, August). Restorative justice practice—The state of the field. Paper presented at Building Strong Partnerships for Restorative Practices Conference, Burlington, VT, USA.
  27. Dhaliwal . Tasminda K. . Daramola . Eupha Jeanne . Alonso . Jacob D. . Marsh . Julie A. . January 2023 . Educators' Beliefs and Perceptions of Implementing Restorative Practices . Education and Urban Society . en . 55 . 1 . 88–118 . 10.1177/00131245211048439 . 0013-1245.
  28. Short . Rose . Case . Gill . McKenzie . Karen . 2018-10-02 . The long-term impact of a whole school approach of restorative practice: the views of secondary school teachers . Pastoral Care in Education . en . 36 . 4 . 313–324 . 10.1080/02643944.2018.1528625 . 149964754 . 0264-3944.
  29. Morrison . Brenda . Ahmed . Eliza . 2006 . Restorative Justice and Civil Society: Emerging Practice, Theory, and Evidence . Journal of Social Issues . en . 62 . 2 . 209–215 . 10.1111/j.1540-4560.2006.00447.x . 1885/28968 . 0022-4537. free .
  30. Doolan, M. (2003). Restorative practices and family empowerment: both/and or either/or? Family Rights Newsletter. London: Family Rights Group.
  31. Burford, G., & Pennell, J. (2000). Family group decision making and family violence. In G. Burford & J. Hudson (Eds.), Family Group Conferencing: New Directions in Community-Centered Child and Family Practice (pp. 171–183). New York, NY: Aldine DeGruyter.
  32. Braithwaite, J. (1994). Thinking harder about democratizing social control. In C. Alder & J. Wundersitz (Eds.), Family Conferencing and Juvenile Justice: The Way Forward of Misplaced Optimism? Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology.
  33. Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency. (1998). Victim offender conferencing in Pennsylvania’s juvenile justice system. Harrisburg, PA. Stutzman Amstutz, L., & Zehr, H. Retrieved from us.mcc.org/system/files/voc.pdf
  34. O’Connell, T. (1998, August). From Wagga Wagga to Minnesota. Paper presented at the First International Conference on Conferencing, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
  35. Pranis, K. (2005). The Little Book of Circle Processes. Intercourse, PA: Good Books.
  36. Roca, Inc. (n.d.). Peacemaking circles: A process for solving problems and building community. Retrieved from http://www.rocainc.org/pdf/pubs/PeacemakingCircles.pdf
  37. Mosley, J. (1993). Turn Your School Round. Cambridgeshire, UK: Wisbech.
  38. Mirsky, L. (2007). SaferSanerSchools: Transforming school culture with restorative practices. Reclaiming Children and Youth, 16(2), 5–12.
  39. Mirsky, L. (2011, May). Restorative practices: Whole-school change to build safer, saner school communities. Restorative Practices eForum. Retrieved from http://www.iirp.edu/article_detail.php?article_id=Njkx
  40. Wachtel, J., & Wachtel, T. (2012). Building Campus Community: Restorative Practices in Residential Life. Bethlehem, PA: International Institute for Restorative Practices.
  41. Nonaka, I. (1993, September). The history of the quality circle. Quality Progress, 81–83. ASQ.
  42. Lilles, H. (2002, August). Circle sentencing: Part of the restorative justice continuum. Paper presented at the Third International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
  43. Rankin, B. (2007). Circles of support and accountability: What works. Let’s Talk/Entre Nous. Vol. 31, No. 3. Ottawa, ON, Canada: Correctional Service of Canada. Retrieved from http://www.csc-scc.gc.ca/text/pblct/lt-en/2006/31-3/7-eng.shtml
  44. Gregory . Anne . Clawson . Kathleen . Davis . Alycia . Gerewitz . Jennifer . October 2016 . The Promise of Restorative Practices to Transform Teacher-Student Relationships and Achieve Equity in School Discipline . Journal of Educational and Psychological Consultation . en . 26 . 4 . 325–353 . 10.1080/10474412.2014.929950 . 264221514 . 1047-4412.
  45. Acosta . Joie . Chinman . Matthew . Ebener . Patricia . Malone . Patrick S. . Phillips . Andrea . Wilks . Asa . 2019-05-01 . Evaluation of a Whole-School Change Intervention: Findings from a Two-Year Cluster-Randomized Trial of the Restorative Practices Intervention . Journal of Youth and Adolescence . en . 48 . 5 . 876–890 . 10.1007/s10964-019-01013-2 . 1573-6601 . 6508973 . 30900083.
  46. Web site: Mirsky. Laura. Building Safer, Saner Schools. Educational Leadership . September 2011 . 69 . 1. ACSD. 11 July 2012.
  47. Web site: Wachtel. Joshua. Restorative Justice: The Evidence. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  48. Web site: Family Group Decision Making and Other Family Engagement Approaches to Child Welfare Decision Making (Vol. 25, No. 2, 2010). American Humane. 11 July 2012.
  49. Web site: Shafer. Mary. Home Work: Life in the CSF Residential Program. IIRP eForum. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  50. Web site: Richardson. Nigel. Welcome to Hull, the World's First Restorative City. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  51. Web site: Davey. Les. Restorative Practices in Workplaces. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  52. Web site: Wachtel. Joshua. Healing After a Student Suicide: Restorative Circles at the University of Vermont. IIRP eForum. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  53. Web site: Wachtel. Joshua. FaithCARE:Creating Restorative Congregations. IIRP eForum. International Institute for Restorative Practices. 11 July 2012.
  54. Gray . Sheridan . Drewery . Wendy . 2011-01-01 . Restorative practices meet key competencies: Class meetings as pedagogy . International Journal on School Disaffection . en . 8 . 1 . 13–21 . 10.18546/IJSD.08.1.03.
  55. Web site: Wachtel . Ted . Restorative Justice in Everyday Life: Beyond the Formal Ritual . 16 August 2012.
  56. McCold, P., & Wachtel, T. (2001). Restorative justice in everyday life. In J. Braithwaite & H. Strang (Eds.), Restorative Justice and Civil Society (pp. 114–129). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  57. Davey, L. (2007, November). Restorative practices: A vision of hope. Paper presented at “Improving Citizenship & Restoring Community,” the 10th International Institute for Restorative Practices World Conference, Budapest, Hungary.
  58. Web site: What is Restorative Practices? .
  59. Wachtel, T. (2005, November). The next step: developing restorative communities. Paper presented at the Seventh International Conference on Conferencing, Circles and other Restorative Practices, Manchester, UK.
  60. Braithwaite, J. (1989). Crime, Shame and Reintegration. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  61. Dhaliwal . Tasminda K. . Daramola . Eupha Jeanne . Alonso . Jacob D. . Marsh . Julie A. . January 2023 . Educators' Beliefs and Perceptions of Implementing Restorative Practices . Education and Urban Society . en . 55 . 1 . 88–118 . 10.1177/00131245211048439 . 0013-1245.
  62. Dhaliwal . Tasminda K. . Daramola . Eupha Jeanne . Alonso . Jacob D. . Marsh . Julie A. . January 2023 . Educators' Beliefs and Perceptions of Implementing Restorative Practices . Education and Urban Society . en . 55 . 1 . 88–118 . 10.1177/00131245211048439 . 0013-1245.
  63. Skrzypek . Candra . Bascug . Erin W . Ball . Annahita . Kim . Wooksoo . Elze . Diane . 2020-08-14 . In Their Own Words: Student Perceptions of Restorative Practices . Children & Schools . 42 . 4 . 245–253 . 10.1093/cs/cdaa011 . 1532-8759.
  64. Drewery . Wendy . 2016-01-28 . Restorative Practice in New Zealand Schools: Social development through relational justice . Educational Philosophy and Theory . en . 48 . 2 . 191–203 . 10.1080/00131857.2014.989951 . 0013-1857.