Restorative Justice and Lived Religion

Restorative Justice and Lived Religion Transforming Mass Incarceration in Chicago - Religion and Social Transformation

Paperback (24 Sep 2024)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Frames restorative justice as a form of moral and spiritual practice with the capacity to transform injustice
In the United States "restorative justice" typically refers to small-scale measures that divert alleged wrongdoers from a standard path through the criminal justice system by funneling them into alternative justice programs. These aim not to punish the offender, but to constructively address the harm that wrongdoing may have caused to individuals or to the community, engaging with the wrongdoer to come to a response that might heal and repair the harm.
Yet restorative justice initiatives generally fail to challenge and transform the racist system of mass incarceration. This book argues that these initiatives have the potential to do so, but that we need to better understand what restorative justice is, and how it should be implemented. It claims that restorative justice can achieve its desired effect only insofar as it provides a mode of association between people that is, at its core, moral and spiritual. The book explores the ways in which restorative justice ethics and practices exhibit moral and spiritual dynamics, and what difference such "lived religious" dynamics can make for purposes of transforming structural violence.
Looking to Chicago's restorative justice network as a model for developing these transformational and sustainable social changes, the volume showcases real-life examples of the kinds of practices and initiatives needed to shift the entrenched dynamics that fuel the prison-industrial complex across the United States.

Book information

ISBN: 9781479823789
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: New York University Press
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 272
Weight: -1g
Height: 229mm
Width: 152mm