The purpose of this article is to examine restorative approaches to campus sexual harm. A restorative response may provide support and validation for survivors, a pathway for personal change for those who cause sexual harm, and assist in changing campus culture. The article addresses three significant challenges to developing a restorative response. The first challenge is the influence of a pervasive ideology that I refer to as crime logic. A second challenge is the need for an intersectional response that addresses the potential for bias in decisions by campus administrators and restorative justice practitioners. The third challenge is to develop restorative approaches for circumstances in which a victim/perpetrator dyad is not appropriate. |
Search result: 4 articles
Conversation on restorative justice |
A talk with Rama Mani |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2019 |
Authors | Albert Dzur |
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Article |
Restorative responses to campus sexual harm: promising practices and challenges |
Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 3 2018 |
Keywords | Sexual assault, feminist, restorative justice in colleges and universities |
Authors | Donna Coker |
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Response |
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Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2018 |
Authors | Catherine Rossi and Serge Charbonneau |
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Article |
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Journal | The International Journal of Restorative Justice, Issue 1 2018 |
Keywords | Restorative justice in U.S. schools, school-based discipline, discipline gap, social justice |
Authors | Carrie Ann Woods and Martha Lue Stewart |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The purpose of this article is to explore the literature on restorative justice (RJ) as employed in educational settings and its relationship to student achievement and to present it as a model for working with high-needs populations. While there is no single measure to determine ‘need’ amongst students, the reference in this article is to particularly vulnerable populations of students, due to racial, linguistic, academic or other differences. Information sources utilised in this study were chosen based on their relevance to the application and assessment of RJ programmes implemented with youth in school systems, with a particular focus on its relevance in the context of the United States. This article points at the history of RJ and how particularly impactful such programmes can be with this target group, given the aims and desired outcomes of this philosophy. |