Restorative Justice: What is it and Does it Work?
Abstract: This article reviews the now extensive literature on the varied arenas in which restorative justice is theorized and practiced – criminal violations, community ruptures and disputes, civil wars, regime change, human rights violations, and international law. It also reviews – by examining empirical studies of the processes in different settings – how restorative justice has been criticized, what its limitations and achievements might be, and how it might be understood. I explore the foundational concepts of reintegrative shaming, acknowledgment and responsibility, restitution, truth and reconciliation, and sentencing or healing circles for their transformative and theoretical potentials and for their actual practices in a variety of locations – family abuse, juvenile delinquency, criminal violations, problem-solving courts, indigenous-colonial-national disputes, ethnic and religious conflicts, civil wars, and liberation struggles. Restorative justice, which began as an alterna