Crime and Reconciliation describes the original setting in the United States where contemporary restorative justice practices first took root. Having worked with the Indiana-based Prisoner and Community Together program (PACT), which eventually advocated for healing dialogue between offending and victimized parties along with family and community members, Mark Umbreit received firsthand experience, which, ten years later, he wrote about in this early classic. In the face of overcrowded jails and a nation with the highest per capita prison population in the world, the author presents a viable alternative to the tough ""law and order"" approach. Casework examples are plentiful in chapters which also conclude with study guide questions for discussion groups. Written in 1985, students of the history of modern restorative justice will appreciate the wide vision held by the pioneering practitioners who laid the foundations for a peacemaking movement that is now worldwide. This book also highlights how church communities played a key role, through independent ministries of reconciliation, in fostering the early growth of restorative work. And yet, the phrase ""restorative justice"" will not be found in this entire book, as it still took a few more years for that term to be popularized.
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Mark Umbreit is professor of social work and founder of the Center for Restorative Justice and Peacemaking at the University of Minnesota. As a pioneer practitioner and researcher in the field of restorative justice, he has authored numerous articles and books and has traveled extensively worldwide to promote the growth of heartfelt dialogue between responsible and affected parties in violent crimes.
"While the book's title seems to narrow the discussion by the word Crime, and while Reconciliation can often be problematic as it hints toward a prescriptive outcome, the original subtitle, Creative Options for Victims and Offenders, widens the scope for life-giving alternatives in all realms of human relationships, suggesting how all of us, in solidarity, are wounded-wounding beings."
-- from the new Foreword by Ted Lewis
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