4 thoughts on “Opinion: Restorative Justice Is Used to Legitimize Oppressive Systems

  1. Thank you for an insightful critique of tacking “restorative justice” on to current justice systems that have nothing in common with the traditional communities in which restoration had meaning. As an advocate in the past, it angered me to see adult leaders smugly presuming to judge a youthful “offender” and deputizing themselves to impose “restoration” on that youth — when, I knew, bad decisions by those very adults caused and contributed to the youth’s behaviors in the first place. We force staggering levels of poverty, family and community abuses and chaos, racism, and troubled adult behaviors on young people, then sternly insist that the youth is the one who must be “restored” to prosocial behavior. It is time to reverse the lens and to judge the “restorers” and the society they represent.

  2. It is highly unfortunate that there remains to this day a certain level of suspicion and hostility towards African Americans, and that they receive disparote and inferior services from a wide number of individuals and institutions, however, at root of this is a pathological narcissism, which comes in all colors.

  3. “Lastly, let us divest from our insidious obsession with surveillance, punishment and slavery (i.e., police, prosecutors and prisons) and invest the adequate resources needed to bring about the timely completion of that reparative plan. This is not an à la carte menu; we must do all of these things.“

    This says it all. Thank you for shedding a bright ass light on complacency of current “efforts.” Great piece.