John Lash

OP-ED: Restorative Justice Isn’t a Plug and Play Option

A friend of mine has been working for several years to implement restorative practices in his Midwestern community. He has worked with nonprofit groups that work in areas of his city suffering high poverty rates. He’s also worked with several other groups interested in alternative strategies to handling conflict. For most of that time he hoped to work in the school system, but was never able to meet anyone with the power to give him a chance. Recently he was invited to facilitate a Restorative Circle with a middle school boy who was returning to school after a suspension for shoving a teacher.

OP-ED: Are Teenage Crime Proneness and Adolescent Risk Taking Obsolete Myths?

We’ve long heard the theory, from Criminology 101 to the U.S. Supreme Court: teenagers are crime prone (even “deadly”), biologically and developmentally impulsive, peer-driven risk takers, heedless of consequences. The statistics would seem unassailable: in every culture, ages 15-24 or so have higher crime rates than those 25 and older. Of course, authorities once held that excessive crime by African Americans was an innate feature of primitive racial biology and undeveloped culture. Unchastened by history, modern theorists have failed to investigate whether “adolescent risks” are explained not by bio-developmental internalities, but by straightforward externalities. Poverty is linked to many high-risk behaviors, and adolescents and young adults are much poorer than older adults.

In Georgia, a Diversion Program Profits a Community, a Park and Juvenile Offenders

In 2008, the Chastain Park Conservancy began accepting juvenile offenders, allowing them to complete their court-ordered community services hours at the conservancy. Ray Mock built relationships with a couple of parole officers and lawyers, and soon, word of mouth about his program traveled. What Mock found was a program that worked for him and his growing nonprofit, and worked for those who had gotten into trouble.