2016
DOI: 10.1080/10474412.2016.1246972
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The Cart Before the Horse: The Challenge and Promise of Restorative Justice Consultation in Schools

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Cited by 58 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…RJ practices have been adopted rapidly by schools in the last two years in reaction to the punishments, sanctions, school expulsions, and school-to-prison pipelines that disproportionately target African-American children by nearly four-to-one (U. S. Department of Education 2016). Anecdotal reports suggest some positive impact on expulsions and suspensions, school climate, and some disciplinary problems, but the adoption rate appears far ahead of an evidence base (Fronius et al 2016;Song and Swearer 2016).…”
Section: Operant Conditioning and Information Disseminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RJ practices have been adopted rapidly by schools in the last two years in reaction to the punishments, sanctions, school expulsions, and school-to-prison pipelines that disproportionately target African-American children by nearly four-to-one (U. S. Department of Education 2016). Anecdotal reports suggest some positive impact on expulsions and suspensions, school climate, and some disciplinary problems, but the adoption rate appears far ahead of an evidence base (Fronius et al 2016;Song and Swearer 2016).…”
Section: Operant Conditioning and Information Disseminationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are numerous educational issues and programs that would benefit from research that incorporates the concerns of both proponents and skeptics. For example, the implementation of restorative justice is gaining popularity in school systems worldwide, but research is far behind practice (Song & Swearer, 2016). Restorative justice as applied to schools is a philosophy of discipline that focuses on rebuilding relationships in the school community by bringing together offenders and those affected by the infraction to decide together how to repair the harm caused to others (Suvall, 2009;Zehr, 2015).…”
Section: Preregistered Adversarial Collaborationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although some scholars and policy makers support the potential of restorative justice (Pavelka, 2013;Wearmouth, Mckinney, & Glynn, 2007;Zehr, 2015), reports from school districts suggest that restorative justice can negatively affect school climate, safety, and staff morale (Augustine, Engberg, Grimm, Lee, Wang, et al, 2018;Eden, 2019;Gray, Sirinides, Fink, Flack, DuBois, et al, 2017). Main areas of disagreement regarding restorative justice include the relative importance of prescriptive policies, requirement of adherence to philosophical values, the level of necessary implementation in a school, and the role that restorative justice plays in addressing issues of racial equality (Anfara, Evans, & Lester, 2013;Morrison & Vaandering, 2012;Song & Swearer, 2016). Rather than debate for decades while millions of students age through the system, researchers supporting the potential of restorative justice can collaborate with those who are skeptical to subject their perspectives to an empirical test through the production of joint research under an agreed upon protocol.…”
Section: Preregistered Adversarial Collaborationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(a) feminist theories and black feminist theories (hooks, 2004) that highlight the complexity of converging multiple identities that challenge the opportunities possible for nurturing authentic relationship, collaboration, and interdependence within communities. The findings of this research begins to expose the complexity of political and social expression counteracting power imbalances that continually marginalize some for maintaining the status (and oppression) of a few (Smith, 1999;hooks, 1984).…”
Section: Cohesion With Other Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%