Foreword
Mark Umbreit
1. Introduction
Elizabeth Beck
2. Justice, Restoration, and Social Work
Nancy Kropf
3. An Introduction to Restorative Justice
Pamela Blume Leonard
4. Restorative Justice Practice
Elizabeth Beck and Andrea Wood
5. Social Work and Restorative Justice: Implications for School
System Practice
Michele V. Hamilton and Lesa Nitcy Hope
6. Restorative Justice in Prisons
Barb Toews and M. Kay Harris
7. Using Conflict to Build Community: Community Conferencing
Lauren Abramson and Elizabeth Beck
8. Restorative Justice and Child Welfare: Engaging Families and
Communities in the Care and Protection of Children
David S. Crampton and Patricia L. Rideout
9. Feminist Perspectives on Family Rights: Social Work and
Restorative Practices to Stopping Women Abuse
Joan Pennell and Mary P. Koss
10. Coming Together After Violence: Social Work and Restorative
Practices
Nancy J. Good and David L. Gustafson
11. Social Work and Restorative Justice in an International
Context: The Case of Liberia
Nancy Rothenberg Williams and Thomas K. Crick
12. Restorative Justice and Aging: Promise for Integrated
Practice
Alexandra Lee Crampton and Nancy Kropf
13. Concluding Thoughts and Next Steps
Elizabeth Beck, Nancy Kropf & Pamela Blume Leonard
Afterword
Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz and Howard Zehr
Index
Elizabeth Beck, PhD, is Associate Professor at the School of Social
Work, Georgia State University.
Nancy P. Kropf, PhD, is Professor and Director of the School of
Social Work, Georgia State University.
Pamela Blume Leonard, MA, is Director of the Georgia Council for
Restorative Justice.
"There are many books dealing with social work and restorative
justice separately. However, to my knowledge, no books have been
published like this one, which analyzes the relations and
interactions of these two professional disciplines. Hence, the
essays in this volume provide insights that are unavailable in the
literature that focuses on each practice in isolation from the
other." -- David G. Gil, Professor of Social Policy, Brandeis
University
"Social work practice is at a crossroad. In our rapidly changing
world, restorative justice provides a needed framework for
assisting individuals, families, and communities following adverse
events in which victim and offender both merit humanitarian
concern. This groundbreaking text builds on the historical values
of social work, while capturing an emerging international social
movement, and will help practitioners understand a method of
intervention that
promotes social justice and healing in a variety of venues and
settings." -- Roberta R. Greene, Professor and the Louis and Ann
Wolens Centennial Chair in Gerontology and Social Welfare, School
of Social
Work, University of Texas at Austin
"A timely and invaluable resource, this landmark book describes
social work's unique role in community conferencing, school
anti-bullying programming, family group counseling, and reparative
justice. Feminist and global perspectives are infused throughout.
Perhaps now social workers will take the helm in the field of
restorative justice, a field in which the values of social work are
so clearly reflected." -- Katherine van Wormer, Professor of Social
Work,
University of Northern Iowa
"Social work and restorative justice have much to gain from each
other. Indeed, we need each other! This book makes a significant
contribution to an essential dialogue and collaboration." -- From
the Afterword by Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz and Howard Zehr
"The editors of this text have provided practitioners and scholars
alike with a text that should be as accessible and valuable to the
uninitiated as it is to those who have years of restorative justice
practice experience." -- Robert McAndrews, School of Social Work,
Salem State University, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
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