Punishment alone rarely answers the most critical questions posed by conflict or harm. What is the root cause? How can this be prevented from happening again? What do victims need to truly heal?
Restorative justice offers another path. By prioritizing accountability, healing and connection over punishment, individuals and communities alike can rebuild trust and move forward with dignity.
Restorative justice is both a philosophy and a set of concrete practices used to repair harm rather than inflict punishment. When conflict occurs, those harmed and those responsible participate in a facilitated process to name the impact, acknowledge responsibility and co-create steps to make things right.
While widely used today, restorative justice practices are not new. Many emerged from the traditions of Māori, First Nation and other Indigenous peoples around the world. These Indigenous peacemaking traditions emphasize community balance, harm prevention, repair and healing, and have gained traction in schools, youth justice, community mediation and other modern contexts.
There are six restorative justice principles:
Restorative justice challenges punitive systems that often escalate harm and exclusion, paving the way for powerful, positive change:
|
Punitive Default |
Restorative Shift |
What Changes |
|
Control |
Connection |
Instead of enforcing compliance through fear, restorative spaces foster a sense of belonging and mutual responsibility. |
|
Exclusion |
Inclusion |
Rather than automatically suspending, jailing or isolating people, restorative processes bring stakeholders together to solve problems. |
|
Punishment |
Healing |
Mutually agreed-upon resolutions aim to repair harm and prevent recurrence. |
These shifts ripple across sectors. Restorative justice practices in schools foster cultures of respect and learning, rather than relying on “gotcha” discipline. In courts, collaborative processes support accountability and survivor healing more effectively than one-size-fits-all sentencing. And in communities, restorative approaches strengthen the social fabric that is essential for safety and well-being.
Zero-tolerance discipline in schools once promised safety, but often led to more harm than good by breeding distrust between authority figures and students, disrupting students' academic progress and perpetuating the school-to-prison pipeline.
Many schools are opting to replace zero-tolerance discipline with restorative justice practices—such as restorative circles, mediation and peer dialogue—and the benefits are clear:
Restorative processes in criminal justice facilitate structured dialogue between the offender, victim and community members. With trained facilitators, participants discuss impact, responsibility and repair. Some examples of restorative justice resolutions include restitution, community service, treatment and community-based support.
Benefits of restorative justice include:
Restorative Justice Community Action: Healing Beyond Institutions
Restorative justice is also used outside of formal systems—such as neighborhoods, workplaces and faith communities—to repair social divisions and foster inclusion. Restorative justice examples in this context include:
Creating a More Just Future with Restorative Justice Training
The transformative power of restorative justice is essential across sectors to foster true healing. To sustain positive change, institutions need skilled facilitators who embody the above principles and can design effective processes that are safe and inclusive.
At the University of San Diego’s Joan B. Kroc School of Peace Studies, the Center for Restorative Justice serves as a hub for education, training and research. Together, we achieve progress by supporting community initiatives and facilitating dialogue that advances restorative leadership.
The Kroc School also offers an MA in Restorative Justice Facilitation and Leadership (MARJ) designed for aspiring systemic changemakers. Throughout the program, students will gain:
Graduates leave prepared to lead restorative justice efforts in schools, justice systems, nonprofits and communities that are trauma-informed and culturally responsive.
Safety grows when harm is met with accountability and care. If you’re driven to make a real-world impact, we invite you to join our community of changemakers today!