Restorative Practices
Build, maintain, and repair relationships in your
community with safety and accountability.
Within the collective dignity, love, and respect of all people, exists the wisdom and resources for a beautiful, harmonious tomorrow. – Jerry Tello
Restorative Practices, deeply rooted in ancient traditions worldwide, support the development of healthy communities by building, maintaining, and repairing relationships. These practices are based on the principle of holding all community members in a context of high accountability and high support. When harm occurs, people responsible for the harm, impacted parties, and community members can gather in a face-to-face dialogue to address the harm, provide a space to build trust, recognize our shared humanity, and start the healing process.
NCRC works at all levels of the restorative spectrum of building, maintaining, and repairing relationships. We work collaboratively with school districts, support community dialogue, train circle facilitators in diverse settings including undergraduate students on a university campus and inmates within the jail system, and hold restorative community conferences as an alternative to the juvenile justice system.
READ ABOUT OUR RESTORATIVE PRACTICES WORK IN THE RAND REPORT!
Different Ways We Help
In the Juvenile Justice System
Prioritizing diversion options for youth