In Fall 2021, the UCLA School of Law Criminal Justice Program and Criminal Justice Law Review held a three-part seminar on corrective justice. The objective was to engage law trainees and professors throughout the nation in discussions about corrective justice and the criminal and juvenile legal system in addition to corrective justice pedagogy and its location in the legal academy. Below are the videos for each panel.
Restorative Justice Panel 2: Restorative Justice as an Alternative to the Criminal/Juvenile Legal System
The 2nd panel in our series concentrated on how we can utilize corrective justice as a method of accomplishing real responsibility, recovery, and change as an action after damage or violence takes place, beyond the punitive criminal/juvenile legal systems. Our panelists were: Wakumi Douglas, Founding Executive Director, S.O.U.L. Sisters Leadership Collective; Jennifer Llewellyn, Director of the Restorative Research, Innovation and Education Lab; Iri Mako, Director Kōrure Whānau, Te Whānau o Waipareira; and Ghani Songster, Healing Futures Program Manager with Youth Art and Self-Empowerment Project. Our mediator was UCLA School of Law 2L trainee Jenny Poretz.
https://criminaljusticeclasses.net/restorative-justice-restorative-justice-as-an-alternative-to-the-criminal-juvenile-legal-system/
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