Principles of Restorative Justice: Difference between revisions

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== WITNESS ==
== WITNESS ==
=== Legitimacy ===
=== Legitimacy ===
* Restoration requires witnessing.
* [[Restoration requires witnessing]].
* Witnesses confirm acknowledgment, process, and outcome.
* [[Witnesses confirm acknowledgment, process, and outcome]].
* Witnessing prevents private or coerced resolutions.
* [[Witnessing prevents private or coerced resolutions]].
* Public memory supports accountability.
* [[Public memory supports accountability.]]


== ROLE OF ELDERS ==
== ROLE OF ELDERS ==

Revision as of 23:35, 31 January 2026

Principles of Restorative Justice

Category: Tsm’syen Law Page status: Working

Purpose

This page outlines the principles of restorative justice as understood within Tsm’syen law. It records how harm is addressed through responsibility, repair, and balance rather than punishment or exclusion.

This page does not establish courts, penalties, or enforcement bodies.

General principles

HARM

Recognition

RESPONSIBILITY

Accountability

RESTORATION

Repair and balance

RELATIONSHIP

Community context

WITNESS

Legitimacy

ROLE OF ELDERS

Guidance

  • Elders may guide restorative processes.
  • Guidance draws on memory, precedent, and restraint.
  • Elders do not impose outcomes but support balance.
  • Trust limits the scope of guidance.

LIMITS

Boundaries

  • Restorative justice does not excuse harm.
  • Restoration does not remove responsibility.
  • Failure to restore balance may require further action.
  • Persistent harm undermines trust and*