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You are here: Home articlesdb articles Bazemore, Gordon and O'Brien, Sandra and Carey, Mark. The Synergy and Substance of Organizational and Community Change in the Response to Crime and Conflict: The Emergence and Potential of Restorative Justice.

Summary

Bazemore, Gordon and Carey, Mark and O'Brien, Sandra (2006). The Synergy and Substance of Organizational and Community Change in the Response to Crime and Conflict: The Emergence and Potential of Restorative Justice. Public Organization Review: A Global Journal. 5(1).

The story of the one-hundredth monkey has generated new ways of thinking about cultural transformation. Different experiences and new understandings of justice have emerged in a variety of cultural contexts and led to a rather sudden multi-national shift in thinking about the collective response to crime, harm and conflict that raises broader theoretical questions about restorative justice as a social movement or innovation. This article will describe the restorative justice movement in an historical context and its emergence into a worldwide phenomenon. The authors also examine the role of communities, or ‘‘instrumental communities’’ in public organizations.


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