04/01/2022
Editor’s Introduction April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence
April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence (Volume 22 Issue 2)
[1] On January 6, 2022, the Lutheran Ethicists gathered by Zoom before the virtual annual meeting of the Society for Christian Ethics. The topic was about the nature and possibility of justice in America after nearly 250 years of slavery and not quite 160 years of post-slavery systemic racism. This issue of JLE presents the […]
For Congregational Discussion April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence
April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence (Volume 22 Issue 2)
Topics of racism and justice are some of the most difficult to discuss for Americans. One way to start a discussion is to use a dialogic method of discussion. Such a method asks small groups to agree to speak and to listen on a topic following a certain order that encourages time for silence between […]
We Want Justice: Retributive, Distributive, and Restorative Justice
April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence (Volume 22 Issue 2)
[1] I want to begin with a difficult and inexplicable truth: white racism is alive and well in the institutional and cultural life of the United States of America. Since the death of George Floyd, there have been multiple calls for racial reckoning in the United States and around the globe. [1] These calls reveal […]
On Pardon, Reparations, and a Politics of Penitence
April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence (Volume 22 Issue 2)
[1] In this essay I want to ask how a person who identifies as white and Christian might live in the United States amidst the ongoing legacies of slavery.[i] There are countless other questions before us—questions about the shape of Black lives, not least!—and I do not want to pretend that the questions of this […]
Book Review: Christianity, Social Justice, and the Japanese American Incarceration during World War II by Anne M. Blankenship
April/May 2022: Restorative Justice: Prospects for Transformation & Penitence (Volume 22 Issue 2)
[1] Our personal security is more of a fantasy than we can comfortably admit, and appeals to national security can conceal the darkest chambers of social bigotry. Executive Order 9066, signed by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt eighty years ago on February 19, 1942, devastated the lives of more than 100,000 Americans of Japanese descent (Nikkei) […]