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Restorative Justice Project Conference Archives


1st Annual Restorative Justice Conference - 1993
Theme: "Christian faith, VORP, and the expanding Restorative Justice Vision"


2d Annual Restorative Justice Conference - 1994


3d Annual Restorative Justice Conference - 1995
Theme: "A new response to crime"

Restorative Justice Proposal | Restorative Justice Principles and Outcome Continuums by Ron Claassen


4th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
Theme: "Restorative Justice, Legislation, and the Church"

October 25-26, 1996
Conference Summary


5th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
Theme: "Pushing the Envelope of Restorative Justice:
The Fresno Model"

October 17-18, 1997
1997 Conference update 9-23-97 Photos of 5th Annual Conference


6th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
Theme: "Restorative Justice: Best Practices in North America"

October 30-31, 1998

Agenda for 1998 Conference


7th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
Theme: "Apology, Pardon and Forgiveness"

February 25 and 26, 2000
Conference Report and videotape order form.


8th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
Theme: Restorative Justice and Systemic Change
Getting to the Roots of Justice

Alternative Models from New Zealand,
Canada and the United States

June 1-2, 2001
Conference brochure in PDF: Side A - Side B
Conference videotape order form
Photos of the conference


9th Annual Restorative Justice Conference
"Building the Restorative Community"

October 25-26, 2002


10th Annual Restorative Justice Conference

"Violence and the journey towards restoration"
November 14-15, 2003

Preconference training November 13, 2003

Place: Fresno, California

Conference brochure


11th Annual Restorative Justice Conference

THE CHANGING CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM: transforming practice through restorative justice legislation

Conference Brochure

Judge Fred McElrea executive summary

Dan Van Ness RJ City executive summary

Panel purpose and procedure, RJ History, Legislative proposal


"Restorative Justice: Focus on the Victim"

12th Restorative Justice Conference at Fresno Pacific University

Keynote speaker: Dr. John Dussich, President, World Society of Victimology
Plenary Speakers: Dr. Mario Gaboury, President, American Society of Victimology
Dr. Bernadette Muscat, California State University Fresno
Dr. Arthur V.N. Wint, California State University Fresno

October 20-21, 2006
Pre-Conference Training October 19, 2006

Conference Brochure | Conference Schedule | Registration Form | Photos

Friday night performance

janka.jpg - 15627 Bytes

Poster with local details on admission.

Description of the performance

Conference gives voice to crime victims

FPU press release by Kristin Deffenbacher

Giving voice to the victim was the goal of the 12th Annual Restorative Justice Conference at Fresno Pacific University.

The title of the October 20-21 event: "The Victim in Focus" signaled a new approach. "People get focused on offenders," said Duane Ruth-Heffelbower, director of graduate academic programs for the FPU Center for Peacemaking & Conflict Studies. "Victims want to know why me, why then, was it my fault. The only person who can answer those questions is the offender and the only process to accomplish that is the restorative justice approach."

Restorative justice is a biblically based method that holds offenders accountable, repairs harm suffered by the victim and engages the community in the search for solutions. The current criminal justice system separates victim and offender. “Victims, offenders and communities who suffer from a criminal offense never get the closure they need,” said Jill Schellenberg, CPACS staff member and conference moderator.

But restorative justice allows the offender to see who they have hurt. “You can imagine if you got in trouble: the difference between paying a monetary fine versus sitting and answering the person you hurt and paying them back and making sure the promises you made are kept—that is harder,” Schellenberg said.

Speakers were: John Dussich, Ph. D., director of the Tokiwa International Victimology Institute at Tokiwa University in Mito, Japan, and associate professor at California State University, Fresno; Mario Gaboury, Ph. D., director of the Center for the Study of Crime Victims’ Rights, Remedies and Resources at the University of New Haven; Arthur Wint, J.D., professor of criminology and coordinator of the peace and conflict studies program at CSUF; and Bernadette Muscat, Ph. D., assistant professor in criminology at CSUF. The audience was made up of professionals in education, ministry, law, politics and business. Sponsors were FPU and the West Coast Mennonite Central Committee.

"I saw restorative justice in a new light,” said Vernon Janzen, conference participant and retired pastor and educator. “Not that it is the easy way out of difficult situations, but that it is the right way, which brings healing and change."


Contact RJP by email.


Last modified January 13, 2007.