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An Introduction to Restorative Circles with Dominic Barter

Facilitator:

  

Dominic Barter

Location: Yesler Community Center

  Yesler Community Center, 917 E Yesler Way, Seattle, 98122, (206) 386-1245
Directions to Yesler Community Center

Date and Time:

  Fri, Nov 13, 2009   
7PM - 9PM (Separate registration for Nov 14-15 Workshop.)

Requested donation:

  This is offered as a gift to our community, and we invite contributions to costs and project.

Details

  Restorative Circles offer ways for individuals, families, groups and communities to establish connection, discover meaning and recover power on profound levels. They create a forum for connecting empathically across differences and reaching agreements that support safety and well-being, both personally and within society.

This systemic approach guides communities in choosing how they would like to respond to future conflict – proactively preventing or diminishing harm – while also giving participants a real-life experience of the practical power of nonviolence to seed understanding and change in challenging contexts.

Developed in the shanty towns, schools, courts and prisons of urban Brazil, Restorative Circles are being used in a wide variety of contexts and countries, where creating the conditions for social justice, group cohesion, resilient relationships and personal healing are recognized as interconnected and vital.

The Circles support dialogue rooted in open-hearted clarity and tangible power-sharing - calling us to rethink our view of and response to living with others, while engaging with the challenge of consciously strengthening community well-being. The results open up revolutionary possibilities for furthering a culture of peace.

In this evening introduction, Dominic Barter will illustrate by real world examples the evolution and practice of this work, and its application to diverse areas of our personal and collective lives.

This event will be filmed; you will have the choice to not appear on the videotape.

Dominic Barter began developing restorative practices and systems in the mid 1990s, inspired by the social complexity of Rio de Janeiro, his adopted home, and his study with Marshall Rosenberg in Nonviolent Communication. Since 2004 he has been the training program director and consultant to the Brazilian Justice Department’s Restorative Justice pilot projects, in collaboration with UNDP, UNESCO, the Special Secretariat for Human Rights, local communities and State Secretaries for Education. In 2008 Dominic was a keynote speaker at the International Conference on Restorative Practices. He coordinates the Restorative Justice Project for the international Center for Nonviolent Communication.

CO-CREATING THE RESOURCES FOR THESE EVENTS AND THIS WORK:

We are committed to making this work available to all who request it.

It is offered in the spirit of a gift.

There is no specific fee required in exchange for participation. We invite those who come to do so in the spirit of receiving a gift.

We see us all as sharing power capable of creating the conditions for the world we want to live in. To support the exercise of this power, information on the financial resources used in developing and presenting this work will be shared during the evening. We hope this will support those participants who so choose to contribute financially toward meeting the event's costs and supporting the on-going work.

For those interested, we also welcome contributions before the event, which help to offset upfront costs. Please continue on to Payment Options if you would like to make such a contribution.

 

(You can also register for the 2-day workshop: Nov 14-15.)

Points

  
  • How can this be useful for my group or community?
  • Restorative Circles offer a way to:
  • * restore the connections and relationships necessary for healthy and safe communities;
  • * create opportunities for everyone affected by the conflict to speak and be heard;
  • * engage individuals and their communities to take responsibility for particular conflicts and ownership of the process;
  • * tap into the resourcefulness of the community for creating next steps.
  • To learn more see “Toward Peace and Justice in Brazil: Dominic Barter and Restorative Circles” by Joshua Wachtel (attached) or www.iirp.org/realjustice/library/brazil.html.

Who is it for?

  Anyone interested in learning how to nurture and sustain power-with, compassionate communities: those working or living in any community or social system system such as health care, schools, the justice system, neighborhoods, families, businesses, non-profit organizations.

Registration and deposit info:

  To ensure a spot, please register online so that we can have an idea of how many people are coming. You can also register at the door, and we hope there is room for everyone who wants to come!

PLEASE REGISTER SEPARATELY for the 2-day workshop: Nov 14-15 to help with our planning.

If you are representing a community organization please indicate which organization on your registration comments.

Online registration:

   If you wish to register more than one person please complete a separate registration for each person. You may make one payment under one person's name for all the people that you register. When you register the additional people covered by the initial payment, enter $0.00 as the payment amount for each of those people. Please put your name in the "comment field" when you register each of those other people so we will know who paid for them.

You will be able to select your donation amount on the next page. The requested donation is between $1.00 and $35.00.

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