This edited collection explores the concept of Generative Justice and how it might help us reimagine conventional responses to crime and state punishment. With case studies from the Global North and South, it offers insights into how, within different cultural contexts, justice-involved people find solidarity, belonging and purpose.The book showcases exciting and innovative projects and communities in which unlikely solidarities have been forged among diverse people, through creative practices, education, food, horticulture, and through shared experiences of reentry, recovery and desistance. By exploring the common features and qualities of these generative places, the book sets out an agenda for future research and activism.
Fergus McNeill is Professor of Criminology and Social Work at the University of Glasgow.Mary Corcoran is Professor of Criminology at Keele University.Beth Weaver is Professor of Criminal and Social Justice at the University of Strathclyde.
1. Introducing Generative Justice – Fergus McNeill, Mary Corcoran and Beth Weaver2. Generative Justice: The Cooperative Way – Beth Weaver3. Generative Justice at LandWorks: Sam’s Story – Julie Parsons and Samuel Auchterlonie4. Kitchen Table Justice: Reflections on What Abolition and Food Justice Can Teach Us About Generative Justice – Kelsey Timler and Cathee Porter5. Global South Generative Justice? A Study of Education and Reintegration in ‘Prisons Without Police’ in Brazil - Sergio Grossi6. Bearing Witness to State Power: Peer Support in Prison as an Expression of Generative Justice - William McGowan and Christian Perrin7. Generative Justice and Systems Change: Five Lessons Learned in Reentry - Ruth Armstrong, Karen Hamer, Dempsey Lewis and Cedric Martin8. Opening Minds, Hearts, and Visions: Generative Justice among Choir Volunteers and Incarcerated Individuals - Mary L. Cohen and Richard Winemiller9. Generative Justice in Hindsight: On Knowing, Doing and Sharing through Participatory Arts- Based Research - Emma Murray, Lucía Arias, Gillian Buck, Kemi Ryan and Natasha Ryan10. A Perspective From Practice: Making Together, Between Limitations and Possibilities - Alison Urie11. The Generative Culture of Recovery: The Intersection of Coloniality, Utopian Visioning and Generative Justice - David Patton12. The Re/Integrative Potential of Generative Spaces: A Case Study of 'The Place' - Alejandro Rubio Arnal13. Possibilities for Generative Justice in the Penal Voluntary Sector - Kaitlyn QuinnAfterword - Michelle Brown and Shadd Maruna
'Generative justice (GJ) is a new term, and this innovative book demonstrates its practical and theoretical potential. Justice is not some lofty and remote conception nor does it belong only to the formal systems of the state. The book itself models the ways in which different perspectives on crime can be pooled in GJ to point towards novel pathways to desistance and reconciliation.' Rob Canton, De Montfort University
Fergus McNeill, Mary Corcoran, Beth Weaver, Fergus (University of Glasgow) McNeill, Mary (Keele University) Corcoran, Beth (The University of Strathclyde) Weaver, Fergus Mcneill
Fergus McNeill, Peter Raynor, Chris Trotter, UK) McNeill, Fergus (University of Glasgow, UK) Raynor, Peter (College of Law and Criminology, Swansea University, Australia) Trotter, Chris (Monash University, Fergus Mcneill
Fergus McNeill, Peter Raynor, Chris Trotter, UK) McNeill, Fergus (University of Glasgow, UK) Raynor, Peter (College of Law and Criminology, Swansea University, Australia) Trotter, Chris (Monash University, Fergus Mcneill
Gwen Robinson, Fergus McNeill, UK) Robinson, Gwen (University of Sheffield, UK) McNeill, Fergus (School of Social & Political Sciences, University of Glasgow, Fergus Mcneill