From reintegrative shaming to restorativeinstitutional hybridity
Loading...
Date
Authors
Forsyth, Miranda
Braithwaite, Valerie
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Eleven International Publishing
Abstract
Crime, shame and reintegration (1989) introduced reintegrative shaming theory in
its first iteration, a theory of crime that sought to be integrative and interdisciplinary,
normative and explanatory. The normative dimension of the theory is rooted
in the republican principle of freedom as non-domination: our institutions,
particularly justice institutions, should be cognisant of the goal of reducing the
quantum of domination in the world. Domination in the criminal or bullying context
often means predation. The principle of freedom as non-domination has
been the bedrock of Braithwaite's theories of crime, regulation and society more
broadly (Braithwaite & Pettit, 1990).
This article looks at the evolutionary pathway reintegrative shaming theory
has followed from the initial core concepts of shaming, reintegration and stigmatisation.
In 2001, a major revision of the theory introduced 30 new propositions
for further testing (Ahmed, Harris, Braithwaite & Braithwaite, 2001). In particular,
the concepts of ethical identity, shame and pride management were brought
into play. Shame acknowledgement and humble pride in this revision are associated
with lower crime, shame displacement (as in blaming others) and narcissistic
pride with higher crime. A decade later, a body of knowledge has also accumulated
on the role of these core concepts in countries outside the global North. In particular,
we explore forgiveness as a ritual of reintegration that has been marginalised
in Western-based research but is the spiritual heartland of reintegration in
cultures with long histories of change, conflict and adaptation.
Reintegrative shaming theory in its evolving form explains why reshaping
institutions to facilitate more effective conflict resolution and healing requires
sensitivity to, and engagement with, culture and context. Ultimately, hybridity in
institutional design is necessary to give meaning to change and security to transitions.
The article also calls for researchers to embrace methodological pluralism in
order to appreciate cultural practices that communicate reintegration and stigmatisation
in different contexts. Such appreciation is at the heart of learning from
each other without pedagogical domination.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
The International Journal of Restorative Justice
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
2037-12-31