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Rights, Resources, and Resolution: A Blueprint for a Restorative Future

Rights, Resources, and Resolution: A Blueprint for a Restorative Future

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In this special solo episode of All Things Conflict - Justice Redesigned, Maria takes center stage to deconstruct our fundamental understanding of "justice." After hosting a series of experts and survivors, Maria reflects on the core puzzle: Why is our 3,000-year-old retributive legal model failing to deliver actual peace? Maria explores justice not just as a set of laws, but as a method for allocating Rights, Resources, and Resolution. She challenges the "Fairness Button" inside all of us and explains why the current system—which focuses on what law was broken and how to punish the offender—often leaves victims sidelined and traumatised. This episode serves as a philosophical and practical blueprint for a restorative future, moving us away from a "win-lose" courtroom battle and toward a "win-win" model of healing and accountability. Key Takeaways Defining Justice: Maria proposes a three-pillar definition of justice: the fair and impartial allocation of Rights (who has a right to what?), Resources (what is needed to fix the harm?), and Resolution (how do we close the chapter?). The "Fairness Button": An exploration of our innate human drive for fairness and how it can be triggered by both real and perceived injustices. Retributive vs. Restorative: * Retributive Justice asks: What law was broken? Who did it? What is the punishment? Restorative Justice asks: Who has been hurt? What are their needs? Whose obligation is it to meet those needs? Hurt vs. Harm: A provocative look at the difference between emotional hurt (which is subjective) and legal harm/injury (which is objective), and why the legal system struggles to handle the former. The 3,000-Year-Old Mistake: Why sticking to a Babylonian-era "eye for an eye" philosophy has led to overcrowded prisons and a lack of true closure for victims. Collaboration Over Competition: Maria argues that despite the headlines, the world actually functions on 99% collaboration and relationships, and justice should reflect that reality. The Victim’s Voice: How the current adversarial system "steals" the conflict from the people involved, leaving victims as mere witnesses in a contest between the State and the Offender. Timestamps 00:00 – Defining the Three Pillars: Rights, Resources, and Resolution. 05:22 – The "Fairness Button": Why we react to injustice. 12:15 – The Retributive Trap: Why punishment rarely leads to healing. 20:40 – Understanding "Harm" vs. "Hurt" in a legal context. 28:10 – Restorative Justice: A blueprint for community-led resolution. 35:45 – Closing: Moving toward a world built on relationship and goodwill. Social Links ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.centreforpeacefulsolutions.org⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.peacefulsolutions.org.uk⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.workplacehuddle.com⁠ ⁠ HOST BIO Maria founded the Centre for Peaceful Solutions in response to the fatal shooting of a 7 year old in her neighbourhood. She developed a model of conflict resolution for violent crime using her brainchild, the Dialogue Road Map (DRM). Over 30 years she has mediated everything from threat to life gang disputes to high stakes business deals gone wrong, Maria empowers people to resolve conflict without reliance on experts. So she trains violent prisoners to be facilitators, leaders to be effective communicators, teenagers to be peer mediators and neighbours to be tenant listeners within their respective communities. This Podcast has been brought to you by Disruptive Media. ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://disruptivemedia.co.uk/
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