Howard Zehr directed the first victim offender conferencing
program in the US and is one of the original developers of
restorative justice as a concept. Zehr is the Distinguished
Professor of Restorative Justice and the codirector of the Zehr
Institute for Restorative Justice at Eastern Mennonite University.
He lives in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
Allan MacRae is the manager of coordinators for the southern
region of New Zealand, overseeing Family Group Conferences for both
youth justice and care and protection. After receiving the National
Supreme Award for Innovation, Allan developed a program in
Wellington, which emerged as a leading model of youth justice. He
lives in New Zealand.
Kay Pranis served as the restorative justice planner for the
Minnesota Department of Corrections for nine years. Pranis has
conducted circle trainings in a diverse range of communitiesfrom
schools to prisons to workplaces to churches, and from rural towns
in Minnesota to Chicago’s South Side to Montgomery, Alabama. She
lives in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Lorraine Stutzman Amstutz is the director of the Mennonite
Central Committee’s (MCC) office on crime and justice. Lorraine has
worked in the victim offender field since 1984 when she began
working in Elkhart, Indiana, the site of the first Victim Offender
Reconciliation Program (VORP) in the United States. Lorraine
currently serves on the board of the local victim offender program
in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, where she lives.
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