Voices of Transformation — Ep. 14
A conversation on restorative justice, second chances, and the architecture of community healing.
In this episode we sit down with practitioners working at the intersection of justice and community to ask a deceptively simple question: what does it actually take to restore a person, a family, a neighbourhood?
We talk about the gap between sentencing and reintegration, and why so many well-intentioned programs fail at the last mile. The answer, our guests argue, is rarely more funding. It is more relationship.
We also explore the slow, quiet work of trust-building — the kind that happens in a circle of chairs long before it ever shows up in a press release. Restorative justice, done well, is less an event and more an ecosystem.
If you work in ministry, social services, or law enforcement, this episode is an invitation to rethink the architecture of healing in the communities you serve.
More from the archive
The Discipline of Becoming
Destiny is not discovered in a moment — it is forged in the quiet rhythms of daily obedience and intentional growth.
Leaders Who Listen First
Before vision can move a room, it must first be earned through the humility of presence and the patience of inquiry.
Rebuild What Tried to Break You
Restoration is not the absence of scars — it is the presence of purpose threaded through every place pain has been.
