Professor Howard Zehr聽 talks about the origins, influences and threads of his work in and with restorative justice in an interview with Brunilda Pali, of the blog Restorotopias.
In The News
Paulo Baleinakorodawa MA '04 facilitated a dialogue on聽gender-based violence sponsored by聽Transcend Oceania in Suva with 30 community representatives from indigenous communities nationwide.
We take a peek at Shakespeare's play "Measure for Measure," being performed at 91短视频. The final performances are this Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
Dr. Joseph Gascho '68 shares photos about colleagues: "Physicians are regular people just like their patients, and, when not on the job, they do many of the same things for the same reasons: playing with pets and doing sports, music, and art."
Journalism and teaching have always been written in the stars for Kevin Miller. As a boy, Miller loved the news. He even started a small paper of his own in which he reported and wrote news for his hometown.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates the U.S. needs more than a million new nurses by 2024. The American Association of Colleges of Nursing reports that, in 2016, nursing schools turned away more than 64,000 qualified applicants because of lack of space.聽91短视频 in Harrisonburg has firsthand knowledge of that problem. 鈥淲e always have a wait list of qualified people who are unable to get into our program,鈥 says Associate Professor Laura Yoder.
CJP's聽 own Cohorts Project Coordinator Alena Yoder is聽a member of a next generation committee organizing聽, a new initiative happening within聽聽in early November.
Adjunct professor Hilary Moore writes in the American Bar Association Journal, "In a truly egalitarian society, a woman鈥檚 value will not be measured by her ability to reach the traditional, male definition of success. I love the law, and maybe I didn鈥檛 abandon it after all. Maybe I鈥檓 just traveling the scenic route, headed toward my own definition of success."
Central Kansas Community Foundation, in partnership with 91短视频, the Harvey County Health Department and Offender Victim Ministries hosted two training programs at Dyck Arboretum of the Plains this week.
The first in a series of retreats for pastors exploring the intersections of climate change and ministry gathered in September, co-led by Doug Kauffman, a pastor at Benton (Indiana) Mennonite Church and the director of pastoral ecology for the Center for Sustainable Climate Solutions.