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The Blake Experience

Stories and thoughts on Restorative Justice

The Conscious Lawyer

1/11/2019

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Here is an excerpt from an interview with J. Kim Wright, Integrative Law Movement.
The Conscious Lawyer 
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VISION FOR LAW IN 2050“The seeds of the late 1990s and early 2000s have flourished. We are grateful to our pioneers and trailblazers who held this vision and brought it to fruition.
Lawyers are now recognized for our true purpose: peacemaking, problem-solving and healing the wounds of the community. Trials are rare and civil. Collaboration, prevention, and transformation are the lawyers’ stock in trade. We create sustainable agreements and resolutions.
Lawmakers serve, conscious of all the stakeholders, and of our interconnectedness with Nature and each other. They work on common goals and values to benefit everyone.
Law enforcement focuses on Right Relationships, working in partnership with the community to foster strong, empowered and safe communities.
Judges are wise leaders who help to balance competing values, hold everyone accountable, and deliver fair results with love, compassion and empathy.
Prisons are a part of our past. Now we focus on rehabilitation, healing, and reconnection for all members of society. Criminal behavior is seen as a symptom of brokenness that needs to be healed.
Law students still learn the focused, analytical thinking that is known as thinking like a lawyer. Now they are also trained in holistic thinking. Art is part of the balanced core curriculum.
Our history of restorative practices and nonviolent communication in schools has helped to produce citizens who tell their truths, take responsibility and accept accountability.
The Legal System Works for Everyone.”​
Our history of restorative practices and nonviolent communication in schools has helped to produce citizens who tell their truths, take responsibility and accept accountability.
The Legal System Works for Everyone.”
J. Kim Wright is a US lawyer and a founding pioneer of the expanding Integrative Law Movement, a movement that can be described in many ways including, in Kim’s own words: “an international movement that responds to the challenges of law practice with creative, innovative solutions. It blends the human and the analytical. The approach spans personal and systemic change. Integrative lawyers are purpose-oriented, that is, they have a clear sense of their own purpose and the purpose of law; they have a broader view of their roles as lawyers, often seeing themselves as change agents; and they are innovative, looking for ways to serve clients and themselves.”
She herself usually answers the question of what Integrative Law is using the poem of ‘The Blind Men and the Elephant’ given the concept is not easily defined or captured in words. These creative tools also invite a sensory, as well as intellectual, understanding of the concept, something which would be encouraged by lawyers within the movement.
What, for you, is the main difficulty with today’s mainstream legal system?I think one of the issues is that people are considered commodities. Clients are sources of money and lawyers are not sources of conflict-resolution but rather people come to lawyers so that they can “beat somebody up”. And so, in both cases, the process is not about resolving conflict, peace-making, healing or getting beyond something. It is not about creation, it is not about love. If it was about all of those things the practice would be designed differently and society would be designed differently, And it is one of the reasons that I am so interested in transforming the practice of law because it is that kind of design, those kinds of values, that I want to promote.
It can be challenging to sustain these beautiful visions when faced with the reality of the problems we see everywhere in the world. Where do you turn for sustenance and courage?I am constantly inspired by the people that I meet and their courage in stepping out and being different when it looks like they are all alone. That sustains me a lot as well as being part of a community that is still able to be idealistic. I am almost 59 years old and I am supposed to be jaded and cynical and, for goodness sake, I am a lawyer! All lawyers are cynical right? But no, I am not, I really am constantly inspired. I am inspired that you created this magazine, you listened to what you were called to do. And I am inspired that I am having dinner this evening with a lawyer who has gone to India to do yoga training. She was looking for what to do next and she got the call to go to India. The people in my community and the people I meet on my travels are just magical, the greatest tribe. And that is the main thing. Travel is my spiritual practice because it brings me in touch with, not only these people, but the synchronicities of the world.


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Second Chances

1/5/2019

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There are really great stories out there about individuals and organizations that make a daily choice to be that person or organization that cares enough, that sees the potential in all humans to know that it’s all about second chances. We all get second chances all the time; do-overs; get-out-of-jai-free (or for a nominal fee) cards and more that we take for granted. We think nothing of it. In fact we expect it.
 
You may not have gotten a speeding ticket lately, but you might have picked up a few parking tickets here and there. What happens? Well, for most of us we pay the fine; maybe go to driving school (keep those points off the ol’ record), but unless you’ve made it a practice of collecting these things, you can consider yourself awarded a second chance. A second chance to use the public roads to go to and from work, maybe pick up your kids from school, or make that very important meeting that could launch your dreams. 
 
Typically, individuals released from incarceration, although no longer behind bars, are nevertheless still in shackles. The restrictions are many as to freedom of movement, where one is allowed to live and with whom. Many programs that once served to aid the reentry process of the recently released have been made out of reach for the individual or dissolved altogether. As rules go, I doubt you or I could survive under such restrictions, yet we demand from those who have so much less to survive and succeed with few resources and fewer support mechanisms in place than is humane. Yet we think nothing of building up a case against those with a past that included incarceration.
 
What happens to you if you get laid off or even fired from your job? You’ve got a couple of options, find another job or maybe collect unemployment. Right? So, say you find that new job and before you can begin, they do a background check on you. What will they find? How generous do you think they will be with you? How forgiving, accepting, accommodating? How likely do you think it is that you will even get to that first day of work if you are recently released from prison and the best you can hope for is maybe a day laborer’s job at less than minimum wage under the table? Or you get hired and you work your first week and when it comes time for the paycheck there isn’t one, because your employer just fired you because of your prison background and you have no pay for the work you did? Where are the second chances here?
 
There is a third option, helping individuals discover their true calling, help them turn that calling into a business and ask community leaders to roll up those sleeves, see these individuals as worth mentoring into an entrepreneur that can stand on his or her own among other businesses and thrive.
 
One such organization is making this happen in a big way; Defy Ventures, Inc. In their “About Us” page, Defy Ventures says the following: “Defy Ventures Transforms the lives o business leaders and people with criminal histories through their collaboration along the entrepreneurial journey.” They do more then what is expected from the typical nonprofit agency missioned to help recently released individuals find jobs, shelter and reconnect with family. They help each individual rewrite the story they tell about themselves. Give them solid tools to succeed, mentors from the business world and the type of support and encouragement most of us would envy.
 
Watch the full video from Second Chances: MDC Humanitarian Award Recipient and see for yourself what can be done when passion is leading the way.
 
http://library.fora.tv/2015/05/11/Second_Chances_MDC_Humanitarian_Award_Recipient
 
Catherine Hoke (Rohr) tells the story of how she saw the value inherent in the men that were incarcerated with those running major corporations and thriving. 
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    Inspired by Herb Blake

    This section is devoted to the inspired work of those dedicated to addressing the needs of the recently released from incarceration, individuals that have been victimized and the community  to heal and know that in the human community all things are possible.

    I dedicate this page to my late husband, Herb Blake and his work inside and outside prison and his book: The Last Place I Looked, which can be purchased from Amazon & Balboa Press.

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