Roundtable Session In-person November Annual Meeting 2025

Prison Abolition as Lived Religious Peacebuilding

Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

This roundtable will bring together U.S.-based practitioners of restorative justice (RJ), transformative justice (TJ), and prison abolition from within and outside academe. It will both situate their praxes as peacebuilding practice and explore these entwined (and sometimes at-tension) modalities as lived religion. While conceiving of prison abolition as a religious practice of peacebuilding is novel, one quickly finds similarities between them in the work of community-led interventions in violence, exercises of imagination, social analysis, and critiques of dominant systems. This roundtable will contextualize prison abolition, RJ and TJ within the peace studies subfield of religious studies, allow participants to engage one another in terms of what, concretely, their praxes entail; the degree to which their activities, commitments, and coalitions constitute lived religious practice; and how everyone can learn from differing emphases in praxes with the potential for collaboration. 

Audiovisual Requirements
LCD Projector and Screen
Comments
As a panel we would like to request Saturday or Sunday in accommodation of our non-AAR affiliated panelists. Thank you for your consideration!

Additionally, Amanda Napior is at Wheaton College, Massachusetts not Boston University.
Tags
#lived religion
#Prison Abolition
#peacebuilding
# trauma studies
#Restorative Justice
#Liberation Theology
#five percenter
#peace studies
#social movements
#social justice activism