JUST Alternatives is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit committed to the advancement of promising Victim-Centered practices in justice and corrections. Our mission is to identify and support effective alternative approaches to reducing violence and victimization in our culture by affirming crime victims’ needs and the power of personal accountability among violent offenders. We strive to cultivate a broader understanding of victims’ issues, offender issues, successful corrections practices, and the relationship of each to the safety of our communities.

We know how alone victims can feel in the unrelenting aftermath of violence, loss, and post-traumatic stress.

Our Victim/Survivor Support work is rooted in the simple power of deep, compassionate, and non-judgmental listening to victims and survivors of traumatic violence, violation, and loss. We know how alone they can feel in the unrelenting aftermath of violence, loss, and post-traumatic stress, and how hard it can be for victims/survivors to feel heard -- by the justice system, by society, and even by close family and friends. We work to provide opportunities for these survivors to feel heard through conversation, correspondence, or advocacy. We know the power of deep listening -- without judgment or expectation. And we know that, for those who need most to be heard, listening itself is the answer.

Our victim offender dialogue (VOD) work provides safe opportunities for survivors of violence and violation to give further voice to the unrelenting trauma of their experiences, and for violent offenders to face more fully the terrible effects of their actions. While VOD is not necessarily a path for all survivors, our victim-centered/offender-sensitive approach can enable unique opportunities. At its very best, it can provide survivors with answers to some of their questions and a chance to be heard directly by their offenders. This can enable in offenders a more personal understanding of the effects of their crimes and violations and, in some cases, a more enduring commitment to self-actualized change and rehabilitation.

Our VOD facilitator training programs – anchored in an understanding of the profound effects of violence and victimization upon individuals, families, and communities – provide tools and skills to help make new meaning from both the victim/survivor and the violent offender experience.

In addition to our direct training, educational, and liaison work with victims/survivors, offenders, service providers, and community members, our efforts include research and presentations that focus on the conditions underlying violence and victimization, and explore promising approaches to issues of incarceration, accountability, rehabilitation, re-entry, and recidivism in the United States and around the world.