The talking circle — a deliberative practice used across many Indigenous traditions in which each member of a community speaks without interruption, listened to by all — is among the oldest and most effective human technologies for collective truth-telling and conflict resolution. It operates on principles that the dominant legal system struggles to implement: that every voice has worth, that speaking and listening are both required, and that justice is a process of communal weaving rather than adversarial combat. Its adoption in contemporary restorative justice programs is partial but promising.
Each step builds on the last.