Juan Tauri and Antje Deckert editorial (https://ojs.aut.ac.nz/dcj/issue/view/3):
And finally, when Decolonizing Criminology and Justice was conceived and then designed it was done so with the hope that it would offer much more than the standard academic journal, with the usual focus on research articles and book reviews. So, it is with great pleasure that we can include the very first poem in this issue, Biko Agozino's fine work Reparations: An interpretation of T.S Eliot's 'Burnt Norton' quartet, whose five opening lines poignantly summarize the focus and intent of this journal:
Past crimes and present crimes
May be repaired in future judgements,
And future crimes are rooted in past crimes.
If all crimes are always open to reparations,
No crime is ever irreparable.
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