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Glossary›Circle Process

Glossary

Circle Process

A structured group dialogue practice rooted in Indigenous peacemaking traditions where participants speak and listen in turn, often using a talking piece.

What is Circle Process?

Circle Process—also called Circle Practice, Peacemaking Circles, or simply Circles—is a facilitated group dialogue method in which participants sit in a circular formation and pass a designated object (a talking piece) to regulate turn-taking. Only the person holding the talking piece speaks, while others listen without interruption. The practice aims to create equitable space for all voices, foster deep listening, build community, and address conflict or shared questions through collective wisdom rather than hierarchical decision-making.

Unlike conventional meetings or therapy groups, Circle Process emphasizes non-hierarchical participation, ceremonial opening and closing rituals, and the physical symbol of the circle itself as representing wholeness, interconnection, and shared humanity. Circles may be used for conflict resolution, community building, organizational decision-making, healing from trauma, or spiritual inquiry.

Origins & Lineage

Circle Process draws directly from Indigenous peacemaking and council traditions practiced for centuries by Native American, First Nations, and other Indigenous peoples across North America. Specific council traditions include those of the Tlingit, Navajo (Diné), and Ojibwe nations, among many others, where community members gathered in circles to resolve disputes, make decisions, and maintain social cohesion.

The contemporary resurgence of Circle Process in Western institutional settings began in the 1980s through the restorative justice movement. In 1996, Judge Barry Stuart of the Yukon Territorial Court in Canada introduced sentencing circles influenced by Indigenous practices, bringing Circle Process into the formal justice system. Around the same time, Kay Pranis, a restorative justice planner for the Minnesota Department of Corrections, began adapting Indigenous circle practices for use in criminal justice settings, schools, and communities. Her 2005 book The Little Book of Circle Processes became a foundational text.

Parallel to the restorative justice lineage, the human potential movement of the 1970s-90s saw non-Indigenous practitioners like Jack Zimmerman and Virginia Coyle develop “Council” practices influenced by Indigenous traditions, detailed in their 1996 book The Way of Council. Christina Baldwin and Ann Linnea published The Circle Way in 2010, further codifying secular circle practices for organizational and spiritual contexts.

How It’s Practiced

A Circle Process typically begins with participants arranging chairs or cushions in a circle with no tables or barriers. A facilitator (called a circle keeper or guardian) opens with a brief ceremony—lighting a candle, sharing an intention, or offering a reading—to mark the transition from ordinary time into intentional gathering space.

The keeper introduces a talking piece (stone, feather, stick, or any meaningful object) and explains that only the holder may speak. The piece moves sequentially around the circle, either clockwise or following participant choice. Speakers may share, ask questions, or simply pass the piece in silence. Rounds continue until the group reaches natural completion or time limits.

Guidelines typically include: speak from personal experience (“I” statements), listen without judgment, maintain confidentiality, and respect the talking piece. Circles may last 90 minutes to several hours. Some circles address specific conflicts or decisions; others explore open-ended questions like “What brings you joy?” or “How do we want to be together?”

The keeper does not direct content but holds the container—tracking time, re-stating agreements if needed, and guiding opening/closing rituals.

Circle Process Today

Circle Process has been adopted across diverse settings: restorative justice programs in schools and prisons, corporate team-building, nonprofit governance, 12-step recovery groups, interfaith dialogue, and conscious community gatherings. Training programs are offered by organizations including the Center for Justice & Peacebuilding at Eastern Mennonite University, the International Institute for Restorative Practices, and numerous Indigenous-led training collectives.

In spiritual and personal growth communities, Circle Process appears at retreat centers, men’s and women’s groups, rites-of-passage programs, and eco-villages. Teachers often blend circle practices with other modalities like meditation, somatic work, or artistic expression. Online adaptations emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic, though many practitioners argue that in-person presence is essential to the form’s power.

Controversy exists around cultural appropriation: some Indigenous leaders have expressed concern about non-Indigenous practitioners commercializing or distorting sacred traditions without proper acknowledgment, relationship, or reciprocity with source communities.

Common Misconceptions

Circle Process is not group therapy, though therapeutic benefits may arise. It lacks the clinical frame, expert interpretation, or treatment protocols of therapy. It is also not merely “taking turns talking”—the ritualized structure, talking piece, and communal intention distinguish it from round-robin sharing.

Circles do not guarantee conflict resolution or consensus. They create conditions for honest dialogue, but outcomes depend on participant willingness and skill. The practice is not inherently “spiritual” in a religious sense, though many circles include spiritual elements; secular applications exist in schools and justice systems.

Finally, Circle Process is not a neutral technique divorced from culture. Its Indigenous roots carry ethical obligations around acknowledgment, proper training, and avoiding exploitative use.

How to Begin

Readers new to Circle Process might start with Kay Pranis’s The Little Book of Circle Processes (2005) or Baldwin and Linnea’s The Circle Way (2010) for accessible overviews and practical guidance. Many communities offer free or low-cost circle practice groups; search for “circle practice near me” or “peacemaking circles” in your area.

For training, seek programs that acknowledge Indigenous origins and ideally involve Indigenous teachers. The Center for Circle Stewardship and local restorative justice organizations often list trainings. Attending a circle as a participant before facilitating one is essential—the practice is learned experientially, not intellectually.

Those wishing to honor the lineage should educate themselves on the specific Indigenous nations whose practices inspired Circle Process, consider direct support or land acknowledgment, and approach the work with humility about cultural transmission.

Related terms

restorative justicecouncil practicetalking circlecommunity buildingconflict resolutionindigenous wisdom
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