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Practice without prospect: the imaginary response to the recording and investigations of sexual assault in prison

Practice without prospect: the imaginary response to the recording and investigations of sexual assault in prison
Practice without prospect: the imaginary response to the recording and investigations of sexual assault in prison
This article draws on Incident Reporting System data from the National Offender Management Service over a ten-year period (2004–2014) and limited, small-scale interviews with four custodial managers. Pat Carlen's work (2008) on imaginary penalities provides the theoretical framework for an assessment of the reporting, recording and initial response to sexual assaults in prisons in England and Wales. The article argues that the recording of sexual assaults became part of a response to new management systems that emphasised compliance, process and audit rather than realising safety in custody. Although the data shows substantial levels of initial activity among staff it is, in essence, practice without prospect. The article suggests that outcomes generally for sexual assaults in prisons in England and Wales are uncertain. Incident reporting has become a bureaucratic process ‘or paper shadow’, which Goffman described as showing ‘what has been done by whom, what is to be done, and who last had responsibility for it’ (Goffman 1961: 73).
imaginary penalities, prison, safety in custody, sexual assault
1362-4806
Wilkinson, Joanne
c847c6ae-57bd-46c0-86ee-4588dc9e1338
Fleming, Jenny
61449384-ccab-40b3-b494-0852c956ca19
Wilkinson, Joanne
c847c6ae-57bd-46c0-86ee-4588dc9e1338
Fleming, Jenny
61449384-ccab-40b3-b494-0852c956ca19

Wilkinson, Joanne and Fleming, Jenny (2023) Practice without prospect: the imaginary response to the recording and investigations of sexual assault in prison. Theoretical Criminology. (doi:10.1177/13624806231184825).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article draws on Incident Reporting System data from the National Offender Management Service over a ten-year period (2004–2014) and limited, small-scale interviews with four custodial managers. Pat Carlen's work (2008) on imaginary penalities provides the theoretical framework for an assessment of the reporting, recording and initial response to sexual assaults in prisons in England and Wales. The article argues that the recording of sexual assaults became part of a response to new management systems that emphasised compliance, process and audit rather than realising safety in custody. Although the data shows substantial levels of initial activity among staff it is, in essence, practice without prospect. The article suggests that outcomes generally for sexual assaults in prisons in England and Wales are uncertain. Incident reporting has become a bureaucratic process ‘or paper shadow’, which Goffman described as showing ‘what has been done by whom, what is to be done, and who last had responsibility for it’ (Goffman 1961: 73).

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 June 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 July 2023
Published date: 12 July 2023
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2023.
Keywords: imaginary penalities, prison, safety in custody, sexual assault

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479161
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479161
ISSN: 1362-4806
PURE UUID: ba5c5d75-4c11-4ca6-a707-3a983050fab9
ORCID for Jenny Fleming: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7913-3345

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2023 16:40
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:20

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Contributors

Author: Joanne Wilkinson
Author: Jenny Fleming ORCID iD

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