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Moral economy and the pursuit of desistance

Moral economy and the pursuit of desistance
Moral economy and the pursuit of desistance
Conventionally, the use of imprisonment is justified partly by its supposed reformative potential (McNeill and Schinkel 2016), and rates of reoffending among life- and long-sentenced prisoners are relatively low (Ministry of Justice 2017). Yet criminological research has not generally considered the identity changes which occur among long-term prisoners during their sentences as potential evidence of desistance. Instead, research on desistance from crime has generally focused on what happens after a sentence of imprisonment, which is itself, implicitly, a purely punitive and negative experience. The sociology of imprisonment does not support such a flat, untextured view. It suggests that long-term prisoners often lose and then rediscover a sense of agency and identity (Crewe, Hulley and Wright 2016), change in their orientation towards their offences (ibid; Ievins 2017), and undertake a range of ethical practices whose private and public meanings can signal reformed selfhood (Williams 2017). Because the moral and social environment of a prison is so dissimilar to the outside world, it is hard to describe these practices confidently as ‘desistance’, despite the obvious resemblances and the changes in behaviour which sometimes go with them. This project aims to integrate these two research perspectives, to ask how prisoners’ moral beliefs and ethical practices are shaped by the prison’s underlying ‘moral economy’, and whether these adaptations constitute desistance.
long-term imprisonment, desistance
Jarman, Ben
17792bef-9b37-408e-b734-acb707842715
Jarman, Ben
17792bef-9b37-408e-b734-acb707842715

Jarman, Ben (2018) Moral economy and the pursuit of desistance. Moral Understandings, Criminal Careers and Responses to Criminal Careers, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge, United Kingdom. 24 - 26 Sep 2018. (doi:10.17863/CAM.52925).

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

Conventionally, the use of imprisonment is justified partly by its supposed reformative potential (McNeill and Schinkel 2016), and rates of reoffending among life- and long-sentenced prisoners are relatively low (Ministry of Justice 2017). Yet criminological research has not generally considered the identity changes which occur among long-term prisoners during their sentences as potential evidence of desistance. Instead, research on desistance from crime has generally focused on what happens after a sentence of imprisonment, which is itself, implicitly, a purely punitive and negative experience. The sociology of imprisonment does not support such a flat, untextured view. It suggests that long-term prisoners often lose and then rediscover a sense of agency and identity (Crewe, Hulley and Wright 2016), change in their orientation towards their offences (ibid; Ievins 2017), and undertake a range of ethical practices whose private and public meanings can signal reformed selfhood (Williams 2017). Because the moral and social environment of a prison is so dissimilar to the outside world, it is hard to describe these practices confidently as ‘desistance’, despite the obvious resemblances and the changes in behaviour which sometimes go with them. This project aims to integrate these two research perspectives, to ask how prisoners’ moral beliefs and ethical practices are shaped by the prison’s underlying ‘moral economy’, and whether these adaptations constitute desistance.

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More information

Published date: 25 September 2018
Venue - Dates: Moral Understandings, Criminal Careers and Responses to Criminal Careers, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 2018-09-24 - 2018-09-26
Keywords: long-term imprisonment, desistance

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496365
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496365
PURE UUID: fbb8def4-4b96-41cf-a011-fbb152f32e15
ORCID for Ben Jarman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3527-5437

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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2024 17:49
Last modified: 14 Dec 2024 03:15

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Author: Ben Jarman ORCID iD

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