NCJ Number
241632
Journal
Criminology & Criminal Justice Volume: 12 Issue: 5 Dated: November 2012 Pages: 527-547
Date Published
November 2012
Length
21 pages
Annotation
This article explores desistance in process among serious offenders residing in democratic therapeutic communities.
Abstract
Drawing upon semi-ethnographic research, this article explores desistance in process among serious offenders residing in democratic therapeutic communities. It is argued that offender rehabilitation in therapeutic communities involves a process of purposive and agentic reconstruction of identity and narrative reframing, so that a 'new' and 'better' person emerges whose attitudes and behaviors cohere with long-term desistance from crime. This is possible because the prison-based therapeutic community, with its commitment to a radically 'different' culture and mode of rehabilitation, socially enables, produces and reinforces the emergence of someone 'different'. The article therefore develops existing understandings of change in forensic therapeutic communities, and reaffirms theories of desistance which emphasize the importance of pro-social changes to the offender's personal identity and self-narrative. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage Journals.