NCJ Number
232632
Date Published
2010
Length
21 pages
Annotation
Based on ethnographic research both inside and outside a South African prison, this chapter argues that asking offenders about their perspectives on their offenses produces a one-sided version of both what happened during a criminal event and of the offender's motivation for his/her behavior.
Abstract
Due to the relatively limited, often one-time and one-sided interaction between the offender and the researcher, the author concludes that interviews with offenders are not a useful method when used alone. When the aim is to know what happened during a criminal event and the motivations for getting involved as offender, interviews should constitute part of various kinds of methodological triangulations in order to generate valid knowledge. This conclusion is illustrated through ethnographic data collected from one juvenile offender in Cape Town, South Africa. The offender, referred to with the pseudonym "Dregan," was first met by the author in 2004 in Pollsmoor prison, where he was incarcerated for a murder he committed when he was 17 years old. When released from prison the first time, Dregan became a part of the author's PhD research. This involved the author becoming a part of various aspects of Dregan's life. This included getting to know his friends and family, as well as accompanying him to places he frequented. The interaction also involved interviews, participating in group discussion, completing a questionnaire, and taking pictures with a disposable camera. Through his fieldwork, the author triangulated methods and also actors and contexts. The chapter describes the kinds of triangulation used as well as the kind of perspectives developed of Dregan and the violent situation in which he became involved. The case illustrates the triangulation as a means of validating the data collected, so as to reach the most probable perspectives on the dynamics of Dregan's violent offending. 19 references