Abstract Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant pattern of prisoner adaptation. Using data from a qualitative study of men serving life sentences in England, I argue that adaptation may in fact vary more than these studies imply both because of the prisoner’s age when sentenced and because of the circumstances of particular offences. Participants’ engagement with the prison’s rehabilitative ‘offer’ depended on how the sentence affected their life course and what they understood to be the moral ramifications of the offence. These findings refine understanding of adaptation and suggest that a renewed focus on moral reflexivity may bear fruit in future prison research.Non
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The central purpose of the article is to explore the psychic components of the early pains of impris...
Adaptation to imprisonment in a correctional facility is a convicted person’s psychological and beha...
Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant pattern of prisoner adaptation...
Recent theorisations of adaptation to life imprisonment emphasise the role of moral and biographical...
© 2016 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Given the increasing number of prisoners serving life s...
Drawing on an amended version of a survey employed in three previous studies, this article reports t...
Desistance research has pushed criminologists to develop a nuanced conceptual account of criminal id...
In England and Wales, life imprisonment is the ultimate sanction for the most serious crimes. The in...
The article is based on my master’s thesis and addresses the issue of the prisonisation of inmates s...
“Life means life” is a mantra of elected state officials who would rather spend already-compromised...
Little attention has been paid to the way in which criminal punishment is interpreted and narrated b...
A reflection on the rise in extremely lengthy life sentences for young adults - what happens to the ...
There is a small, but growing, body of research on prisoners' families. It has shown that these fami...
Specific expectations of the sentenced person arise from the aims of sentencing, vague and philosoph...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Interview [format: audio file and Word transcripts] ...
The central purpose of the article is to explore the psychic components of the early pains of impris...
Adaptation to imprisonment in a correctional facility is a convicted person’s psychological and beha...
Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant pattern of prisoner adaptation...
Recent theorisations of adaptation to life imprisonment emphasise the role of moral and biographical...
© 2016 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Given the increasing number of prisoners serving life s...
Drawing on an amended version of a survey employed in three previous studies, this article reports t...
Desistance research has pushed criminologists to develop a nuanced conceptual account of criminal id...
In England and Wales, life imprisonment is the ultimate sanction for the most serious crimes. The in...
The article is based on my master’s thesis and addresses the issue of the prisonisation of inmates s...
“Life means life” is a mantra of elected state officials who would rather spend already-compromised...
Little attention has been paid to the way in which criminal punishment is interpreted and narrated b...
A reflection on the rise in extremely lengthy life sentences for young adults - what happens to the ...
There is a small, but growing, body of research on prisoners' families. It has shown that these fami...
Specific expectations of the sentenced person arise from the aims of sentencing, vague and philosoph...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>Interview [format: audio file and Word transcripts] ...
The central purpose of the article is to explore the psychic components of the early pains of impris...
Adaptation to imprisonment in a correctional facility is a convicted person’s psychological and beha...