Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and necessary contributors to policies and practices affecting them. In this paper, we examine what this type of inclusion feels like for criminalised people who share their lived experiences in penal voluntary sector organisations. Focus groups conducted in England and Scotland illustrated how this work was experienced as both safe, inclusionary and rewarding and exclusionary, shame-provoking and precarious. We highlight how these tensions of 'user involvement' impact criminalised individuals and compound wider inequalities within this sector. The individual, emotional and structural implications of activating lived experience therefore require care...
Debates surrounding the ostensibly ‘transformative’ potential of personalisation for social work ser...
Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seeming...
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatm...
Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and nece...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in British Jour...
Mixed economies of welfare have seen increasing numbers of service users funnelled into voluntary, r...
This is qualitative data from six focus groups, undertaken 2019–2020, including a total of 32 penal ...
Mass incarceration and supervision operate through a mixed economy. Using the case study of Samarita...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: [Quinn, K., Tomczak, P., & Buck, G. (202...
Whilst the value of lived experience in the helping process is recognised in a range of settings inc...
Recent penal policy developments in many jurisdictions suggest an increasing role for voluntary orga...
The voluntary sector acts as the last line of defense for some of the most marginalized people in so...
Volunteers and voluntary organisations play significant roles pervading criminal justice. They are k...
This paper explores the concept of ‘penal drift’ - the gradual adoption of criminal justice culture,...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Tomczak, P. & Buck, G. (2019). The crimi...
Debates surrounding the ostensibly ‘transformative’ potential of personalisation for social work ser...
Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seeming...
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatm...
Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and nece...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in British Jour...
Mixed economies of welfare have seen increasing numbers of service users funnelled into voluntary, r...
This is qualitative data from six focus groups, undertaken 2019–2020, including a total of 32 penal ...
Mass incarceration and supervision operate through a mixed economy. Using the case study of Samarita...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: [Quinn, K., Tomczak, P., & Buck, G. (202...
Whilst the value of lived experience in the helping process is recognised in a range of settings inc...
Recent penal policy developments in many jurisdictions suggest an increasing role for voluntary orga...
The voluntary sector acts as the last line of defense for some of the most marginalized people in so...
Volunteers and voluntary organisations play significant roles pervading criminal justice. They are k...
This paper explores the concept of ‘penal drift’ - the gradual adoption of criminal justice culture,...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Tomczak, P. & Buck, G. (2019). The crimi...
Debates surrounding the ostensibly ‘transformative’ potential of personalisation for social work ser...
Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seeming...
The Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatm...