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Offending and Desistance: The importance of social relations


Offending and Desistance: The importance of social relations

Hardback by Weaver, Beth

Offending and Desistance: The importance of social relations

£150.00

ISBN:
9781138799721
Publication Date:
21 Jul 2015
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:
Routledge
Pages:
274 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 15 May 2024
Offending and Desistance: The importance of social relations

Description

In Offending and Desistance, Beth Weaver examines the role of a co-offending peer group in shaping and influencing offending and desistance, focusing on three phases of their criminal careers: onset, persistence and desistance. While there is consensus across the body of desistance research that social relations have a role to play in variously constraining, enabling and sustaining desistance, no desistance studies have adequately analysed the dynamics or properties of social relations, or their relationship to individuals and social structures. This book aims to reset this balance. By examining the social relations and life stories of six Scottish men (in their forties), Weaver reveals the central role of friendship groups, intimate relationships and families of formation, employment and religious communities. She shows how, for different individuals, these relations triggered reflexive evaluation of their priorities, behaviours and lifestyles, but with differing results. Weaver's re-examination of the relationships between structure, agency, identity and reflexivity in the desistance process ultimately illuminates new directions for research, policy and practice. This book is essential reading for academics and students engaged in the study of criminology and criminal justice, delinquency, probation and criminal law.

Contents

1. Introduction 2. A critical review of desistance research 3. Critical realism and relational sociology: a conceptual framework for theorising desistance 4. The dynamics of co-offending: from formation to fragmentation 5. Work, family and transitional masculinities: Seth's story 6. Fighting, football and fathering: Harry's story 7. From delinquency to desistance and back again: Jed's story 8. Being, becoming and belonging: from gangs to God: Jay's story 9. Reflexivity, relationality, religiosity and recognition: Evan's story 10. An imprisoned life: Andy's Story 11. The dynamics of desistance 12. Conclusion.

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