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Desisters in the Making? Exploring the Capacity to Desist During Community Transition Among a Small Longitudinal Panel of Releases Journal of Crime & Justice

NCJ Number
252663
Journal
Journal of Crime & Justice Volume: 41 Issue: 1 Dated: 2018 Pages: 62-80
Author(s)
Eric Grommon; Jason Rydberg
Date Published
2018
Length
19 pages
Annotation
Since self-narratives signal readiness for change and the capacity to desist from crime, the current study used longitudinal interviews with 39 male subjects in a small, industrialized, Midwestern U.S. city to examine self-narratives as a means of obtaining additional understanding of desistance and the malleable components that shape the process.
Abstract
In contrast to existing long-term desistance studies, this research considers the presence of desistance-promoting narratives during reentry. Data on three waves of interviews conducted shortly after release and three or more months after the first interview are presented. Results indicate that returning prisoners engage with desistance-promoting themes during the immediate reentry process, and that the prevalence and importance of these themes change with additional time in the community. The implications of these findings for reentry policy, practice, and research are discussed. (publisher abstract modified)