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Saturday, May 18, 2019

Desistance

Criminology & sorry legal expert 2006 SAGE Publications (London, Thousand Oaks & New Delhi) and the British Society of Criminology. www. sagepublications. com ISSN 17488958 Vol 6(1) 3962 DOI 10. 1177/1748895806060666 A desistance substitution class for wrongdoer perplexity FERGUS McNEILL Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde, UK Abstr second In an in? uential member print in the British Journal of Social Work in 1979, Anthony Bottoms and Bill McWilliams proposed the adoption of a non- manipulation figure for probation coiffe.Their argument rested on a c arful and considered analysis non only of semi observational grounds ab out(p) the in military capability of rehabilitative word besides connaturally of theoretical, moral and philosophical questions to the highest degree much(prenominal)(prenominal)(prenominal) interventions. By 1994, emerging leaven close to the capability potentness of well-nigh intervention programmes was suf? cient to atomic number 82 beam of light Raynor and Maurice Vanst wholeness to point signi? send wordt revisions to the non- discussion effigy.In this article, it is argued that a different but equally germane(predicate) form of empirical enjointhat derived from desistance studiessuggests a withdraw to re-evaluate these earlier mental images for probation radiation diagram. This reevaluation is in addition required by the trifleation that such(prenominal) studies enable us to understand and theorize both desistance itself-importance and the role that penal professionals world power play in back up it.Ultimately, these empirical and theoretical insights drive us back to the complex interfaces in the midst of technical and moral questions that indifferent Bottoms and McWilliams and that should feature to a greater ex got prominently in contemporary debates roughly the futures of wrongdoer focusing and of our penal systems. make water Words desistance forcefulness ethics offender charge non pr each(prenominal)ing icon probation 39 40 Criminology & reprehensible Justice 6(1) IntroductionCritical analysts of the history of ideas in the probation service bring forth charted the various reconstructions of probation give that collect accompanied changes in penal theories, policies and sensibilities. Most famously, McWilliams (1983, 1985, 1986, 1987) describe the transformations of probation from a missionary endeavour that aimed to save souls, to a professionalized endeavour that aimed to cure offend through rehabilitative preaching, to a practical(a) endeavour that aimed to provide picks to custody and practical avail for offenders ( check up on as well Vanst nonpareil, 2004).More recent commentators construct suggested later transformations of probation practice related ? rst to its cast, in England and Wales, as punishment in the comp any(prenominal) and t presentfore to its change magnitude focus on put on the line trouble and public protect ion (Robinson and McNeill, 2004). In distributively of these eras of probation history, practitioners, academics and other commentators have sought to articulate radical epitomes for probation practice. though much of the debate about the merits of these images has concentrate on empirical questions about the ef? acy of different approaches to the treatment and management of offenders, probation paradigms also re? ect, unquestioningly or explicitly, developments both in the philosophy and in the sociology of punishment. The origins of this article ar similar in that the initial pulsation for the development of a desistance paradigm for offender management1 emerged from re places of desistance research (McNeill, 2003) and, more speci? cally, from the ? ndings of close to specially cardinal recent studies (Burnett, 1992 Rex, 1999 Maruna, 2001 Farrall, 2002).However, closer examination of some aspects of the desistance research also suggests a normative contingency for a new paradigm indeed, some of the empirical evidence come outs to make a necessity out of sure practice virtues. That these virtues argon arguably in decline as a result of the fore-fronting of risk and public protection in contemporary criminal umpire serves to make the development of the mooring for a desistance paradigm both timely and necessary. To that end, the structure of this article is as follows.It pops with summaries of both important paradigms for probation practicethe nontreatment paradigm (Bottoms and McWilliams, 1979) and the revised paradigm (Raynor and Vanstone, 1994). The article then proceeds with an analysis of the emerging theoretical and empirical case for a desistance paradigm. This section draws not only on the ? ndings of desistance studies but also on recent studies of the effectiveness of different approaches to securing private change in general and on recent developments in the what deeds belles-lettres in surgical incisionicular.The estimable ca se for a desistance paradigm is then advanced not only in the light of the empirical evidence about the practical necessity of certain modes of ethical practice, but also in the light of developments in the philosophy of punishment, close to notably the ideas associated with the work of the new replenishmentists (Lewis, 2005) and with Anthony duffs penal communications possible action (Duff, McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management 2001, 2003).In the concluding raillery, I analyze to sketch out some of the parameters of a desistance paradigm, though this is intended more as an attempt to chivvy debate about its development quite than to de? ne categorically its features. 41 Changing paradigms for probation practice committal to writing at the end of the 1970s, Bottoms and McWilliams declared the rent for a new paradigm for probation practice, a paradigm that is theoretically rigorous, which takes very seriously the limitations of the treatment model but which r enders to redirect the probation services tralatitious aims and set in the new penal and neighborly scene (1979 167).Bottoms and McWilliams proposed their paradigm against the backdrop of a prevailing view that treatment had been discredited both empirically and ethically. Though they did not review the empirical case in any great detail, they refer to several(prenominal) studies (Lipton et al. , 1975 Brody, 1976 Greenberg, 1976) as establishing the broad conclusion that dramatic reformative results are hard to discover and are usually absent (Bottoms and McWilliams, 1979 160). They also stressed the theoretical inadequacies of the treatment model, noting several ? aws in the analogy amid probation interventions and medical treatment ? st, execration is voluntary whereas well-nigh diseases are not second, crime is not pathological in any straightforward smack and third, individual treatment models sloppiness the fond causes of crime. Worse salvage, neglect of these ? aws produced ethical problems they argued that over-con? dence in the prospects for effecting change through treatment had permitted its advocates both to squeeze offenders into interventions (because the treatment provider was an expert who knew high hat) and to ignore offenders views of their admit situations (because offenders were victims of their own lack of insight).Perhaps most insidiously of all, at heart this ideology coerced treatment could be justi? ed in offenders own best takes. Bottoms and McWilliams also discerned an important underlying con? ict between the determinism implied in diagnosis and treatment and the frequently stressed casework linguistic rule of client selfdetermination (1979 166). How can offenders be simultaneously the objects on whom psychological, physical and cordial forces operate (as the term diagnosis implies) and the authors of their own futures (as the principle of self-determination requires)?Bottoms and McWilliams hope was that by exposi ng the weaknesses of the treatment paradigm, they would book for a renaissance of the probation services traditional core values of hope and respect for persons. They suggested that the four primary aims of the service are and have been 1 2 3 4 The training of inhibit encourage for offenders The statutory supervision of offenders Diverting appropriate offenders from custodial sentences The reduction of crime (1979 168). 42 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) It is their discussion of the ? rst and second of these objectives that is most germane(predicate) to the discussion here.However, it is worth noting ? rst that, for Bottoms and McWilliams, the problem with the treatment model was that it assumed that the fourth objective must(prenominal) be achieved through the pursuit of the ? rst three an assumption that they suggested could not be sustained empirically. 2 With regard to the provision of jock as opposed to treatment, Bottoms and McWilliams rejected the objecti? cation of offenders implied in the casework relationship, wherein the offender becomes an object to be treated, elderly or managed in and through amicable policy and professional practice. One subject of this objecti? ation, they suggested, is that the formulation of treatment plans rests with the expert the approach is essentially of? cer-centred. Bottoms and McWilliams (1979 173) suggested, by way of contrast, that in the non-treatment paradigm (a) treatment (b) Diagnosis (c) customers Dependent Need as the basis for social work action becomes becomes becomes Help overlap Assessment Collaboratively De? ned Task as the basis for social work action In this formulation, help includes but is not moderate to material help probation may continue to address emotional or psychological dif? ulties, but this is no longer its raison detre. Critically, the test of any proposed intervention technique is that it must help the client. Bottoms and McWilliams (1979 174) explicitly disavowed any claim that the help model would be bene? cial in the reduction of crime. 3 Having reconceived of probation practice as help rather than treatment, Bottoms and McWilliams discussion of probations second aim, the statutory supervision of offenders, explored the implicit tensions between help and surveillance.Accepting that probation of? cers are law enforcement agents as well as helpers, they drew on an article by Raynor (1978) that argued for a crucial distinction between coercion and constraint choice under constraint is chastely acceptable manipulative coercion is not (Bottoms and McWilliams, 1979 177). Following Raynor, they suggested that fashioning this distinction meaningful required probation of? cers actively to seek, within the constraints of the probation order, to maximize the area of choice for the offender.Their paradigm therefore invoked a distinction between the requisite requirements obligate by the court (with the offenders constrained consent) and the substantiv e content of the support march. In the latter connection, the client should be free to choose to accept or reject help without terror of further sanctions. Put another way, the authority for supervision derives from the court but the authority for help resides in the offender. For Bottoms and McWilliams this required that the (then) legal requirement of consent by defendants to probation and partnership ervice should be taken much more seriously indeed, they suggested that so as to vitiate compulsory help McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management arising from a probation recommendation, defendants consent to such recommendations should be required. Where consent was absent, no such recommendation should be made. xv years later, Peter Raynor and Maurice Vanstone (1994) argued that the non-treatment paradigma paradigm that they clearly regarded as being well befitting of the in? uence that it had exercised in the intervening yearswas none the slight in shoot of re vision.The resurgence of optimism about the potential effectiveness of some forms of treatment guide Raynor and Vanstone to argue that the foundations of the non-treatment paradigm, built as they were out of a mixture of doubt and scepticism about the crime-reducing potential of rehabilitation, have produced cracks in the structure (1994 396) By uncoupling helping offenders from crime reduction, the paradigm is prevented from exploring whether work with individuals on their idea, behaviour and attitudes has any relevance to crime reduction. menses k this instantadays conductge of research into effectiveness necessitates, therefore, a rede? ing of the concept of appropriate help in a way that retains the principle of collaboration, and the stress on client needs, but which incorporates informed practice concentrate on in? uencing and helping individuals to stop pique . . . This should not detract from the need to address the social and economic context of crime. (Raynor and Vans tone, 1994 398) 43 It is clear that Raynor and Vanstone (1994) were not advocating a return to a treatment paradigm rather, in their discussion of intervention programmes, they explicitly rejected Bottoms and McWilliams dichotomization of treatment and help.More speci? cally, Raynor and Vanstone questioned the assumption that critiques of psychodynamic approaches as involving disguised coercion, denial of clients views, the objecti? cation of populate, and a demonstrable lack of effectiveness when applied to offenders (1994 399) could be equally applied to all forms of treatment. This false assumption, they argued, led Bottoms and McWilliams to ignore other possible bases for intervention outside the medical model and fosterd the reader to determine all attempts to in? uence offenders as ethically objectionable treatment (Raynor and Vanstone, 1994 400).A further crucial problem with the non-treatment paradigm rested in its neglect of victims. The arguments of left realist crimino logists (Young, 1988) persuaded Raynor and Vanstone (1994) that the traditional probation value of respect for persons had to include the actual and potential victims of crime. This in turn implied that the extent to which client (that is, offender) choice could be respect and unconditional help could be offered had some necessary limitations essentially, probation had to accept an obligation to work to bowdlerise the harms caused by crime, as well as the ills that provoke it.Thus Compensatory help and empowerment of offenders are a proper response to situations where individuals have had few opportunities to avoid crime, but 44 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) their purpose is not s implicate to widen offenders choices it includes doing so in a manner consistent with a wider goal of crime reduction. Such a goal is not simply in the interests of the powerful although criminal nicety in an unequal society re? ects and is belie by its inequalities, the least powerful suffer som e of the most common kinds of crime and are most in need of protection from it. This includes, of hang, many offenders who are themselves victims of crime . . . ) (Raynor and Vanstone, 1994 401) Raynor and Vanstone (1994 402) concluded by adapting Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) nonrepresentational compact of their paradigm (a) Help becomes Help consistent with a commitment to the reduction of harm Explicit converse and talks offering opportunities for informed consent to involvement in a process of change Collaboratively de? ned travail germane(predicate) to criminogenic needs, and potentially effective in meeting them b) Shared assessment becomes (c) Collaboratively de? ned task becomes In equipment casualty of both organizational change and practice development, the 10 years that followed the publication of Raynor and Vanstones (1994) article have been even more tumultuous than the years between the publication of the non-treatment paradigm and its revision. It is beyond th e scope of this article to give an account of these changes (see Nellis, 1999 Raynor and Vanstone, 2002 Mair, 2004 Robinson and McNeill, 2004).Indeed, since the purpose of this article is to consider how the practice of offender management should be suppose in the light of the desistance research, there is some merit in ignoring how it has been reconstructed for more political and pragmatic drives. That said, two particular developments require comment. The ? rst relates to changes in formulations of the purposes of probation since the publication of the earlier paradigms.Without entering into the ongoing debates about the recasting of probations purposes south of the border (see Robinson and McNeill, 2004 Worrall and Hoy, 2005), it is suf? cient to state that, in contrast to the four aims outlined by Bottoms and McWilliamsaims which were still uncontested by Raynor and Vanstone in 1994the new National Offender Management Service, incorporating prisons and probation, exists to man age offenders and in so doing to provide a service to the law-abiding public. Its objectives are to punish offenders and to reduce re-offending (Blunkett, 2004 10).The second development concerns the action of a particular approach to developing effective probation practice in England and Wales in McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management the form of the what work initiative (McNeill, 2001, 2004a). In effect, this initiative involves the imposition from the centre of an implicit what whole works paradigm for probation practice. Once again the debates about the characteristics, implications and ? aws of this paradigm are complex (see Mair, 2004). Perhaps he easiest way to summarize the paradigm however, is to suggest a further revision to Raynor and Vanstones (1994) adaptation of Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) schematic summary (a) Help consistent with a commitment to the reduction of harm (b) Explicit dialogue and negotiation offering opportunities for informed consent to involvement in a process of change (c) Collaboratively de? ned task relevant to criminogenic needs, and potentially effective in meeting them becomes Intervention required to reduce reoffending and protect the public master assessment of risk and need governed by the application of structured assessment instruments 5 becomes becomes Compulsory encounter in structured programmes and case management processes to address criminogenic needs as required elements of legal orders imposed irrespective of consent Theoretical and empirical arguments for a desistance paradigm4 A fundamental but perhaps indispensable problem with the non-treatment paradigm, the revised paradigm and the what works paradigm is that they begin in the wrong place that is, they begin by thinking about how practice (whether treatment, help or programmes) should be constructed without ? rst thinking about how change should be understood.For Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) this omission makes some sense, since th eir premise was that the prospects for practice securing individual change were bleak. However, for Raynor and Vanstone (1994) and for the prevailing what works paradigm, the problem is more serious presumptuousness their reasonable optimism about the prospects for individual rehabilitation, the absence of a well- actual theory of how rehabilitation occurs is more problematic. 5 Understanding desistance The change process involve in the rehabilitation of offenders is desistance from offending.The smooth impact that desistance research has had on policy and practice hitherto is both surprising and problematic because 46 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) knowledge about processes of desistance is clearly critical to our understandings of how and why ex-offenders come to change their behaviours. Indeed, edifice an understanding of the human processes and social contexts in and through which desistance occurs is a necessary precursor to developing practice paradigms put another way , constructions of practice should be embedded in understandings of desistance.The implications of such embedding are signi? cant and far-reaching. Maruna et al. (2004) draw a parallel with a related reassign in the ? eld of addictions away from the feel of treatment and towards the idea of convalescence, quoting an in? uential essay by William White (2000) Treatment was birthed as an adjunct to recovery, but, as treatment grew in size and status, it de? ned recovery as an adjunct of itself. The original perspective needs to be recaptured. Treatment institutions need to once again become servants of the larger recovery process and the association in which that recovery is nested and sustained . . (White, 2000, cited in Maruna et al. , 2004 9) Although the language of recovery may be inappropriate in relation to offenders, effrontery both that it implies a medical model and that it suggests a prior state of well-being that may neer have existed for many, the analogy is telling none the less. Put simply, the implication is that offender management services need to think of themselves less as providers of correctional treatment (that belongs to the expert) and more as supporters of desistance processes (that belong to the desister).In some respects, this shift in perspective, by re-emphasizing the offenders viewpoint, faculty re-invigorate the non-treatment paradigms rejection of the objecti? cation of the client and of the elevation of the therapist. However, it does so not by rejecting treatment per se, but by seeing professional intervention as being, in some sense, subservient to a wider process that belongs to the desister. Before proceeding further, more needs to be said about how processes of desistance should be understood and theorized.Maruna (2001) identi? es three broad theoretical perspectives in the desistance belles-lettres maturational reform, social splices theory and narrative theory. Maturational reform (or ontogenic) theories have the longest history and are establish on the established links between age and certain criminal behaviours, particularly pass crime. Social bonds (or sociogenic) theories suggest that ties to family, employment or educational programmes in early adulthood explain changes in criminal behaviour across the life course.Where these ties exist, they create a stake in conformity, a reason to go straight. Where they are absent, people who offend have less to lose from continuing to offend. floor theories have emerged from more qualitative research which stresses the signi? cance of prejudiced changes in the persons sense of self and identity, re? ected in changing motivations, greater concern for others and more consideration of the future. Bringing these perspectives together, Farrall stresses the signi? cance of theMcNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management relationships between objective changes in the offenders life and his or her inbred assessment of the value or signi? cance of these changes . . . the desistance literature has pointed to a range of chemical elements associated with the ending of active involvement in offending. Most of these factors are related to acquiring something (most commonly employment, a life partner or a family) which the desister values in some way and which initiates a reevaluation of his or her own life . . (Farrall, 2002 11) 47 Thus, desistance resides someplace in the interfaces between developing personal maturity, changing social bonds associated with certain life transitions, and the individual subjective narrative constructions which offenders build around these nominate events and changes. It is not just the events and changes that matter it is what these events and changes mean to the people elusive. clear this understanding implies that desistance itself is not an event (like being cured of a disease) but a process.Desistance is necessarily about ceasing offending and then refraining from further offending ove r an extended period (for more detailed discussions see Maruna, 2001 Farrall, 2002 Maruna and Farrall, 2004). Maruna and Farrall (2004) suggest that it is helpful to distinguish primary desistance (the achievement of an offence-free period) from thirdhand desistance (an underlying change in self-identity wherein the ex-offender labels him or herself as such). Although Bottoms et al. 2004) have raised some doubts about the value of this distinction on the grounds that it may exaggerate the importance of cognitive changes which need not always accompany desistance, it does seem likely that where offender managers are dealing with (formerly) persistent offenders, the distinction may be useful indeed, in those kinds of cases their role might be constructed as prompting, reenforcement and sustaining secondary desistance wherever this is possible.Moreover, further empirical support for the notion of secondary desistance (and its usefulness) might be found in Burnetts (1992) field of ef forts to desist among 130 adult spot offenders released from custody. Burnett noted that while eight out of ten, when interviewed pre-release, wanted to go straight six out of ten subsequently reported re-offending post-release. For many, the intention to be law-abiding was provisional in the sense that it did not represent a con? dent prediction only one in four reported that they would de? itely be able to desist. Importantly, Burnett discovered that those who were most con? dent and optimistic about desisting had greatest success in doing so. For the others, the provisional nature of intentions re? ected social dif? culties and personal problems that the men faced (Burnett, 2000 14). That this implies the need for intentions to desist to be grounded in changes of identity is perhaps supported by Burnetts ? ndings about different types of desisters. She discerned three 48Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) categories non-starters who adamantly denied that they were real criminals and, in fact, had fewer previous convictions than the others avoiders, for whom keeping out of prison was the signalize issue and converts who appeared to have decided that the costs of crime outweighed the bene? ts. Indeed, the converts were the most resolute and certain among the desisters. They had found new interests that were all-preoccupying and overturned their value system a partner, a child, a effective job, a new vocation.These were attainments that they were not prepared to jeopardize or which over-rode any interest in or need for property crime. (Burnett, 2000 14) Although Burnett notes that, for most of the men involved in her study, processes of desistance were characterized by ambivalence and vacillation, the over-turning of value systems and all pre-occupying new interests that characterized the converts seem to imply the kind of identity changes invoked in the notion of secondary desistance.Marunas (2001) study offers a particularly important contribution to unde rstanding secondary desistance by exploring the subjective dimensions of change. Maruna compared the narrative scripts of 20 persisters and 30 desisters who officed similar criminogenic traits and backgrounds and who lived in similarly criminogenic environments. In the condemnation script that emerged from the persisters, The condemned person is the cashier (although he or she militia plenty of blame for society as well). Active offenders . . . argely saw their life scripts as having been written for them a long time ago (Maruna, 2001 75). By contrast, the accounts of the desisters revealed a different narrative The redemption script begins by establishing the trueness and conventionality of the fibbera victim of society who gets involved with crime and drugs to achieve some sort of power over otherwise bleak circumstances. This deviance eventually becomes its own trap, however, as the narrator becomes ensnared in the vicious cycle of crime and imprisonment.Yet, with the help of some outside force, someone who believed in the ex-offender, the narrator is able to accomplish what he or she was always meant to do. Newly empowered, he or she now seeks to give something back to society as a display of gratitude. (Maruna, 2001 87) The desisters and the persisters shared the same sense of fatalism in their accounts of the development of their criminal careers however, Maruna reads the minimization of responsibility implied by this fatalism as evidence of the conventionality of their values and aspirations and of their need to believe in the essential goodness of the real me.Moreover, in their accounts of achieving change there is evidence that desisters have to discover internal representation in order to resist and overcome the criminogenic structural pressures that play upon them. This discovery of internal representation seems to McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management relate to the role of signi? cant others in envisioning an alternative iden tity and an alternative future for the offender even through periods when they cannot see these possibilities for themselves.Typically later in the process of change, involvement in generative activities (which usually make a contribution to the well-being of others) plays a part in testifying to the desister that an alternative agentic identity is being or has been forged. Intriguingly, the process of discovering agency, on one level at least, sheds interesting light on the apparent theoretical inconsistency that Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) inferred from the treatment paradigm that is, an inconsistency between its deterministic analysis of the causes of criminality and its focus on self-determination in the treatment process.Arguably what Maruna (2001) has revealed is the role of re? exivity in both revealing and producing shifts in the dynamic relationships between agency and structure (see also Farrall and Bowling, 1999). back up desistance The implications for practice of thi s developing evidence base have begun to be explored in a small bend of research studies that have focused on the role that probation may play in supporting desistance (for utilization Rex, 1999 Farrall, 2002 McCulloch, 2005). In one study of assisted desistance, Rex (1999) explored the experiences of 60 probationers.She found that those who attributed changes in their behaviour to probation supervision described it as active and participatory. Probationers commitments to desist appeared to be generated by the personal and professional commitment shown by their probation of? cers, whose reasonableness, pallidity and encouragement seemed to engender a sense of personal loyalty and accountability. Probationers interpreted advice about their behaviours and underlying problems as evidence of concern for them as people, and were motivated by what they saw as a display of interest in their wellbeing (Rex, 1999 375).Such evidence resonates with other arguments about the pivotal role tha t relationships play in effective interventions (Barry, 2000 Burnett, 2004 Burnett and McNeill, 2005 McNeill et al. , 2005). If secondary desistance (for those involved in persistent offending at least) requires a narrative reconstruction of identity, then it seems obvious why the relational aspects of practice are so signi? cant. Who would risk engaging in such a precarious and threatening venture without the reassurance of sustained and compassionate support from a trusted denotation?However, workers and working relationships are neither the only nor the most important resources in promoting desistance. Related studies of young people in trouble suggest that their own resources and social networks are often better at closure their dif? culties than professional staff (Hill, 1999). The potential of social networks is highlighted by resilience perspectives, which, in contrast with approaches that dwell on risks and/or needs, consider the protective factors and processes involved i n positive adaptation in spite of adversity.In footing of practice with young 49 50 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) people, such perspectives entail an emphasis on the recognition, exploitation and development of their competences, resources, skills and assets (Schoon and Bynner, 2003). In similar vein, but in relation to re-entry of ex-prisoners to society, Maruna and LeBel (2003) have made a convincing case for the development of strengths-based (rather than needs-based or risk-based) narratives and approaches.Drawing on both psychological and criminological evidence, they argue that such approaches would be likely both to enhance residence with parole conditions and to encourage exprisoners to achieve earned redemption (Bazemore, 1999) by focusing on the positive contributions through which they might make good to their communities. Thus promoting desistance also means striving to develop the offenders strengthsat both an individual and a social network levelin order to bui ld and sustain the momentum for change.In looking towards these personal and social contexts of desistance, the most recent and perhaps most wide-scale study of probation and desistance is particularly pertinent to the development of a desistance paradigm. Farrall (2002) explored the kick upstairs or lack of progress towards desistance achieved by a group of 199 probationers. Though over half of the strain evidenced progress towards desistance, Farrall found that desistance could be attributed to speci? c interventions by the probation of? cer in only a few cases, although help with ? ding work and mending damaged family relationships appeared particularly important. Desistance seemed to relate more clearly to the probationers motivations and to the social and personal contexts in which various obstacles to desistance were addressed. Farrall (2002) goes on to argue that interventions must pay greater concern to the community, social and personal contexts in which they are situate d (see also McCulloch, 2005). After all, social circumstances and relationships with others are both the object of the intervention and the medium through which . . . change can be achieved (Farrall, 2002 212, emphases added).Necessarily, this requires that interventions be focused not solely on the individual person and his or her perceived de? cits. As Farrall (2002) notes, the problem with such interventions is that while they can build human capital, for example, in footing of enhanced cognitive skills or modify employability, they cannot generate the social capital that resides in the relationships through which we achieve participation and inclusion in society. 6 Vitally, it is social capital that is necessary to encourage desistance. It is not enough to build capacities for change where change depends on opportunities to exercise capacities . . the process of desistance is one that is produced through an interplay between individual choices, and a range of wider social forc es, institutional and societal practices which are beyond the control of the individual (Farrall and Bowling, 1999 261). Barrys (2004) recent study provides another key reference point for exploring how themes of capital, agency, identity and transition play out speci? cally for younger people desisting from offending. Through in-depth interviews with 20 young women and 20 young men, Barry explored why they started and stopped offending and what in? enced or inhibited them McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management in that behaviour as they grew older. The young people revealed that their decisions about offending and desisting were related to their need to feel included in their social world, through friendships in childhood and through wider commitments in adulthood. The resolve displayed by the young people in desisting from offending seemed remarkable to Barry, particularly given that they were from disadvantaged backgrounds and were limited in their advance to mainst ream pportunities (employment, housing and social status) both because of their age and because of their social class. Barry recognizes crucially that Because of their transitional situation, many young people lack the status and opportunities of full citizens and thus have limited capacity for social recognition in terms of durable and legitimate means of both accumulating and expenditure capital through taking on responsibility and generativity . . .Accumulation of capital requires, to a certain extent, both responsibilities and access to opportunities however, children and young people rarely have such opportunities because of their status as liminal entities (Turner, 1969), not least those from a working class background. (2004 3289) 51 It is interesting to note that similar messages about the signi? cance both of the relational and of the social contexts of desistance have emerged recently from treatment research itself.Ten years on from McGuire and Priestleys (1995) original statement of what works, these neglected aspects of practice have re-emerged in revisions to and re? nements of the principles of effective practice. One authoritative recent review, for example, highlights the increasing attention that is being paid to the need for staff to use interpersonal skills, to exercise some finesse in their interventions, to take diversity among participants into account and to look at how the broader service context can best support effective practice (Raynor, 2004 201).Raynor notes that neglect of these factors may account for some of the dif? culties undergo in England and Wales, for example, in translating the successes of demonstration projects to general practice. He suggests that the preoccupation with group programmes arises from their more standardized application, which, in turn, allows for more doctrinal evaluation than the complex and varied nature of individual practice. However, this pre-occupation (with programmes), ironically perhaps, is undermined by the literature on treatment effectiveness in psychotherapy and counselling arguably the parent discipline of what works.Here, the evidence suggests that the most crucial variables of all in determining treatment outcomeschance factors, external factors and client factors relate to the personal and social contexts of interventions rather than to their contents (Asay and Lambert, 1999). Moreover, in terms of those variables which the therapist can in? uence, it is a occur ? nding that no method of intervention is any more effective than the rest, and, instead, that there are common aspects of each intervention that are responsible for bringing about change (see Hubble et al. , 1999 Bozarth, 2000). These 52Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) core conditions for effectivenessempathy and genuineness the establishment of a working alliance and using person-centred, collaborative and client-driven approachesare perhaps familiar to probation staff, but not from earlier revie ws of what works? . 7 With regard to the probation paradigms reviewed earlier, these ? ndings are particularly signi? cant because, condescension the disciplinary location and positivist approaches of these studies, the forms of treatment that they commend seem to be some way take away from those criticized by Bottoms and McWilliams (1979).Indeed, the notion of therapeutic or working alliance implies, as Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) advocated, that the worker and client share agreement on overall goals, agreement on the tasks that will lead to achievement of these goals and a bond of mutual respect and trust (Bordin, 1979). This seems explicitly to preclude the kind of attitudes and practices that Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) associated with treatment and that arguably characterize the prevailing what works paradigm (McNeill, 2004b). Ethical arguments for a desistance paradigmLeaving aside these emerging empirical ? ndings and theoretical issues, desistance research has some cle ar ethical implications for the practice of offender management. The ? rst of these implications is perhaps already obvious. Rexs (1999) research, reviewed in the context both of Marunas (2001) account of narrative reconstruction and of the evidence from psychotherapy research about the critical signi? cance of certain core conditions for treatment, points to the importance of developing penal practices that express certain practical virtues.Virtue-based approaches to ethics have experienced something of a resurgence in recent years (Pence, 1991), suggesting a shift in moral thinking from the question what ought I to do? to the question what sort of person should I be? In this context, one of the merits of desistance research is that by asking offenders about their experiences both of attempting desistance and of supervision, progress is made towards answering the question that a would-be virtuous offender manager might ask What sort of practitioner should I be?The virtues feature d in responses from desisters might include optimism, hopefulness, patience, persistence, fairness, respectfulness, trustworthiness, loyalty, wisdom, compassion, ? exibility and sensitivity (to difference), for example. The practical import of the expression of these virtues is suggested by recent discussions of the enforcement of community penalties, which have emerged particularly (but not exclusively) where community penalties have been recast as punishment in the community. This recasting of purpose has increased the need for effective enforcement in order that courts regard community penalties as credible disposals.Though the language of enforcement implies an emphasis on ensuring the meaningfulness and inevitability of sanctions in the event of non-compliance, Bottoms (2001) has argued convincingly that attempts to encourage or require compliance in McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management the criminal justice system must creatively mix habitual mechanisms, constra int-based mechanisms, instrumental mechanisms and normative mechanisms (related to beliefs, attachments and perceptions of legitimacy).What seems clear from the desistance research is that, through the establishment of effective relationships, the workers role in supporting compliance is likely to be particularly crucial to the development of these normative mechanisms. It is only within relationships that model the kinds of virtues described above that the bollock authority conferred on the worker by the court is likely to be rendered legitimate in the spirit of the offender. Just as perceptions of legitimacy play a key role in encouraging compliance with prison regimes (Sparks et al. 1996), so in the community legitimacy is likely to be a crucial factor both in preventing breach by persuading offenders to comply with the order and, perhaps, in preventing recidivism by persuading offenders to comply with the law. This notion of moral persuasion (and modelling) as a role for offen der managers resonates with some aspects of Anthony Duffs penal communications theory (Duff, 2001, 2003). Duff (2003) has argued that probation can and should be considered a mode of punishment indeed he argues that it could be the model punishment.However, the notion of punishment that he advances is not merely punitive that is, it is not implicated simply with the in? iction of pain as a form of retribution. Rather it is a form of creative punishment that in? icts pain only in so far as this is an inevitable (and intended) consequence of bringing offenders to face up to the effects and implications of their crimes, to rehabilitate them and to secure . . . reparation and reconciliation (Duff, 2003 181). The pains involved are akin to the unavoidable pains of repentance.For Duff, this implies a role for probation staff as mediators between offenders, victims and the wider community. Though developing the connections between Duffs theory and desistance research is beyond the scope of this article, Marunas (2001) study underlines the signi? cance for desisters of the redemption that is often achieved through engagement in generative activities which help to make sense of a damaged past by using it to protect the future interests of others. It seems signi? ant that this buying back is tillable rather than cataclysmal that is, the right to be rehabilitated is not the harvest-time of experiencing the pains of merely punitive punishment, rather it is the result of evidencing repentance and change by making good. In working to support the reconstruction of identity involved in desistance, this seems to underline the relevance of the redemptive opportunities that both community penalties and restorative justice approaches might offer.No less obvious, by contrast, are the futility and counter-productiveness of penal measures that label, that exclude and that segregate and co-locate offenders as offenders. Such measures seem designed to con? rm and cement condemnat ion scripts and thus to frustrate desistance. However, as well as set off the importance of encouraging and supporting offenders in the painful process of making good, the desistance 53 54 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) research at least hints at the reciprocal need for society to make good to offenders.Just as both Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) and Raynor and Vanstone (1994) recognized the moral implications of accepting the role that social inequalities and immoralitys play in arouse offending behaviour, so Duff (2003) argues that the existence of social injustice creates moral problems for the punishing polity. The response must be a genuine and visible attempt to remedy the injustices and exclusion that they that is, some offenders have suffered (Duff, 2003 194). Duff suggests that this implies that the probation of? cer . . . ill now have to help the offender negotiate his relationship with the polity against which he has offended, but by whom he has been treated unjust ly and disrespectfully she must speak for the polity to the offender in terms that are censorious but also apologeticterms that seek both to bring him to recognise the wrong he has done and to express an apologetic recognition of the injustice he has suffered and she must speak to the polity for the offender, explaining what is due to him as well as what is due for him. (2003 194, emphasis added)Thus the help and practical support advocated in the non-treatment paradigm can now be re-legitimated both empirically, in terms of the need to build social capital in supporting desistance, and normatively (even within a punishment discourse) as a prerequisite for making punishment both intelligible and just for offenders. cognition of interactions between, on the one hand, exclusion and inequalities and, on the other, crime and justice, also lies behind some of the arguments for rehabilitative approaches to punishment. Such arguments tend to lead to rights-based rather than utilitarian ve rsions of rehabilitation.For McWilliams and Pease (1990), rights-based rehabilitation serves a moral purpose on behalf of society in constricting punishment and preventing exclusion by working to re-establish the rights and the social standing of the offender. By contrast, Garland (1997) describes how, in late-modern penality, a more instrumental version of rehabilitation has emerged in which the offender need not (perhaps cannot) be respected as an end in himself or herself he or she has become the means to another end. He or she is not, in a sense, the subject of the court order, but its object.In this version, rehabilitation is not an over-riding purpose, it is a coadjutor means. It is offence-centred rather than offender-centred it targets criminogenic need rather than social need. The problem with this version of rehabilitation, however, is that it runs all the same moral risks that led Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) to reject treatment it permits, in theory at least, all of t he same injustices, violations of human rights and disproportionate intrusions that concern, for example, the American Friends Services Committee in 1971, and led ultimately to the emergence of just deserts (von Hirsch, 1976 Home Of? e, 1990). Indeed, in England and Wales, the current situation is worse in one respect McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management the removal of the need for offenders consent to the imposition of community penalties (under the Crime (Sentences) Act 1997), which made some sense in the context of the move towards seeing probation as a proportionate punishment, means that offenders can now be compelled to undertake treatment in the form of accredited programmes.In a recent article, Lewis (2005) has drawn on the work of the new rehabilitationists (Cullen and Gilbert, 1982 Rotman, 1990) to revive the case for a rights-based approach to rehabilitation meaning one which is touch with the reintegration of offenders into society as useful human being s. According to Lewis, the principles of the new rehabilitationists include commitment to, ? rst, the states duty to undertake rehabilitative work (for similar reasons to those outlined above) second, somehow setting limits on the intrusions of rehabilitation in terms of proportionality third, maximizing voluntarism in the process and, ? ally, using prison only as a measure of last resort because of its negative and damaging effects. In exploring the extent to which these principles are articulated and applied in current penal policy, she reaches the conclusion that current rehabilitative efforts are window-dressing on an excessively punitive managerialist system (Lewis, 2005 119), though she retains some hope that practitioner-led initiatives at the local level might allow some prospect that these principles could be applied.The value of the desistance research may be that just as the evidence about nothing works allowed Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) to make a theoretical and empi rical case for more ethical practice, and the evidence that something works enabled Raynor and Vanstone (1994) to revise that case, so the evidence from desistance studies, when combined with these constructive developments in the philosophy of punishment, might do a similar job in a different and arguably more destructive penal climate. 55 Conclusions a desistance paradigmThis article has sought to follow the example offered by Bottoms and McWilliams (1979) and Raynor and Vanstone (1994) by difficult to build both empirical and ethical cases for the development of a new paradigm for probation practice. In summary, I have suggested that desistance is the process that offender management exists to promote and support that approaches to intervention should be embedded in understandings of desistance and, that it is important to explore the connections between structure, agency, re? exivity and identity in desistance processes. Moreover, desistance-supporting interventions need to res pect and foster agency and re? xivity they need to be based on legitimate and respectful relationships they need to focus on social capital (opportunities) as well as human capital (motivations and capacities) and they need to exploit strengths as well as addressing needs and risks. I have also suggested that desistance research highlights the relevance of certain practice virtues that it requires a focus 56 Criminology & Criminal Justice 6(1) on the role of legitimacy in supporting normative mechanisms of compliance that it is consonant in many respects with communicative approaches to punishment which cast probation of? ers (or offender managers) as mediators between offenders, victims and communities and that it suggests a rights-based approach to rehabilitation which entails both that the offender makes good to society and that, where injustice has been suffered by the offender, society makes good to the offender. Like the authors of the earlier paradigms, I do not intend here t o offer a detailed account of precisely how a desistance paradigm might operate in practice (for some initial suggestions see McNeill, 2003). That task is one that could be more fruitfully undertaken by those working in the ? ld, preferably in association with offenders themselves. However, in an attempt to suggest some direction for such development, Table 1 summarizes the contrasts between the constructions of practice implied by the nontreatment, revised, what works and desistance paradigms. Unlike the earlier paradigms, the desistance paradigm forefronts processes of change rather than modes of intervention. Practice under the desistance paradigm would certainly accommodate intervention to meet needs, reduce risks and (especially) to develop and exploit strengths, but Table 1.Probation practice in four paradigms The non-treatment paradigm Treatment becomes help The revised paradigm Help consistent with a commitment to the reduction of harm A what works paradigm Intervention req uired to reduce re-offending and protect the public A desistance paradigm Help in navigating towards desistance to reduce harm and make good to offenders and victims8 Explicit dialogue and negotiation assessing risks, needs, strengths and resources and offering opportunities to make good Collaboratively de? ed tasks which tackle risks, needs and obstacles to desistance by using and developing the offenders human and social capital Diagnoses becomes shared assessment Explicit dialogue and negotiation offering opportunities for consensual change superior assessment of risk and need governed by structured assessment instruments Clients dependent need as the basis for action becomes collaboratively de? ned task as the basis for action Collaboratively de? ed task relevant to criminogenic needs and potentially effective in meeting them Compulsory engagement in structured programmes and case management processes as required elements of legal orders imposed irrespective of consent McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management whatever these forms might be they would be subordinated to a more broadly conceived role in working out, on an individual basis, how the desistance process might best be prompted and supported.This would require the worker to act as an advocate providing a conduit to social capital as well as a treatment provider building human capital. Moreover, rather than being about the technical management of programmes and the disciplinary management of orders, as the current term offender manager unhelpfully implies, the forms of engagement required by the paradigm would re-instate and place a high premium on collaboration and involvement in the process of co-designing interventions.Critically, such interventions would not be concerned solely with the prevention of further offending they would be equally concerned with constructively addressing the harms caused by crime by encouraging offenders to make good through restorative processes and commun ity service (in the broadest sense). But, as a morally and practically necessary corollary, they would be no less listless with making good to offenders by enabling them to achieve inclusion and participation in society (and with it the continuous tense and positive reframing of their identities required to sustain desistance).Perhaps the most obvious problem that might be confronted by anyone pursuance to envision further or even enact this paradigm, is that the communities on which its ultimate success would depend may lack the resources and the will to engage in supporting desistance, preferring to remain merely punishing communities (Worrall and Hoy, 2005). This is, of course, an issue for any form of offender management or reintegration.However, rather than letting it become an excuse for dismissing the paradigm, it should drive us to a recognition of the need for offender management agencies to re-engage with community education and community involvement and to seek ways an d means, at the local level and at the national level, to challenge populist punitiveness (Bottoms, 1995) and to offer more progressive alternatives. 57 NotesI am very grateful to Steve Farrall and Richard Sparks for their hospitality in hosting the seminars through which this article was developed and to all of the contributors to the seminars both for their helpful and encouraging comments on earlier versions and for the stimulation that their papers provided. I am also grateful to Monica Barry, microphone Nellis and Gwen Robinson for comments on the draft version of this article. Though I have itch reservations about the term offender management (relating to its obvious inference that the offender is a problem to be managed rather than person to be assisted and that the task is technical rather than moral), I use it here, not just because of its contemporary relevance, but also because it refers both to community disposals and postprison resettlement. 8 Criminology & Criminal Ju stice 6(1) 2 Owing to their pessimism about the prospects for treatment delivering their fourth aim (the reduction of crime), Bottoms and McWilliams turned their attention to other crime reduction strategies and in particular to crime prevention. Their argument in this connection was essentially that because crime is preponderantly social . . . ny serious crime reduction strategy must be of a socially (rather than an individually) based character (Bottoms and McWilliams, 1979 188). 3 That said, they allowed that there is, ironically, at least a tiny shred of research evidence to suggest that, after all, help may be more crime-reducing than treatment (Bottoms and McWilliams, 1979 174). To support this claim they referred to two studies that presaged later desistance research the ? st suggested that although intensive casework treatment had no apparent impact, changes in the post-institutional social situations of offenders (for example, getting espouse or securing a job) were associ ated with reductions in recidivism (Bottoms and McClintock, 1973) the second suggested that treatment did demonstrate lower reconviction rates where the treatment involved primarily practical help which was given only if and when offenders asked for it (Bernsten and Christiansen, 1965). 4 This section of the article draws heavily on McNeill et al. (2005). 5 It may be that this gap in theory s in part the product of the incremental and quasi-experimental character of what works research indeed it might even be said that the what works philosophy is anti-theoretical in that it is more preoccupied with identifying and replicating successes than in explaining and understanding them (Farrall, 2002). 6 Signi? cantly, Boeck et al. s (2004) emerging ? ndings suggest that bridging social capital in particular (which facilitates social mobility) seems to be limited among those young people in their study involved in offending, leaving them ill-equipped to navigate risk successfully. That said , some recent studies have begun to explore the contribution of particular practice skills to effectiveness. Raynor refers in particular to a recent article by Dowden and Andrews (2004) based on a meta-analysis examining the contribution of certain key staff skills (which they term core correctional practices or CCPs) to the effectiveness of interventions with offenders. 8 It is with some unease that I have merely mentioned but not developed arguments about the importance of making good to (and for) victims in this article.I am therefore grateful to Mike Nellis for highlighting the contingent relationships between offenders making good and making amends to victims. There is little empirical evidence that desistance requires making amends or making good to particular victims, although there are of course independent and compelling reasons why this matters in its own right. As Nellis suggests (personal communication, 18 August 2005), the case for making amends requires separate justi? cation. He further suggests that from the point of view of interventions with offenders, it may be important not so much as an enabling factor in desistance as a signifying factor.Drawing on this distinction, my own view is that although making amends is neither necessary nor suf? cient for desistance to occur, it may be useful none the less in consigning the past to the past (for victims and offenders) and thus in entrenching redemption scripts (for offenders). McNeillA desistance paradigm for offender management References American Friends Services Committee (1971) Struggle for Justice. New York Hill & Wang. Asay, T. P. and M. J. Lambert (1999) The Empirical Case for the leafy vegetable Factors in Therapy Quantitative Findings, in M. A. Hubble, B. L. Duncan and S. D.Miller (eds) The Heart and Soul of Change What Works in Therapy, pp. 3356. Washington, DC American Psychological Association. 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Boeck, Thilo, Jennie Fleming and hazelnut tree Kemshall (2004) Young People, Social Capital and the Negotiation of Risk, paper presented at the European Society of Criminology yearly Conference, Amsterdam, August.Bor din, E. (1979) The Generalizability of the Psychoanalytic Concept of the Working Alliance, Psychotherapy 16 25260. Bottoms, Anthony (1995) The Philosophy and Politics of Punishment and Sentencing, in C. Clarkson and R. Morgan (eds) The Politics of Sentencing Reform, pp. 1749. Oxford Oxford University Press. Bottoms, Anthony (2001) Compliance and Community Penalties, in A. Bottoms, L. Gelsthorpe an

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