Index

David Honeywell (University of Manchester, UK)

The Ambiguities of Desistance

ISBN: 978-1-83982-787-7, eISBN: 978-1-83982-786-0

Publication date: 16 March 2021

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

Honeywell, D. (2021), "Index", The Ambiguities of Desistance, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 99-100. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83982-786-020211009

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021 David Honeywell. Published under exclusive license by Emerald Publishing Limited


INDEX

Accommodation
, 2, 35, 73, 79

Alienation
, 18–19

‘Ban the box’
, 5

Belief, role of
, 68–72

British Convict Criminology Organisation (BCC)
, 64–65

Child sexual abuse
, 79

Closed prisons
, 18

Cognitive transformation
, 4

Convict Criminologist Organisation
, 8, 81

Convict criminology
, 10, 73

Criminal conviction
, 62–68

Criminal justice system
, 15, 35, 57–58

Criminology
, 7–8

Deprivation
, 12

Desistance
, 2–3, 6, 12, 18, 23, 51, 74, 81, 86

consumers
, 23–31

emotional and psychological pain
, 33

examining
, 7–8

external factors
, 3

generativity
, 39–40

imprisonment
, 11–12, 40

liminality
, 34

making good
, 39–40

redemption
, 39–40

vs. rehabilitation
, 6–7

stress
, 2–3

Differential association theory
, 4

Disclosure Barring Service (DBS)
, 81

Divided self
, 48, 50, 83

Drug addiction
, 41

Dual identities
, 62–68

Education
, 18, 23, 43, 66, 76

Embodied motivations
, 67–68

Emotional trajectory
, 4

Ex-offenders
, 4, 13–14, 41, 52, 65, 83

Favouritism
, 18–19

Generativity
, 39–40

Habitus clivé
, 83

Homelessness
, 41

Identity transformation
, 33, 47–49

Imposter syndrome
, 62–63

Imprisonment
, 11, 14

desistance
, 11–12, 40

pains of
, 12

positive self-change
, 15–16

Insider/outsider dichotomy
, 48–50

Institutional ambiguities
, 23–31

Liminality
, 9, 22

stigma
, 50–51

void of
, 34–39

Looking glass self concept
, 53

Making good approach
, 12–13, 39–40, 85

Moral community
, 70–72, 79

Narrative criminology
, 9, 59, 82–83

Neutralisation theory
, 7–8

Offender Assessment System (OASys)
, 35–36

Open prisons
, 18–23

Open University (OU)
, 38, 77–78

Over-disclosing
, 54

Painful narrative
, 39–45

Prisons
, 33, 56–57

Barlinnie
, 13

closed prisons
, 18

desistance
, 15–16, 33

domestic worries
, 15–16

Durham
, 12–13

Manchester
, 82

open prisons
, 18–23

Scottish
, 15–16

Probation Services
, 35, 37–38

Probation Trusts
, 36–37

Psychotherapy
, 77–78

Recruitment policies
, 5

Redemptive narrative
, 55–59

Region analysis
, 52

Rehabilitation
, 6–7, 15–16, 36–37

Reinventive institutions
, 24–25

Religion
, 4

Replacement self
, 65, 77–78

Retrospective reflexivity
, 50

Rite of passage
, 34–35

Self-change
, 3

identity transformation
, 47–48

imprisonment
, 11

Self-fulfilling prophecy
, 42–43

Self-improvement
, 33

Self-labelling
, 83

Self-reflection
, 77–78

Self-transformation
, 9–10, 42–43, 53, 85–86

Sex offenders
, 39

Sexual abuse
, 43

Social bonds
, 58

Social mobility
, 39, 83

Social network factors
, 2

Socio-economic factors
, 4

Stigmatisation (stigma)
, 18–19, 50, 55

Storytelling
, 9–10, 47–48

Trust, role of
, 68–72

Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS)
, 23–24

Visceral habitus
, 67–68

Wounded healers
, 55–59

Zero-tolerance policy
, 19