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Offender Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities

Enabling Change the TC way

By Alisa Stevens

Published October 10th 2012 by Routledge – 224 pages

Series: International Series on Desistance and Rehabilitation

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Description

Offender rehabilitation has become increasingly and almost exclusively associated with structured cognitive-behavioural programmes. For fifty years, however, a small number of English prisons have promoted an alternative method of rehabilitation: the democratic therapeutic community (TC). These prisons offer long-term prisoners convicted of serious offences the opportunity to undertake group psychotherapy within an overtly supportive and esteem-enhancing living environment.

Drawing upon original research conducted with ‘residents’ (prisoners) and staff at three TC prisons, Offender Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities provides a uniquely evocative and engaging portrayal of the TC regime. Individual chapters focus on residents’ adaptation to ‘the TC way’ of rehabilitation and imprisonment; the development of caring relationships between community members; residents’ contributions towards the safe and efficient running of their community; and the greater assimilation of sexual offenders within TCs for men, made possible in part by a lessening in ‘hypermasculinity’.

By analyzing residents’ own accounts of ‘desistance in process’ in the TC, this book argues that TCs help offenders to change by enabling positive developments to their personal identity and self-narratives: to the ways in which they see themselves and their life. The radically ‘different’ penal environment allows its residents to become someone ‘different’.

Reviews

"This is a beautifully written, detailed and sensitive ethnography of an unfashionable corner of the prison estate in England and Wales. Moreover, it is an approach that has survived many critical onslaughts and that in itself suggests that there is something worth preserving and celebrating here. Stevens’ research will undoubtedly contribute to that process, reminding the older generation of criminologists and criminal justice practitioners of why we were inspired by TCs and bringing that inspiration to a new generation of students and practitioners." - Anne Worrall, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books, May 2013

Contents

1. Therapeutic communities and prisons, 2. Conducting research in prisons: tightrope walks and emotion work, 3. New beginnings: commencing change the TC way, 4. Care, trust and support, 5. Responsibility, accountability and safety, 6. Vulnerability, unmasking and 'de-othering', 7. Pursuing change the TC way and beyond

Author Bio

Alisa Stevens is Lecturer in Criminal Justice Studies at the University of Kent. Her main areas of research interest are the correctional services (prisons and probation), offender rehabilitation, and desistance from crime.

Name: Offender Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Communities: Enabling Change the TC way (Hardback)Routledge 
Description: By Alisa Stevens. Offender rehabilitation has become increasingly and almost exclusively associated with structured cognitive-behavioural programmes. For fifty years, however, a small number of English prisons have promoted an alternative method of rehabilitation: the...
Categories: Criminology and Criminal Justice, Prisons, Criminal Behaviour and Forensic Psychology, Criminal Justice, Sentencing and Punishment