Supporting families, promoting desistance? Exploring the impact of imprisonment on family relationships

Jardine, Cara; Hart, Emily Luise and van Ginneken, Esther F.J.C., eds. (2017) Supporting families, promoting desistance? Exploring the impact of imprisonment on family relationships. In: New Perspectives on Desistance. Palgrave Macmillan Ltd., London, pp. 163-186. ISBN 9781349951840 (https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95185-7_8)

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Abstract

Families affected by imprisonment are attracting growing research attention, inspired in no small part by the theorising of desistance scholars which suggests that families have a crucial role in reducing reoffending. Yet, these arguments have been critiqued by those who suggest that the prison has a damaging impact upon families, who therefore must be supported in their own right. This chapter will argue that adopting a more relational perspective, which recognises the central role of reciprocity in family life and desistance, can reveal new insights as to how both families and resettlement might be supported. However, given the high levels of social marginality experienced by many families, such approaches will always be limited. This calls into question models of desistance that suggest families can provide stocks of social capital, and gives cause to reflect on the true costs of imprisonment.