Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on editors and contributors
- Introduction
- one Extending the ‘desistance and recovery debates’: thoughts on identity
- two Emotions and identity transformation
- three Men, prison and aspirational masculinities
- four Lived desistance: understanding how women experience giving up offending
- five Growing out of crime? Problems, pitfalls and possibilities
- six Different pathways for different journeys: ethnicity, identity transition and desistance
- seven Fear and loathing in the community: sexual offenders and desistance in a climate of risk and ‘extreme othering’
- eight Social identity, social networks and social capital in desistance and recovery
- nine Alcoholics Anonymous: sustaining behavioural change
- ten Endnotes and further routes for enquiry
- Index
ten - Endnotes and further routes for enquiry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on editors and contributors
- Introduction
- one Extending the ‘desistance and recovery debates’: thoughts on identity
- two Emotions and identity transformation
- three Men, prison and aspirational masculinities
- four Lived desistance: understanding how women experience giving up offending
- five Growing out of crime? Problems, pitfalls and possibilities
- six Different pathways for different journeys: ethnicity, identity transition and desistance
- seven Fear and loathing in the community: sexual offenders and desistance in a climate of risk and ‘extreme othering’
- eight Social identity, social networks and social capital in desistance and recovery
- nine Alcoholics Anonymous: sustaining behavioural change
- ten Endnotes and further routes for enquiry
- Index
Summary
The concerns and the focus of chapters in this volume have varied, although all in their different ways have explored identity in the context of personal change. However, it is hardly a new observation that, within wider interests around desistance, the question of identity – and reshaping, rediscovering or finding a new sense of self – has proved tricky for researchers. Maruna et al, for example, note that
In general, criminologists have been eager to study desistance, but wary of the idea of personal transformation. The difference is that, whereas desistance is tangible and measurable (at least in theory), identity change is anything but. One can ‘prove’ that someone has not offended – or at least that they have not gotten caught – but this is not proof that a person has ‘changed’. (2009, 30)
As our chapters have shown, identity itself, and identity change (or, in our terms, transformation) can be conceptualised in different ways. This reflects the breadth and diversity of thinking across the desistance and recovery literatures. The emphases fall on internal cognitive processes or emotions in some quarters (see Giordano et al, 2002; 2007; Vaughan, 2007; Paternoster and Bushway, 2009), external relations and validations in others (Maruna et al, 2004 or, in a different vein, Best et al, 2015) and narratives of self in yet others (Maruna's (2001) Making good being the most prominent example). These present different perspectives on, and understandings of, agency, motivations and mechanisms enabling the process of change. In this final chapter I begin with some closing thoughts on the nature of identity, what spurs individuals on towards change, and the relationships and generative activities that enable them to sustain it over time. I then review promising research approaches that might provide valuable insights into personal change, as a complement to large-scale studies. I draw on empirical studies elsewhere, but focus significantly on the exemplars within this book to illustrate the benefits (and also the limitations) of these methods and what their findings may tell us.
So what do we mean by self and identity? And what about personal change?
Across the varying perspectives on identity, there is a general consensus that identities are not fixed and are subject to change and (re)negotiation over time.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Moving on from Crime and Substance UseTransforming Identities, pp. 229 - 258Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2016