Highlighting the complex human realities that exist within the criminal justice system, this book foregrounds scholars and activists who harness their own encounters with policing, courts, and imprisonment to recast criminological theory, method, and policy, proving lived experience as important to criminological and sociological enquiry.
Highlighting the complex human realities that exist within the criminal justice system, this book foregrounds scholars and activists who harness their own encounters with policing, courts, and imprisonment to recast criminological theory, method, and policy, proving lived experience as an important aspect of criminological and sociological enquiry.
Grounding lived experiences within broader sociological, psychological, and criminological theories, this book advocates ethically established perspectives that centre marginalised voices and embed lived experience wisdom, knowledge and expertise in scholarship and professional practice.
Beyond Autoethnography: Lived Experience Criminology will be of interest to students, scholars, and criminal justice professionals.
Arvustused
'As this important new collection vividly demonstrates, the ways that criminology engages with lived experiences are changing. Increasingly, lived experiences are valued not merely as data for academics to interpret and analyse. Rather, they are seen as hard-earned and embodied forms of knowledge with which criminology must engage in a dialogue characterised above all by respect. The first part of that dialogue, for criminologists, has to be a deep and self-critical form of listening. I hope readers will hear and heed the diverse and important voices contained in this collection; there is so much to learn from them and with them.' Fergus McNeill, Professor of Criminology and Social Work, University of Glasgow
'The collection, edited by Maycock, Antojado, and Darley, provides a compelling exposure to the three arms of the justice system policing, courts, and correctional services -with both an academic and lived experience lens across four sections, the final focused on applying lived experience. With poetry and evidence, the humanness underpinning legal processes is centralized to create a reflective text leaving the reader with much to ponder, good and bad. An essential and powerful contribution to understanding justice, empathy, and the transformative potential of lived experience definitely, a must read!' Rosemary Ricciardelli, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Memorial University of Newfoundland
1.Foreword. 2.Acknowledgement. 3.Introduction: Redrawing the Boundaries
of Criminological Knowledge. Part 1: Police and Lived Experience. 4.Extract
16 From Cell
101. 5.Silent Voices: Workplace Discrimination and
Microaggressions Experienced by Women in Law Enforcement. 6.Neurodiversity at
the Nexus: Addressing the Challenges and Opportunities at the Intersections
of Neurodiversity and Law Enforcement. 7.A Descriptive Scientific
Phenomenological Approach to Criminology and Criminal Legal Research. Part 2:
Courts and Lived Experience. 8.The Lucifer Effect. 9.Moving From Offenders
to Partners: Reflections on the Potential for Courts as Co-designed
Institutions. 10.Feminist Perspectives of Lived Experience of the Criminal
Courts Connecting the Continuum: Womens Ways of Knowing and the Criminal
Courts. Part 3: Punishment and Lived Experience. 11.6 Years Old. 12.Mapping
the Unassimilable: Carceral Narratives through Lived Experience,
Psychoanalysis, and Agonism. 13.Out of the Frying Pan? A Personal and
Scholarly Interest in Protective Housing in Prisons: Reflecting on
Vulnerability, Decision-Making and the Quest for Humane Penal Practices.
14.From Prison to Halfway House: Using Lived Experience and Feminist
Co-Ethnography to Reform Community Corrections. Part 4: Applying Lived
Experience. 15.Concrete Cage. 16.The Role of Prison Radio and Storytelling in
Generative Criminology. 17.Resisting Carceral Colonialism through Lived
Experience in Night Patrol Research. 18.The Living, Being, and Doing of
Praxis: Insurgent-Knowledge-Making through Liberatory Experiential
Epistemology and Radical Autoethnography in the Free Palestine Movement.
19.From the chaotic debris of experience, we select fragments. arguing with
lived experience of the criminal justice system and taking lessons for
convict criminology.
Dwayne Antojado, Lecturer in Sociology and Criminology, Adelaide University; and Visiting Scholar, School of Government, Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines.
Danica Darley, Research Associate, University of Sheffield.
Matthew Maycock, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, Monash University, Melbourne; Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Curtin University; and Visiting Associate Professor, Edinburgh Napier University.