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E-raamat: Unmaking of Crime: Contexts, Pathways, and Representations of the Processes of Desistance on the Parisian Ground

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"This book uncovers the evolution of the penology that lies behind such evolutions in France and refers to the most recent theories of desistance from crime to analyse the influence of different criminal justice policies like prison, probation or electronic surveillance over this specific process of change"--

The Unmaking of Crime documents the pathways of offenders reforming their journey and desisting from crime, and assesses the opportunities and limitations of the criminal justice system in aiding this process.



The Unmaking of Crime documents the pathways of offenders reforming their journey and desisting from crime, and assesses the opportunities and limitations of the criminal justice system in aiding this process. Building from known factors involved in desistance — the influence of family, relationships, employment, or geographical relocations — it expands the lens to include new perspectives, such as the impact of drug abuses on the post-sentence period, the interaction of religion with delinquency, and the reconfigurations of citizenship.

Building on original qualitative research in Paris, the book considers a range of factors in the process of desistance, such as spheres of socialisation, the role of stigma and the opportunities offered or denied after a time in a criminal lifestyle, and the relationship between those seeking to desist from crime and key institutions and resources.

Arvustused

"Beginning with a Durkheimian understanding of crime and punishment, Benazeth has produced a fully French reconceptualization of the desistance concept that is theoretically sophisticated and critically nuanced in way that few can do as well as the French. A gift to criminology akin to the Statue of Liberty."

Shadd Maruna, Professor of criminology, Queens University Belfast.

"Prison overcrowding is a problem as old as the prison itself, but in the late modern period it has reached unprecedented heights and combined with long sentences and aging prisoners is creating a humanitarian disaster in many countries. In this much needed book, Valerian Benazeth points to a hopeful way out too often abandoned or overlooked by contemporary prison services, learning from the many former prisoners who have desisted from crime and no longer need prison bars to protect safety.

Jonathan Simon, Lance Robbins Professor of Criminal Justice Law, Berkeley University.

"Overall, Benazeths book is exemplary. It provides non-French readers with a detailed account of Frances cultural, institutional, and legal contexts. The work extensively engages with the international literature to frame and analyse its findings. The book is rich with nuance and detail, far beyond what can be fully conveyed in these limited lines. For instance, although the French legal system offers several mechanisms for expunging criminal records, Benazeth demonstrates that a criminal past nonetheless has a negative impact. In France, taking gap years is uncommon, and gaps in ones CV are not easily explained away. Furthermore, there are no robust systems for further learning education and even menial positions often require high qualifications. As Benazeth shows, individuals who drop out of school are unlikely to ever secure stable employment."

Martine Herzog-Evans, University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, France

1. Introduction: beyond us and them
2. Understanding knowledge about
desistance: The empirical and practical contribution of a continent of
research
3. Methodology: retracing desistance journeys using in-depth
interviews
4. Is there a French accent in desistance processes? 5.The
economics of desistance: experimenting with the limits of its power to
deconstruct the cult of money
6. Desistance and religion: a passport to
redefine ones affiliations?
7. The intertwining of addictions in desistance
processes: the role of an airlock or a bridge
8. Becoming an ordinary citizen
again: another anchor for the desistance processes
9. The ambivalent effects
of prison
10. Desistance and probation: the paradox of limited institutional
effects
11. Desistance and electronic surveillance: leverage with varying
degrees of success
12. Contextualising and extending knowledge about
desistance
Valerian Benazeth holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of Paris-Saclay (France) and is an associate researcher at the CESDIP Research Centre. Educated in France and in the United States as an exchange student (UTEP, TX), and then as a teaching assistant (Williams College, MA), he conducted one of the first empirical studies about desistance in France. His doctoral research integrated three years of fieldwork and received merit scholarships from the City of Paris and from the French Department of Justice. After serving for a time as the head of the research department inside the French Youth Justice Board, he resumed teaching at university in France.