Religiously Motivated Desistance: An Exploratory Study

Michael A. Hallett, J. Stephen McCoy

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

This article examines the life-history narratives of 25 successful ex-offenders professing Christianity as the source of their desistance. Unstructured in-depth life-history interviews from adult male desisters affirm use of a "feared self" and "cognitive shifts" regarding perceptions of illegal behavior. "Condemnation scripts" and "redemption narratives," however, differ radically from those uncovered in previous research. Stories of behavior change and identity transformation achieved through private religious practice and energetic church membership dominate the narratives. Findings suggest there are diverse phenomenologies of desistance and that by more narrowly tailoring research to explore subjectivities in the desistance process, important discrepancies in perceptions of agency and structure are revealed. Three prominent desistance paradigms - Making Good, Cognitive Transformation, and Identity Theory - are used to examine the narratives.

Idioma originalAmerican English
Páginas (desde-hasta)855-872
Número de páginas17
PublicaciónInternational Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
Volumen59
N.º8
DOI
EstadoPublished - jul 2015

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