Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis

It is recognised that women who have offended comprise a vulnerable group having commonly experienced trauma and abuse. However, the dominant risk paradigm and assessment tools used within the Criminal Justice System have excluded women offenders in the research base. Similarly, current approaches t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gomm, Rebecca Maria
Published: Durham University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.685671
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-685671
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6856712017-08-30T03:19:44ZWomen making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysisGomm, Rebecca Maria2016It is recognised that women who have offended comprise a vulnerable group having commonly experienced trauma and abuse. However, the dominant risk paradigm and assessment tools used within the Criminal Justice System have excluded women offenders in the research base. Similarly, current approaches to desistance, which is concerned with the cessation of offending, have neglected the perspective of women offenders. This study explores an alternative approach, based upon women offenders perspectives, to inform upon intervention and support which encourages desistance from offending. Resilience theory provides a broad framework for the study, in which in depth interviews were conducted with a purposeful sample of 15 ethnically diverse women drawn from probation services and third sector agencies. Documentary records which included offence history and Probation assessment records were utilised to provide a rich context to the research. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to explore the women’s experiences and understandings of their offending behaviour, as well as how they found meaning in the support and interventions received from these services. Findings revealed complex histories of childhood neglect and abuse, interpersonal violence in adult relationships, including rape and mental health needs. Of particular importance was the value placed by the women on interventions and approaches that focussed on enabling them to build resilience, through relational resources and self-efficacy beliefs. Barriers to building resilience were related to adaptive behaviours, including the understanding that trust in relationships was paradoxical. Another barrier was posed through lack of self-efficacy beliefs. The study concludes that desistance from offending is underpinned by the process of building resilience for recovery in women offenders. It is recommended that building resilience to support the recovery journey is translated into policy and practice and that the way in which women offenders are assessed based on risk to the public is reconceptualised to inform this.364.15Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.685671http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11567/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 364.15
spellingShingle 364.15
Gomm, Rebecca Maria
Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
description It is recognised that women who have offended comprise a vulnerable group having commonly experienced trauma and abuse. However, the dominant risk paradigm and assessment tools used within the Criminal Justice System have excluded women offenders in the research base. Similarly, current approaches to desistance, which is concerned with the cessation of offending, have neglected the perspective of women offenders. This study explores an alternative approach, based upon women offenders perspectives, to inform upon intervention and support which encourages desistance from offending. Resilience theory provides a broad framework for the study, in which in depth interviews were conducted with a purposeful sample of 15 ethnically diverse women drawn from probation services and third sector agencies. Documentary records which included offence history and Probation assessment records were utilised to provide a rich context to the research. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used to explore the women’s experiences and understandings of their offending behaviour, as well as how they found meaning in the support and interventions received from these services. Findings revealed complex histories of childhood neglect and abuse, interpersonal violence in adult relationships, including rape and mental health needs. Of particular importance was the value placed by the women on interventions and approaches that focussed on enabling them to build resilience, through relational resources and self-efficacy beliefs. Barriers to building resilience were related to adaptive behaviours, including the understanding that trust in relationships was paradoxical. Another barrier was posed through lack of self-efficacy beliefs. The study concludes that desistance from offending is underpinned by the process of building resilience for recovery in women offenders. It is recommended that building resilience to support the recovery journey is translated into policy and practice and that the way in which women offenders are assessed based on risk to the public is reconceptualised to inform this.
author Gomm, Rebecca Maria
author_facet Gomm, Rebecca Maria
author_sort Gomm, Rebecca Maria
title Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_short Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_full Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_fullStr Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_full_unstemmed Women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
title_sort women making meaning of their desistance from offending : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.685671
work_keys_str_mv AT gommrebeccamaria womenmakingmeaningoftheirdesistancefromoffendinganinterpretativephenomenologicalanalysis
_version_ 1718522192051830784