CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous

People convicted of sexual offences are arguably one of the most marginalized criminal offender groups because both the general population and offender populations tend to have hardened views of these individuals (Spencer, 2009; Wilson & Prinzo, 2001). Circles of Support and Accountability Ottaw...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Beitner, Marci
Other Authors: Joubert, David
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32981
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4120
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-329812018-01-05T19:02:28Z CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous Beitner, Marci Joubert, David Sex offenders CoSA Power Governmentality Interpretative phenomenological analysis Reintegration Volunteers Subjective experiences People convicted of sexual offences are arguably one of the most marginalized criminal offender groups because both the general population and offender populations tend to have hardened views of these individuals (Spencer, 2009; Wilson & Prinzo, 2001). Circles of Support and Accountability Ottawa (CoSA-Ottawa) is an organization that helps people convicted of sexual offences reintegrate into society by challenging traditional forms of community reintegration. CoSA-Ottawa was founded on the principles of restorative justice, which are exemplified in their mottos “no more victims” and “no one is disposable.” The organization relies on the commitment and contribution of volunteers to assist with the reintegration process. While there have been various studies on CoSA from different perspectives (Duwe, 2012; Fox, 2014; Wilson, Picheca, and Prinzo, 2007; Wilson & Prinzo, 2001), there have been few studies directly focusing on CoSA-Ottawa volunteers through a critical lens. This study examines the subjective experiences of CoSA-Ottawa volunteers who work with people labeled as ‘sex offenders.’ The research was conducted using semi-structured interviews with six participants. Each interview transcript was transcribed and analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis. The master themes that developed through this study include: the humanization of the monstrous, the reintegration and re-socialization through a helping relationship, and overall impacts of these relationships on CoSA-Ottawa volunteers. Using a governmentality and power conceptual framework, this thesis demonstrates how the relationships between the core members and volunteers are transformative and act as an extension of the carceral system. Further, this thesis illustrates that the supportive function of these relationships is explicit, while their governing function is implicit. 2015-10-08T18:43:19Z 2015-10-08T18:43:19Z 2015 2015 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32981 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4120 en Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Sex offenders
CoSA
Power
Governmentality
Interpretative phenomenological analysis
Reintegration
Volunteers
Subjective experiences
spellingShingle Sex offenders
CoSA
Power
Governmentality
Interpretative phenomenological analysis
Reintegration
Volunteers
Subjective experiences
Beitner, Marci
CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
description People convicted of sexual offences are arguably one of the most marginalized criminal offender groups because both the general population and offender populations tend to have hardened views of these individuals (Spencer, 2009; Wilson & Prinzo, 2001). Circles of Support and Accountability Ottawa (CoSA-Ottawa) is an organization that helps people convicted of sexual offences reintegrate into society by challenging traditional forms of community reintegration. CoSA-Ottawa was founded on the principles of restorative justice, which are exemplified in their mottos “no more victims” and “no one is disposable.” The organization relies on the commitment and contribution of volunteers to assist with the reintegration process. While there have been various studies on CoSA from different perspectives (Duwe, 2012; Fox, 2014; Wilson, Picheca, and Prinzo, 2007; Wilson & Prinzo, 2001), there have been few studies directly focusing on CoSA-Ottawa volunteers through a critical lens. This study examines the subjective experiences of CoSA-Ottawa volunteers who work with people labeled as ‘sex offenders.’ The research was conducted using semi-structured interviews with six participants. Each interview transcript was transcribed and analyzed using interpretative phenomenological analysis. The master themes that developed through this study include: the humanization of the monstrous, the reintegration and re-socialization through a helping relationship, and overall impacts of these relationships on CoSA-Ottawa volunteers. Using a governmentality and power conceptual framework, this thesis demonstrates how the relationships between the core members and volunteers are transformative and act as an extension of the carceral system. Further, this thesis illustrates that the supportive function of these relationships is explicit, while their governing function is implicit.
author2 Joubert, David
author_facet Joubert, David
Beitner, Marci
author Beitner, Marci
author_sort Beitner, Marci
title CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
title_short CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
title_full CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
title_fullStr CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
title_full_unstemmed CoSA-Ottawa’s Volunteers’ Subjective Experiences with ‘Sex Offenders:’ Taming the Monstrous
title_sort cosa-ottawa’s volunteers’ subjective experiences with ‘sex offenders:’ taming the monstrous
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/32981
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-4120
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