RT Article T1 “I have to be a man for my son”: The narrative uses of fatherhood in prison JF Punishment & society VO 25 IS 1 SP 162 OP 180 A1 Schultz, William J A2 Bucerius, Sandra M. 1978- A2 Haggerty, Kevin D. LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1827750847 AB Research on incarcerated fathers tends to accentuate the harmful familial consequences of parental incarceration and discuss how having children might prompt incarcerated fathers to desist from crime. Less attention has focused on how narratives of fatherhood shape the day-to-day dynamics of incarceration. Drawing on 93 qualitative interviews with incarcerated fathers in Western Canada, we focus specifically on our participants’ parenting narratives. Such narratives are significant interventions in the world, allowing incarcerated fathers to frame their identities in particular ways while simultaneously shaping personal behaviour. Our research, 1. Identifies important fatherhood narratives provided by our participants, and 2. Details how such narratives operate in prison, allowing our participants to advance personal agendas that are themselves related to the dynamics of incarceration. In doing so, we provide insights into incarcerated fathers’ situations and advance criminological efforts to appreciate how different actors entangled in the criminal justice system conceive, manage, and narrate their situation. K1 Redemption K1 prison code K1 Prison K1 Narrative Criminology K1 Fatherhood DO 10.1177/14624745211018760