Nuances of fragmentation, (mis)recognition and closeness: Narratives of challenges and support during resettlement

The transition from prison to society tends to be tough and painful for people in resettlement and challenging to facilitate for professionals. The Norwegian Correctional Services aim for a continuous reentry focus throughout the prison sentence. Norway has been presented as one of the Nordic except...

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Authors: Koffeld-Hamidane, Sylvia (Author) ; Schinkel, Marguerite 1977- (Author) ; Andvig, Ellen (Author) ; Karlsson, Bengt (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
In: Punishment & society
Year: 2024, Volume: 26, Issue: 1, Pages: 187-207
Online Access: Volltext (kostenfrei)
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Summary:The transition from prison to society tends to be tough and painful for people in resettlement and challenging to facilitate for professionals. The Norwegian Correctional Services aim for a continuous reentry focus throughout the prison sentence. Norway has been presented as one of the Nordic exceptional penal states, partly based on ‘the encouraging pattern of officer-inmate interactions’. However, this exceptional picture has been criticized for paying more attention to discourse than to lived experiences. As newly released persons’ experiences of interaction and relationships with staff and of how these facilitate and frustrate their reentry processes have largely been ignored, this article draws attention to their perspectives. Inspired by narrative analysis, in cooperation with persons with lived experience, we constructed three stories of challenges and support during resettlement. Through these in-depth presentations of frustrating misrecognition, ignorance and fragmentation, but also of closeness, continuity, recognition, belonging and de-stigmatization, this study provides important insights into how interaction and relationships with staff enable and constrain reentry to society. By bringing lived experience into the discourse of Nordic exceptionalism, this article adds valuable perspectives to this still ongoing debate. Overall, we argue for a revitalization of the primary officer role and a broader approach to resettlement to facilitate support throughout the prison sentence.
ISSN:1741-3095
DOI:10.1177/14624745231203961