RT Article T1 ‘Patience, persistence and proportionality’: Probation officer's perspectives of desistance in practice JF Probation journal VO 71 IS 2 SP 139 OP 158 A1 Beck, Peter A1 McGinnis, Emma A2 McGinnis, Emma LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1892736985 AB Desistance from crime is a priority for criminal justice policy and practice yet the term carries varying definitions across research literature. Contemporary discourses promote a refocusing from desistance's representation as an individual's personal journey, to understanding desistance more akin to a social movement. Research has predominantly focused on the lived experience of those striving to achieve desistance, with practitioner perspectives remaining under researched. This study, conducted post COVID-19, aimed to explore and evaluate how probation officers operationalise desistance in practice. Outcomes evidence that whilst practitioners acknowledge the diverse conceptualisations of desistance, it remains a priority in practice, even where the focus is predominantly risk management. Key practice features emerging as essential to promoting desistance include identifying and cultivating a motivation to change, approaches to forming the supervisory relationship and how practitioner's respond when risks increase. A supporting organisational ethos is critical but challenged in the complex post COVID-19 context. K1 professional values K1 relationship-based practice K1 Probation officers K1 Probation Supervision K1 Probation K1 Desistance DO 10.1177/02645505241236780