RT Article T1 Mobilizing Metaphors in Criminological Analysis: a Case Study of Emotions in the Penal Voluntary Sector JF The British journal of criminology VO 64 IS 6 SP 1239 OP 1258 A1 Quinn, Kaitlyn A2 Buck, Gillian A2 Tomczak, Philippa LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1914459148 AB Metaphors pervade media and political constructions of crime and justice, provoking responses and shaping actions. Scholarship in adjacent disciplines illustrates that emotion-metaphors offer unique insight into emotional and interpretive processes, valuably illuminating sense-making, problem solving and action. Yet, metaphors are rarely analysed within criminology, leaving an important opportunity for theorizing emotions and their implications largely unrealized. We explore the analytical and theoretical potential of emotion-metaphors for criminology, using empirical research conducted in the penal voluntary sectors of England and Scotland. Drawing on focus groups with volunteers and paid staff, we analyse the metaphors that non-profit practitioners mobilized to convey how their work felt: (1) absurd and unstable, (2) vulnerable and constrained, (3) devalued and discarded and (4) risky and all-consuming. K1 Penal voluntary sector K1 Emotion K1 Metaphor DO 10.1093/bjc/azae027