RT Article T1 Desisting into what?: an exploration of desistance from crime after imprisonment among Chilean women JF Geographies of gendered punishment SP 293 OP 314 A1 Droppelmann, Catalina A2 Borquez, Ignacio A2 Rodriguez, Jacinta LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1924949873 AB While prison reentry is a complex process, linked to several contextual factors, its success or failure has traditionally been measured based on recidivism outcomes (Durose et al., 2014). The present chapter analyzes the process of reentry among a group of Chilean women through the critical lens of gender. We first describe methodological aspects of the study and its participants. Then, we analyze the beginnings of the reentry process, focusing on the structural obstacles to social integration, which are associated with the fulfillment of gender roles and the occurrence of multiple demands. We then discuss the participants’ identity changes after leaving prison. The results raise the question of the extent to which women have the opportunity to rewrite their past, given the structural constraints of gender and class; therefore, we explore the obstacles they encounter after imprisonment and how they perceive their ability to leave crime behind. Finally, we describe how the participants developed a normative life script, based on a notion of redemption that is anchored in traditional gender roles and the ethics of care. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 311-314 SN 9783031612763