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Title: Redemption and Risk: Social enquiry and the new penology


1
Redemption and Risk Social enquiry and the new
penology
  • Fergus McNeill
  • Glasgow School of Social Work
  • Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde
  • Fergus.McNeill_at_strath.ac.uk

Dr. Nicky Burns Law School University of
Strathclyde Nicola.Burns_at_strath.ac.uk
2
Social enquiry and the new penology
  • From old to new penology
  • From welfare to risk
  • From treatment to management
  • From individuals to groups (dividuals)
  • From mitigation to responsibilization
  • From professionalism to managerialisation
  • Evidence of transformation in the discourses,
    objectives and techniques of penality (Feeley and
    Simon 1992)
  • Social enquiry separating the incorrigible
    from the reclaimable?
  • Discourses of selection and suitability
  • Rationales for leniency and for punishment (by
    de-selection)

3
Harris (1996)
  • in their observational, reporting, recording
    and interventive activities probation officers
    are story-tellers par excellence, offering up for
    the consumption of other professionals not the
    truth tout court but a rendition of it which
    will be comprehensible and acceptable both in the
    language of their own invisible trade
    (Pithouse, 1987) and in that of their intended
    audience. But probation officers are not mere
    narrators standing aloof from the action,
    commenting, interpreting and advising in
    dispassionate terms. On the contrary, their
    narratives have about them a tactical aesthetic
    designed to promote a humane response from their
    audience, and even to inculcate a set of
    socio-political ideas by insinuating speculative
    but plausible social explanations of a specific
    criminal act into a quasi-legal document. This is
    narrative as action indeed
  • Probation is marginal as a profession and
    marginal to criminal justice, social work and
    both central and local government. It claims a
    libertarian and egalitarian value base but daily
    imposes control on its charges in particular by
    the suspensiveness of its power (p118)

4
Research question and methods
  • Part of a larger multi-method study of social
    enquiry and sentencing in the sheriff courts
  • What does the contemporary report writer try to
    communicate to the sentencer, why are these
    particular messages selected and how are they
    communicated?
  • Research sites and participants
  • A qualitative approach participant observation
  • Fieldwork diary
  • Observing cases
  • Shadow writing
  • Post-observation interviews

5
Regulation, reflexivity and agency
  • Surround, field and frame (Hawkins, 2002)
  • A fourth level form
  • The operationalisation of frame in a given case
    or situation practice
  • Report writers as marginal actors in the field
  • Surviving the margins and constructing influence
  • Reflexivity and agency
  • Acquiring and employing capital in the field of
    criminal justice

6
Creating the narratives constructing and revising
  • Authorship
  • Redrafting earlier authors versions
  • Social worker, offender, and other voices
  • SW-led, shared and contested authorship
  • Coherence
  • Consonance and dissonance within the new
    narrative
  • Communication
  • Persuasive and ambivalent
  • Competing discourses?
  • Selection seriousness and suitability
  • Technical and/or moral grounds for selection
  • Redemption scripts and (implicit) condemnation
    scripts (Maruna 2001)

7
Constructing Geena and Patrick
  • Geena
  • Social worker and practice teacher
  • Qualified for more than five years, specialist in
    criminal justice social work
  • An enthusiast, committed to effective practice a
    moderniser?
  • Patrick
  • Male, early 20s, 40 previous convictions,
    history of drug misuse, on remand for possession
    of class C drugs, theft and possession of an
    offensive weapon and now in breach of an existing
    probation order, of bail and of release licence

8
SER summary
  • Current situation
  • Partner and daughter
  • Fraught relationship instability
  • Disadvantage
  • The area
  • His history of loss
  • Educational disruption
  • His mothers withdrawal
  • Patricks victimisation
  • Drugs
  • History of use and of unsuccessful change efforts
  • Problems accessing structured support
  • Current honesty and motivation
  • Offending
  • Long history
  • Drug-related
  • Honesty, remorse and insight
  • Weapon but no intent to harm
  • Options
  • Breaches of previous orders
  • Need to tackle drugs issue to reduce re-offending
  • Defer to allow him access to services, under
    threat of strict enforcement

9
Geenas Patrick?
  • Authorship
  • Geena drafts a narrative that Patrick confirms
  • For example Geena tells Patrick that she will
    be saying to the sheriff that custody has not
    addressed his addiction problems and will suggest
    a 3 month deferment. Patrick nods, but says he
    is going to jailGeena says that what he needs
    is a good conversation with a drug counsellor,
    Patrick agrees (Diary week 12).
  • Coherence
  • The story of Patrick a consonant narrative of
    redeemability but with dissonant elements?

10
Redeeming Patrick
  • For Geena, Patricks drug use is the main issue
    for her, from which his offending stems. Geena
    is trying to tell the sheriff that he is
    motivated and by noting his honesty in telling
    her about drugs, she is trying to show that he
    wants help. (Fieldwork diary week 12, p.20)
  • Mr Swan was open and honest about his drug use
    and at our last probation meeting expressed a
    willingness to engage with the addiction
    services. However, he was incarcerated before he
    had the opportunity to speak to a trained drug
    counsellor (SER Case 19, p.4)
  • According to Mr Swan his offending behaviour has
    mainly been influenced by his drug dependency
    problems. With regards to the offences before the
    court, Mr Swan has accepted all responsibility
    for all charges. He frankly admits that he
    offended on the date by stealing a quantity of
    personal goods for financial gain. Mr Swan was
    able to demonstrate a degree of regret and
    remorse for the offence committed. He was able to
    understand the direct correlation between his
    drug dependency and his offending (SER Case 19)

11
Geenas Patrick (contd.)
  • Communication
  • Persuasive consonance, but
  • Dissonance lends credibility
  • Her mentioning of the two probation orders shows
    that she is not daft and is being realistic
    with the court (Diary week 12).
  • Competing discourses?
  • Technical and moral grounds for selecting Patrick
  • Risk as a rationale for leniency
  • It is the authors opinion that Mr Swan remains
    at high risk of re-offending if he does not
    address his addiction difficulties and breaks his
    cycle of offending behaviour (SER case 19).
  • Redemption and/for risk reduction?

12
Tactics and strategies
  • Geena on the margins of social work survival and
    influence
  • No, we don't have any direction, any influence,
    they social work managers are not interested in
    what we do and how, as long as we get reports to
    court So it's us and seniors, we really apart
    from us getting told off about something
    (Interview Geena).
  • Geena on the margins of criminal justice
    survival and influence
  • The writer has informed Mr Swan that she is
    prepared to work with him during probation,
    however, if he were to miss any appointments or
    fail to engage with the addiction services she
    would alert the court to this (Case 19 SER).
  • Geena tells me that she is showing that she is
    accountable to the court and that she will do
    her job to ensure that Patrick complies (Diary
    week 12).

13
Performing Geena
  • Geena the moderniser the what works agenda,
    discourses of risk and getting involved
  • Geena goes on to note that many of the older
    staff members feel that what works is just
    another flavour of the month with management,
    a way of seeing more clients in less timeshe
    however doesnt see it this way, its about
    trying to improve service (Diary week 1).
  • Geena the traditional social worker
  • Patrick states again that he is going to prison
    again and starts to cry. Geena tells him that
    all is not lost. Patrick shakes his head I
    always go back to smack
  • G Why do you think you do that?
  • P Make me forget
  • G Is this a conscious decision you have made to
    seek help?
  • P Yes
  • G Thats a really mature attitude to take (Week
    12 22/10/2003)

14
Discussion
  • Preparing social enquiry reports is a kind of
    pre-sentencing focussed on selection
  • The process is heavily regulated (structured) but
    is also (often) highly reflexive (agentic)
  • SER authors often strive to construct consonant
    and persuasive narratives that provide moral and
    technical evidence of redeemability (rationales
    for leniency?) though they also sometimes
    condemn implicitly by failing to construct such
    accounts (dissonant and neutral narratives)
  • Even the modernisers who best reflect and
    express the features of the new penology continue
    to trade in the discourses of the old at the
    level of practice, the old and the new are
    blended together in attempts to construct
    influence (cultural capital?) in the field of
    criminal justice
  • Welfare re-legitimated by risk
  • The promise of effectively managed treatment
  • Patrick as an individualised dividual
  • Mitigation for and responsibilization of Patrick
  • Geena as a managerialized professional

15
Conclusions
  • Penal professionals are complex social actors
  • The relationships between shifts in penal
    policies and shifts in penal practices are
    complex and contingent
  • Changes in the surround and the field do not
    influence frames and forms in a linear
    fashion forms of practice are both produced by
    and producers of frames, field and surround.
  • Put another way, penal actors are not passive in
    the face of changes in the field and surround
    they can respond with enthusiasm, compliance,
    resistance and/or subversion their strategies
    can be conscious and reflexive (see also Robinson
    and McNeill 2004)
  • Frames and forms needs to be explored
    ethnographically in order to understand the
    inter-relationships between form, frame, field
    and surround for different penal actors. This
    kind of enquiry seems best suited to revealing
    how penality is culturally produced and
    re-produced in practice
  • A better understanding of these processes of
    production and reproduction is a pre-requisite of
    effecting change in penal systems

16
References
  • Feeley, M. and Simon, J. (1992) The new
    penology notes on the emerging strategy of
    corrections and its implications, Criminology
    30 449-474.
  • Harris, R. (1996) Telling tales probation in
    the contemporary social formation, in Parton, N.
    (ed.) Social Theory, Social Change and Social
    Work. London Routledge.
  • Hawkins, K. (2002) Law as Last Resort
    Prosecution Decision-Making in a Regulatory
    Agency. Oxford Oxford University Press.
  • Maruna, S. (2001) Making Good. Washington
    American Psychological Association.
  • Pithouse, A. (1987) Social Work the Social
    Organisation of an Invisible Trade. Aldershot
    Gower Press.
  • Robinson, G. and McNeill, F. (2004) Purposes
    Matter The Ends of Probation in Mair, G. (ed.),
    What Matters in Probation Work. Cullompton
    Willan.

17
Justifying assistance, in the public interest
  • Sh 8 I looked at it from the point of view of
    dealing with a man in his early twenties with
    an absolutely horrendous record, serious
    problems, not much in not much positive to be
    said and yet the emphasis in the report appeared
    to be for some form of probation and assistance.
    Assistance is all very well if he's at an age,
    stage and position where he can take advantage of
    it but it doesn't appear to me from reading this
    report that this man was anywhere in the realms
    of getting that sort of disposal in the public
    interest. Maybe in his interest but it doesn't
    appear to be in the wider public interest that
    would be a likely outcome.

18
Hope and hopelessness
  • Sh 10 I look first of all at the complaint
    and then look at the previous convictions. What
    this would tell me is that the accused is looking
    at a maximum custodial sentence but that he is
    such a bad offender where custody has had no
    possible benefit and is unlikely to be of any
    benefit other than keeping him away for a short
    period, that I may well be looking at the social
    enquiry report to see if there are any realistic
    reasons or proposals for a sentence other than a
    maximum custodial sentence... it is looking for
    hope in a hopeless situation. That's the
    approach I come to -

19
Patrick Bad and hopeless
  • Sh 9 Is there any good reason for deflecting
    this man from custody?
  • Intv And is there?
  • Sh 9 I don't think so, no.
  • Sh 8 Not reading the report, no.
  • Sh 9 He's a very, very bad offender he's
    only in his early twenties and he's got a
    terrible record.
  • Intv I mean how would you characterise this
    guy?
  • Sh 9 A hopeless case, to be honest.
  • Intv That's something else I was going to
    ask you, whether you thought there was any hope
    here.
  • Sh 9 I think he is no, it doesn't look like
    it.
  • Sh 8 He appears to be in the throes of a
    dreadful addiction to drugs and unable to sustain
    any assistance of any sort from anybody to try
    and deal with it in any united way for any length
    of time because his record shows he's just
    constantly in trouble.

20
Managing sentencing?
  • Intv And you think the social worker should
    play a part in managing acceptance of the
    sentence?
  • Sh 10 I don't think the social worker no, I
    don't think the social worker should be saying as
    the defence agent will Look, with this record
    you're facing a maximum sentence, I will try to
    persuade the court A, B, C but I have to tell you
    and you will know you're facing a maximum
    sentence and you're lucky not to be on
    indictment. Now, she has upset the system by
    associating herself too closely with the accused,
    I think.
  • Sh 9 Yes.
  • Sh 8 Uh-huh, it's quite clear
  • Sh 10 I haven't seen that phraseology before.
  • Sh 8 No I haven't either but it's clear from
    reading the last two paragraphs that the author
    of this report thinks that this person should be
    placed on probation again and that she will
    support him in endeavouring to achieve a
    successful outcome on a probation order which, as
    history tells us, is extremely unlikely at this
    stage. And I think it takes away from the
    independence of the report.
  • Sh 9 Uh-huh, yeah, absolutely.
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