This article reports on the early stages of a project to develop a model of offender rehabilitation that operationalises the concept of desistance.


Authors

Chris Fox, Caroline Marsh

Abstract

This article reports on the early stages of a project to develop a model of offender rehabilitation that operationalises the concept of desistance. The concept of desistance is influential but operationalising it remains a challenge. The aim of this article is to assess whether personalisation of offender rehabilitation has potential as a mechanism for operationalising the concept of desistance. We identify learning from the design and implementation of personalisation in social care, but challenges include the roll out of personal budgets, developing a local market to support consumer choice and the limited evidence base on the effectiveness of personalisation. We specify a project to pilot personalisation in the English probation sector that tests concepts relating both to the design and commissioning of personalised services, including community capacity building to support the supply of personalised services at the local or even micro level. A project evaluation design is also outlined.

Publication link

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2066220316683132

Fox, C. and Marsh, C (2016) ‘Operationalising Desistance through Personalisation’ European Probation Journal Vol.8(3) pp.185-206