Based on in-depth interviews with a group of men under probation supervision, Sam King investigates the factors associated with making a decision to desist from crime. The book examines strategies for desistance, and explores the factors that individuals consider when they are thinking about how they will desist.
"It's a cliché to describe books as 'timely'. In this case, however, it could not be more true. Sam King's theoretically informed and meticulously researched analysis of whether and how probation supervision can support the early stages of desistance from crime will be a vitally important resource, not just for researchers and policymakers, but also for those charged with commissioning and providing probation services - not just in the strange new landscape of criminal justice in England and Wales, but also much further afield."
Fergus McNeill, Professor of Criminology & Social Work, University of Glasgow.
"Sam King makes an invaluable contribution to our understanding of the attitudes and opportunities that lead offenders to stop offending. His reliable and scholarly summary of current research is enlivened with many vivid quotations from his own interviews with people struggling to get out - and stay out - of crime. This engaging and readable book offers many perceptive insights into the contribution that probation officers could make to support the process of change."?
Professor Rob Canton, De Montfort University.
"Sam King's research monograph is aptly situated in Routledge's formidable collection of books in their International Series on Desistance and Rehabilitation. King's research, based on in-depth interviews with 20 men on probation and their supervising officers, reveals the processes which led towards a decision to attempt to desist; the strategies that individuals considered; the obstacles that individuals believed they would encounter and how they intended to overcome these and the role of human agency in this phase? Desistance Transitions and the Impact of Probation makes an important contribution"
Beth Weaver, University of Strathclyde