Role Exit in Prison Officers

Returning to ‘Civvy Street’

Darren Woodward author Sarah Nixon author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Publishing:30th Dec '24

£36.99

This title is due to be published on 30th December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Role Exit in Prison Officers cover

Exploring why prison officers leave His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) and the processes and trajectories involved in returning to ‘civilian life’, this book examines the reasons that prison officers want to leave HMPPS and how they transition back to ‘civvy street’.

As well as presenting qualitative data from interviews with ex-prison officers, the authors also draw analytically on their ‘insider’ positionality to offer insights on the lived experience of prison officers both in the role and on their subsequent departure from the service. In doing so, they identify the rewards and challenges of working in a prison environment, while using Ebaugh’s (1988) four-stage model of role exit as a theoretical framework to help understand the process of leaving the prison service. Among the issues addressed are the impact of austerity, the Voluntary Early Departure Scheme, the decline in transmission of knowledge (‘jail craft’) to new recruits, high staff turnover, increased violence and the impact of COVID-19. These are counterbalanced by an exposition of what ex-prison officers recall positively about their time in service, such as loyalty, support, solidarity and pride in the uniform and helping prisoners with their custodial lives. The authors also put forward practical recommendations for ways in which HMPPS could encourage prison officers to stay in post for longer.

Providing authentic insights into the role of ex-prison officers, this book is ideal reading for students and academics of criminology, penology, criminal justice, sociology and criminal psychology. It will also be of interest to criminal justice practitioners and organisations such as Unlocked Graduates, the Howard League for Penal Reform and the Prison Reform Trust.

"There is certainly a need for more texts like this about the lived experiences of former prison officers. The market is saturated by ex-prisoner accounts yet there’s still a huge gap of ex-prison officer accounts. This book helps to fill that gap which will be a refreshing insight for many practitioners, pracademics, and students alike! It draws on many of the same themes always associated with ex-prisoners such as desistance which includes the process of reintegrating and identity transition. There is also a strong theme of Sykes seminal work about the Pains of Imprisonment which although focuses on the deprivations experienced by prisoners, can most certainly be translated to the lives of prison officers who are affected in many ways by the pains of imprisonment as prisoners themselves!"
David Honeywell, Lecturer in Criminology, Arden University, UK

"Contributing to a growing body of work on prison staff, this book presents a unique opportunity to explore the lived realities of personal, professional and cultural transitions involved in leaving the prison service. Role Exit in Prison Officers: Returning to ‘Civvy Street’ delivers an opportunity to understand why prison officers are leaving the service, particularly focusing on voluntary termination, medical retirement, and discharge. This is timely work in the wake of the recently seen ‘exodus’ of experienced operational prison staff who are, crucially, well-versed in ‘jailcraft’. Interrogating the liminal space between employment in the prison service and what lies next in the lives of those who leave, this publication deals with important issues of transition, burnout, and identity reorientation. Much like the resettlement and reintegration into the community of those who have served prison sentences, the return to ‘civvy street’ for former prison officers comes with its own unique set of personal challenges which require attention in the penological field. This publication will be of interest to academic, practitioner, and policy maker communities and should be embraced by all with an interest in the impact of carceral spaces on people who work within them."
Helen Nichols, Senior Lecturer in Criminology, University of Hull, UK

"Nixon and Woodward combine professional experience with scholarly knowledge to produce this book, which is written with insight, empathy, and nuance. It is a great read for criminology students and scholars and for those who seek to better understand the realities of working in prison."
Francis Pakes, Professor of Criminology, University of Portsmouth, UK

ISBN: 9781032049519

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

186 pages