The Role of Food in Resettlement and Rehabilitation
Good Food and Good Lives
Julie Parsons editor Kevin Wong editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:6th Jun '25
£145.00
This title is due to be published on 6th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
Exploring the role of food in enabling people with convictions to live a ‘good life’, this book examines the tangible ways in which the growing, cooking and eating together of food has the potential to be both transformative and small-steps incremental in facilitating desistance journeys for people with convictions.
At its most reductive, food sustains us physically, it’s the fuel which keeps us alive. Of course, emotionally, culturally and socially it does more than that. This edited book addresses an under-researched area of resettlement and rehabilitation which has real-world application to policy and practice in criminal justice and related areas such as mental health, physical health, employment and education. Importantly, given the relatability of food growing, cooking and eating to the wider public, it offers opportunities to connect the desistance journeys and lives of people with convictions to the wider public.
The Role of Food in Resettlement and Rehabilitation will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, sociology, social work, and food studies. It is also important reading for government policy makers in criminal justice; and health care, social policy, and criminal justice practitioners including prison governors, social workers and providers of services for people with convictions in custody and community.
In this excellent edited book Julie Parsons and Kevin Wong explore the contribution of food and its associated practices in helping individuals to live meaningful and productive lives following their involvement with the criminal justice system. Their use of the Good Lives Model as an overarching conceptual framework is strikingly original and resonates beautifully with its insistence that effective human agency depends as much on our embodiment as a capacity for reflection and planning.
Professor Tony Ward, PhD, DipClinPsyc, FRSNZ. Developer of the Good Lives Model
Good Food and Good Livesis a collective labour of love, curated by two outstanding scholars of lived experiences of justice. It is a groundbreaking collection about pioneers in our midst who are quietly building solidarity and making communities more just and liveable for all.
Professor Mary Corcoran, Keele University
Until now, extraordinarily little has been written about leaving behind the prison’s very unusual and often impoverished ‘foodscape’ and re-entering social worlds with different possibilities and problems in which food plays a vital part. Putting it more simply, food really matters for rehabilitation and reintegration!
Professor Fergus McNeill, University of Glasgow
ISBN: 9781032448480
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
264 pages