Professionalism in Probation

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A01=Matt Tidmarsh
Author_Matt Tidmarsh
Category=JKVS
Crack Cocaine
criminal justice reform
Elizabeth Street
Emotional Exhaustion
emotional labour in corrections
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Hierarchical Observation
HMP Peterborough
Interchange Manager
Managerial Co-ordination
Marketisation
Mass Supervision
Multiple Stakeholders
Offender Group Reconviction Scale
offender rehabilitation
Offenders
organisational identity
Probation
Probation Habitus
Probation officers
Probation Practice
Probation Service
Probation Service Officers
Probation Staff
probation staff professional identity discourse
Professional Development
Professionalism
Professionalism in Probation
public sector marketisation
Rehabilitation
Required Display Rules
Risk Assessment Technologies
Senior Case Manager
Senior Probation Officers
Short Term Prison Sentences
sociology of professions
Target Operating Model
Taxpayers
The State
TR Model
Transforming Rehabilitation
Transforming Rehabilitation Reforms
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367621933
  • Weight: 590g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Aug 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores probation staff understandings of professionalism in the aftermath of the Transforming Rehabilitation (TR) reforms to services in England and Wales. Drawing on the sociology of the professions, this book offers an original and timely contribution to the criminal justice literature, examining the ways in which professionalism in probation has been reshaped and renegotiated in response to the market logic that has dominated public services in recent decades.

The case of the TR reforms offers a useful platform for exploring broader shifts in understandings of professionalism. This book demonstrates the ways in which professionalism in probation can be understood as a discourse through which professionals are expected to be receptive to the demands of multiple stakeholders – offenders, taxpayers, the state, and, additionally, the market. It situates TR in a marketising continuum, the logical endpoint of a period of reform that has sought to discipline staff and reshape their understandings of professionalism.

Written in a clear and direct style, this book is essential reading for researchers engaged in probation, rehabilitation, criminal justice, and organizational and professional studies.

Matt Tidmarsh is a lecturer in Criminal Justice at the School of Law, University of Leeds. He completed his PhD on staff experiences of the Transforming Rehabilitation reforms to probation services in England and Wales, at the School of Law, University of Leeds, in November 2019. His research interests are interdisciplinary, drawing from criminology, sociology, and penology – with a particular focus identity, culture, and practice in probation.

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