Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and "Revolving-Door" Imprisonment in the UK
The profile of prisoners across many Western countries is strikingly similar – 95% male, predominantly undereducated and underemployed, from the most deprived neighbourhoods. This book reflects on how similarly positioned men configure masculinities against global economic shifts that have seen the decimation of traditional, manual-heavy industry and with it the disruption of long-established relations of labour. Drawing on life history interviews and classical ethnography, the book charts a group of men’s experiences pre, during and post prison. Tracking the development of masculinities from childhood to adulthood, across impoverished streets, ‘failing’ schools and inadequate state ‘care’, the book questions whether this proved better preparation for serving prison time than working in their local, service-dominated, labour markets. It integrates theories of crime, geography, economics and masculinity to take into account structural and global economic shifts as well as individual long-term perspectives in order to provide a broad examination on pathways to prison and post prison.
"1137605926"
Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and "Revolving-Door" Imprisonment in the UK
The profile of prisoners across many Western countries is strikingly similar – 95% male, predominantly undereducated and underemployed, from the most deprived neighbourhoods. This book reflects on how similarly positioned men configure masculinities against global economic shifts that have seen the decimation of traditional, manual-heavy industry and with it the disruption of long-established relations of labour. Drawing on life history interviews and classical ethnography, the book charts a group of men’s experiences pre, during and post prison. Tracking the development of masculinities from childhood to adulthood, across impoverished streets, ‘failing’ schools and inadequate state ‘care’, the book questions whether this proved better preparation for serving prison time than working in their local, service-dominated, labour markets. It integrates theories of crime, geography, economics and masculinity to take into account structural and global economic shifts as well as individual long-term perspectives in order to provide a broad examination on pathways to prison and post prison.
129.99 In Stock
Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and

Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and "Revolving-Door" Imprisonment in the UK

by David Maguire
Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and

Male, Failed, Jailed: Masculinities and "Revolving-Door" Imprisonment in the UK

by David Maguire

Paperback(1st ed. 2021)

$129.99 
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Overview

The profile of prisoners across many Western countries is strikingly similar – 95% male, predominantly undereducated and underemployed, from the most deprived neighbourhoods. This book reflects on how similarly positioned men configure masculinities against global economic shifts that have seen the decimation of traditional, manual-heavy industry and with it the disruption of long-established relations of labour. Drawing on life history interviews and classical ethnography, the book charts a group of men’s experiences pre, during and post prison. Tracking the development of masculinities from childhood to adulthood, across impoverished streets, ‘failing’ schools and inadequate state ‘care’, the book questions whether this proved better preparation for serving prison time than working in their local, service-dominated, labour markets. It integrates theories of crime, geography, economics and masculinity to take into account structural and global economic shifts as well as individual long-term perspectives in order to provide a broad examination on pathways to prison and post prison.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783030610616
Publisher: Springer International Publishing
Publication date: 11/03/2020
Series: Palgrave Studies in Prisons and Penology
Edition description: 1st ed. 2021
Pages: 243
Product dimensions: 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.02(d)

About the Author

David Maguire is Director for the Prison Reform Trust’s Building Futures Programme, a five-year programme for those that have served 10 or more years in prison. As a researcher at Oxford University and University College London, UK, he has extensive experience leading on prison-based projects, collecting data on the vulnerabilities facing those in prison and widely disseminating these findings to impact change.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Introduction: Failing Masculinities.- Chapter 2. Theorising Marginalisied Masculinities.- Chapter 3.- Economic Change: Post Industrial Masculinities.- Chapter 4.- Background and Methods: Epistemological Privilege?.- Chapter 5. Local Lads: Pathways to Prison.- Chapter 6. (Non)Working Lives.- Chapter 7. Boys to “Cons”: Adolescent to Adult Transitions in the Local Prison.- Chapter 8. Vulnerable Masculinities: Absent Men and Imagined Futures.- Chapter 9. Conclusion: Marginalised from the Margins.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“In his classic study Learning to Labour, Paul Willis showed us how the pressures of masculinity duped working class English boys into self-entrapment in lives of manual labour. Forty years later in post-industrial north of England, Maguire finds that the same demands of masculinity are now preparing working class males not for the factory floor, but for prison. Maguire’s ground-breaking new study of the reproduction of a criminal caste has the potential to be as transformative as Willis’s writing was 45 years ago.“

—Shadd Maruna, Professor of Criminology, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

“Maguire’s book is a triumph on so many levels. The culmination of a long personal journey, it offers anyone concerned about prisons, social justice and men’s lives a rich and provocative new resource. Academic books are often the result of impressive scholarship and searching intelligence. This is all of that, but I also defy anyone not to be moved by Maguire’s account of young men looping inand out of jail. Hurting inside and out, they have rarely been so well drawn or their predicaments so acutely analysed.”

—Rod Earle, Senior Lecturer in Youth Justice, The Open University, UK.

“Complicating new arguments that young men no longer ‘learn to labour’, but instead ‘learn to serve’, this book charts the ways that places and spaces come to bear on constructions and performances of masculinity and result in young men ‘learning to serve’ at her Majesty’s pleasure. Sensitive and sophisticated, the sociological insights developed by David Maguire are in keeping with the traditions of the famous Teesside studies, upon which this book excellently builds.”

— Steven Roberts, Associate Professor of Sociology, Monash University, UK.

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