ABSTRACT

Long sentenced young people are a small but significant part of the juvenile prison population. The current approach to young people convicted of serious crime speaks to wider issues in criminal and social justice, including the idealisation of (some) childhoods, processes of racialisation and identity and the sociology of the body. Analysing the relationships between biography, trauma and habitus reveals the ways in which class, racial and legal status are experienced and resisted.

Young Men's Experiences of Long-Term Imprisonment: Living Life considers the need for the reinvigoration of prison ethnography and calls for a phenomenological approach to understanding youth crime and punishment. An insightful ethnographic study on imprisoned 15- to 17-year-olds in England, this volume examines how young people experience long-term imprisonment, manage their time and imagine and shape their futures. Drawing on observations, interviews and correspondence, Tynan situates long-term imprisonment of young men within the wider social context of criminal and social justice; and analyses constructs and practices that locate responsibility for crime with individuals and communities.

Young Men's Experiences of Long-Term Imprisonment: Living Life will be of interest to students and researchers interested in the sociology of prisons, punishment and youth justice and qualitative research methodology.

chapter 1|24 pages

‘Be easy, see wagwan’

Introduction

chapter 2|26 pages

‘My story’s boring’

Why young prisoners’ stories matter

chapter 3|19 pages

‘Real talk’

Methodology and reflections on fieldwork

chapter 4|24 pages

‘Just gotta ride it’

Adaptation, survival and change

chapter 5|21 pages

‘That’s just their pen and ink’

Resisting the pains of imprisonment

chapter 6|21 pages

‘Obviously, you can’t just back down…’

Violence and identity

chapter 7|22 pages

‘Clothes, food and love…’

Family, fatherhood and the limits of fratriarchy

chapter 8|16 pages

‘Jail’s not gonna do nothin’…at all’

Conclusion