Description
Book SynopsisExamines the lives of young people who spent considerable time in and out of correctional institutions as adolescents. This book narrates the day-to-day experiences of these young men and women, focusing on their attempts to surmount the challenges of adulthood, resisting a return to criminal activity, and formulating long-term goals for a secure adult future.
Trade Review"Their sensitive appraisal of the intersecting social forces and social institutions, as well as the internal struggles that young people face, shines through in this book."— The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice
"
Everyday Desistance is a humanizing portrait of a group of young adults which brings readers to a compassionate understanding of their hardships as well as a great degree of admiration for their triumphs."— Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
"Timely, interesting, and well-written, the authors provide a comprehensive examination with accessible stories and ideas.
Everyday Desistance fills a niche that needs to be filled."— Mercer L. Sullivan, author of Getting Paid: Youth Crime and Work in the Inner City
"There is much to be gained from both a policy and theory perspective by reading
Everyday Desistance. It is a well-written and engaging study that contributes to knowledge about re-entry and the journey toward desistance....We can learn a lot about how to help them reach this goal by reading this book." — Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
"This book is a must read for anyone looking to understand the complex daily choices of desistance and to support formerly incarcerated young people to not only survive in adulthood but also to thrive. For me, the book goes beyond the confines of juvenile justice readership — it holds important lessons for anyone working in child welfare to consider their work in the larger picture of poverty, community, incarceration and reentry."— Juvenile Justice Information Exchange
"
Everyday Desistance stands out as an important contribution to the now burgeoning literature on desistance." — European Journal of Probation
Reposting of JJIE's "BOOK REVIEWS Book Review: ‘Everyday Desistance: The Transition to Adulthood Among Formerly Incarcerated Youth'"— Youth Today
"Laura Abrams and Diane Terry offer a richly detailed account of ‘formerly incarcerated youth’ and their struggle to emerge as adults. Desistance is part of the story, and the authors tell it well." — Children & Society
"Using in-depth, in-person interviews, UCLA social welfare professor Laura S. Abrams and Diane J. Terry... have presented a more nuanced portrait of life after juvie"
"Abrams and Terry collected firsthand stories and insights to answer the following questions: What does everyday life look like for young people who age out of the juvenile justice system? And how do young people navigate the transition to adulthood while attempting to stay out of the hands of the law?"— Stan Paul, UCLA Luskin
Table of ContentsContents
Foreword by Michelle Inderbitzin, PhD
1 Introduction
2 The Road to Juvie
3 Locked Up and Back Again
4 And Now I’m an Adult
5 Dangers and Decisions: Navigating Desistance as a Young Man
6 You Can Run but You Can’t Hide
7 Finding a Net to Fall Back On: The Young Woman’s Journeys
8 Everyday Desistance: Theory Meets Reality
9 Policy and Practice Reforms: Supporting the Pathway to Adulthood
Acknowledgments
Appendix: The Research Process
Bibliography
Index