Abstract
The transition from prison is a crucial phase in the complex and lengthy desistance process but there is little New Zealand-based research on prisoners’ experiences of transitions. This article reports on one aspect of a qualitative study on transitions by focusing on two prisoners’ ‘vision narratives’ about hopeful accounts of becoming people who can make a positive contribution in the future. The article argues that working with those still in prison to develop vision narratives could be a valuable, initial means of enabling them to begin the journey towards desistance. This approach, however, would require a substantial modification of public and criminal justice discourses and correctional policies and practices.
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