"Making a difference": Interpreting responsivity ambience for parole work.

Heliyon

Alvis, 2100 Stella Court, Columbus, OH, 43215, USA.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study utilizes qualitative interviews with 150 parole officers in Canada to analyze job satisfaction and the relational dynamics of their work, emphasizing the transformational relationships formed in correctional environments.
  • The research highlights the challenges POs face due to economic, social, and political constraints, questioning the effectiveness of their role as change agents in rehabilitation despite their adherence to core correctional practices.
  • Findings suggest that workplace culture and environment significantly influence POs' motivation and relationships with both their colleagues and those under supervision, leading to a deeper understanding of the therapeutic aspect of corrections and the potential pitfalls of interventions.

Article Abstract

In this article, we draw on qualitative interview data (n = 150) from parole officers (POs) employed in Canada's federal correctional service. Our analysis interprets job satisfaction, accountability, and relational aspects of POs' work, taking a semi-grounded constructivist approach. We discovered correctional workers, such as probation and parole officers, engage in transformational relationships within their workplace environments. However, given economic, social, and political constraints, we question how these change agents actually 'make a difference' in practice. Fidelity to core correctional practices suggests therapeutic alliances are fundamental to intervention. Emergent in our discoveries is how the workplace environment, organizational climate and culture, and penal atmosphere mediate reflexive experiences that inspire motivation, morale, and change. However, our interpretation and situational awareness of parole adds to a lacuna in knowledge about therapeutic relationships in correctional work generally and the responsivity principle specifically for sensemaking about how interventions may sometimes become iatrogenic. We found that POs negotiate their relationships with those under supervision as much as with fellow correctional workers. pertains to consolidation and conceptual clarity concerning how corrections, in its public safety mandate, induces in/efficacy. Through discussion, we theorize how securitized settings affect well-being and provide practical insights to converge on the rehabilitative ideal and criminal desistance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11532879PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e39617DOI Listing

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