The aim of all this is to develop themes and refresh my thinking in preparation for a larger mixed-methods study on parole.
Further details + links to the paper available at the link above.
@benjarman.uk.bsky.social
Criminologist and prison researcher. Scholar of punishment, fascinated by human extremes. Husband of better half, Quaker, lover of silence, servant of unquiet spaniel and toddler. https://benjarman.uk for more on my work.
The aim of all this is to develop themes and refresh my thinking in preparation for a larger mixed-methods study on parole.
Further details + links to the paper available at the link above.
Themes identified in the interviews included temporal disruption, procedural expectations, and performativity. The paper highlights tensions between the system's risk assessment focus and some participants' expectations of a broader moral evaluation.
10.07.2025 09:29 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0I re-examined some of my PhD interviews, thinking about the parole decision as some of my participants saw it: not as the product of a discrete decision-making event (the oral hearing) but of a longer administrative process, in which the sediment of past assessments and reports shape outcomes.
10.07.2025 09:29 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0I presented exploratory findings on life-sentenced prisoners' experiences of the parole process at the British Society of Criminology conference last week.
benjarman.uk/news/parole-...
My PhD thesis is now open access: "Moral messages, ethical responses" - research on how men serving life sentences navigate the moral dimensions of their punishment. Interview-based study completed at Cambridge last year. Links at benjarman.uk/news/phd-ava...
19.06.2025 12:19 β π 4 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0If this situation concerns you too, then please do the same. There are some resources linked from this page, if you would like to use your voice in solidarity with us:
www.quaker.org.uk/news-and-eve...
I feel compelled to use my voice to defend their (our, my) rights, which are under threat, and have written to my MP opposing the further expansion of the police's powers to suppress political activism.
03.04.2025 21:54 β π 2 π 3 π¬ 1 π 0A small number of Friends from the meeting, and more from other meetings around the country, have spent time in prison in connection with their exercise of the right to protest.
03.04.2025 21:54 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0As Caroline's letter points out, this raid was part of a wider suppression of the right to peaceful protest. It threatens many groups more vulnerable than Quakers, but came to our home because we support and shelter those who act in sympathy with our principles.
03.04.2025 21:54 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Screenshot of a letter (truncated to meet character limits): Dear Rachel Blake, I am sure that you will have heard in the press about the forcible entry by police into Westminster Quaker Meeting House on the evening of Thursday 27 March. This is the first time that there has been forcible entry into a Meeting House since the early days of Quakers during the persecution of the late seventeenth century, and it has profoundly disturbed those who worship at our Meeting House as well as other community groups that hire rooms there. We hope that you will take this matter up with the Home Secretary. What has happened at Westminster Meeting House is a β probably unintended - consequence of how the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 and the Public Order Act 2023 have criminalised many forms of protest. Quakers are well known for speaking truth to power over many centuries, and this violation of our place of worship is an example of the erosion of our rights and those of many people far more vulnerable than us. Westminster Quakers have worked hard to create a place of peace and calm in the centre of the City of Westminster. More than twenty police officers forced entry into the building although there were Quakers and staff on site who would have opened the door if they had rung the bell. They damaged the door of our Grade 2 listed building and entered every room, disturbing our hirers including a therapy session and a life drawing class. The police arrested six women who had hired a room for a Youth Demand social event. They were eating humous and bread sticks when the police arrived. We are making a formal complaint to the police, and will be asking for compensation to cover the cost of repairing the door and entry system (although police attending said that compensation was unlikely because arrests were made). We have been heartened by messages of support from Quakers around the world, and from people of faith and no faith across London and beyond.
A letter from the Clerk of my Quaker meeting to the Meeting's MP, about the police raid at our Meeting House in Covent Garden last Thursday. It's a space I've used and treasured, since my first visit 20 years ago next month. Reading about the raid felt like learning that my home had been violated.
03.04.2025 21:54 β π 6 π 2 π¬ 1 π 0Wood anemones!
30.03.2025 22:54 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Fairly safe to say, I'd think, that it's usually clear the measures don't capture all the harms.
07.03.2025 19:46 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Have you been a juror on a child sexual abuse trial? Please help improve the experience for others through this innovative study, being carried out by @unisouthampton.bsky.social PhD student Stephen Hanvey:
southampton.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_...
"the vice of shallowness" is brilliant
19.02.2025 21:42 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0What's the source for this, Jason? I remember reading De Profundis once, but don't remember thisβ¦
19.02.2025 16:57 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0New talk: Moving beyond FAIR data publication principles in qualitative research. Using prisons to explore how we balance transparency with obligations to research participants, with ref to recent debates in US #Criminology.
benjarman.uk/news/ldw-tal...
Feedback welcome.
#OpenData #OpenResearch
π’Shaping Sentencing Reform!
Professor @harryannison.bsky.social and Dr @benjarman.uk of the Law School have made significant contributions to the Independent Sentencing Review consultation through a series of responses.
πRead more: https://buff.ly/3WPJdD1
#SentencingReform #PublicPolicy
remarks to follow the subtleties I've mentioned. But that doesn't mean it's asking too much.
24.01.2025 08:15 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Yes, that's fair enough. Sentencing remarks both express censure and are used by prisons as a succinct record of the facts, to be used in risk assessment etc. In that context it's probably asking a lot of reporters who don't have courts as a regular beat and might not know how to interpret the
24.01.2025 08:15 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Strongly agree with this and linked thread. Of course people want the offender to be present for the sentence and it is often deeply painful for families and victims when they refuse to attend. But there are limits to what can practically be done.
23.01.2025 12:12 β π 8 π 4 π¬ 0 π 0for allocating what was a historically severe punishment have to be made public. The reason it was mentioned was that his barrister asked for it to be taken into consideration, and it was. The tone of the reporting is often sensationalist but the reports accurately represent the proceedings.
23.01.2025 22:49 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0This wasn't about making insinuations about other autistic people, but about accurately and publicly putting info into the public domain about the context for a crime that was just about as serious as they get, after misinformation about it had led to nationwide rioting. The sentence and the reasons
23.01.2025 22:49 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Disagree. It's important for the sentencing hearing to consider evidence of any mitigating factors which might affect the appropriate sentence. Autism is one such factor and the judge indicated that it was taken into account as mitigation, albeit that it didn't lessen his responsibility by much.
23.01.2025 22:49 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Thanks - looking forward to reading it
19.01.2025 19:50 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Source? And how is 'seriousness' measured here?
19.01.2025 08:33 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Much of the underlying thinking dates to my time with @prtuk.bsky.social in 2021/2: thanks due to them.
13.01.2025 12:47 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Sharing my response to the MoJ's Independent Sentencing Review. It examines how we might think differently about the progression of long-sentenced prisoners while maintaining public confidence.
Fuller overview here: benjarman.uk/news/sentenc...
Full text here: benjarman.uk/publications...
Congrats! Also finished mine at long last this year - it's the best feeling.
19.12.2024 22:15 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0An arch, pleasingly silly printed notice posted above a microwave in a shared office kitchen.
I saw this in the kitchen at the new office yesterday, and somehow felt just a little bit more at home.
19.12.2024 21:01 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Thanks - might try after Christmas. 7 months without any form of response does seem quite a long time!
18.12.2024 22:50 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0