2021
DOI: 10.5204/ijcjsd.1942
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The Importance of Incorporating Lived Experience in Efforts to Reduce Australian Reincarceration Rates

Abstract: It is widely acknowledged that ‘good policy’ should be informed by the people it most directly affects. However, learning from people with lived experiences in the criminal justice sector, such as people who have served time in prison, has received little attention. This article discusses the significance of and challenges related to capturing the voices of people who are currently serving time or have served time in prison. We argue that formalising the perspectives of these individuals into policymaking thro… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Importantly, a key strength of this research is the incorporation of lived experience of program participants as recommended to enhance program outcomes for people from priority groups [ 38 ]. However, the relatively small sample (n = 32) might be considered a limitation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Importantly, a key strength of this research is the incorporation of lived experience of program participants as recommended to enhance program outcomes for people from priority groups [ 38 ]. However, the relatively small sample (n = 32) might be considered a limitation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To be clear, there is often "consultation" at this stage of policy (and also in research), but Paradis and Mosher (2012) have documented a frustration that this does not translate into policy action. Meaningful engagement with LE can influence the later stages of the design and implementation of policy and inspire policy innovation (Mcintosh and Wright 2018;Doyle et al 2021;Miller et al 2023).…”
Section: Lived Expertise and Meaningful Inclusion In Policymakingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the realm of criminology, there is a growing body of literature which elevates, and to some degree fetishizes, the experiences of individuals caught in the criminal justice system. Outside the scholarship of convict criminology, which has been critiqued for failing to assimilate into the local academic milieu of Australia (Doyle et al, 2021), lived experience in criminology has not been otherwise conceptualised. Indeed, there has been work published around concepts of "co-production" and "co-design" in criminal justice (Johns et al, 2022) but these insights have been more or less illuminations of practical measures, considerations and benefits, among other things, of involving people with lived experience of the criminal justice system.…”
Section: Reflections Of a Prisonermentioning
confidence: 99%