The challenge of working with racially motivated offenders: An exercise in ambivalence?

Author:

McGhee Derek1

Affiliation:

1. University of Southampton,

Abstract

A Probation Circular published in 2005 announced that accredited one-to-one programmes should be developed for Racially Motivated Offenders (RMOs). This article reviews a number of existing literatures written by both practitioners and academics which have focused on the problems and opportunities that arise during interventions with RMOs. At the same time, in this article, insights derived from the latter literatures are contextualized within poststructuralist and discursive psychological literatures. The outcome of this is an attempt to forge common ground between practitioner-derived insights on racism, racists, identity, locality and shared `communities of prejudice' with poststructuralist approaches to identity and the advancement of specific therapeutic/correctionalist techniques (especially the motivational interviewing technique pioneered by Miller and Rollnick, 1991) for facilitating change processes in RMOs.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Law

Reference68 articles.

1. Appiah, A. (1990) `Racisms', in D.T. Goldberg (ed.) Anatomy of Racism, pp. 3—17. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press.

2. Doing cognitive distortions: A discursive psychology analysis of sex offender treatment talk

3. Beyond the racist/hooligan couplet: race, social theory and football culture

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