Freedom, so close but yet so far: The impact of the ongoing confrontation with freedom on the perceived severity of punishment Cover Image
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Freedom, so close but yet so far: The impact of the ongoing confrontation with freedom on the perceived severity of punishment
Freedom, so close but yet so far: The impact of the ongoing confrontation with freedom on the perceived severity of punishment

Author(s): Elli Gilbert, Helene De Vos
Subject(s): Criminology, Penal Policy
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Electric monitoring; freedom; imprisonment; liberty-restriction; subjective severity;

Summary/Abstract: The severity of a particular sentence is often assumed to be reflected by its degree of liberty-restriction: a five-year prison sentence is considered more severe than a oneyear prison sentence, and imprisonment is considered more severe than electronic monitoring. Yet, the relationship between the degree of liberty-restriction and the experienced severity is more complex. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in two Belgian and two Norwegian prisons, and phenomenological interviews with electronically monitored offenders, this article argues that a lesser degree of liberty-restriction can result in a more painful experience of this liberty restriction, but still contributes to the offenders’ reintegration.

  • Issue Year: 9/2017
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 132-148
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English