A key conceptual contribution is the book’s critique of normalcy as both an aspirational and oppressive goal. The work illustrates how the pursuit of mainstream inclusion can expose desisters to both new and continuous harms. These include surveillance and stigma, social and literal death, gendered violence, and economic precarity. By engaging with feminist and temporal criminological theories, the book sheds light on how desisters’ experiences reveal the dark side of normalcy, calling into question whether its pursuit is wholly desirable.
With its focus on the intersections of gender, stigma, and social control, this work advances academic debates on desistance, proposing a rethinking of how criminal justice systems and support frameworks engage with those transitioning out of criminalized lifestyles. It will appeal to students and scholars of criminology, desistance, gender studies, recovery from addiction, and to practitioners and policy-makers in these fields.
Tea Fredriksson is senior lecturer at Stockholm University’s Department of Criminology, studies constructions of belonging and otherness. Focusing on prisons and desistance, she uses intersectional and hauntological frameworks in explorations of spaces and processes of punishment.
Robin Gålnander is associate senior lecturer at Stockholm University’s Department of Criminology. His primary research focus involves desistance from crime using feminist theories and methodologies, and he has conducted a longitudinal, qualitative research project on women’s desistance from crime since 2015.