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Research Article

Living ‘good lives’: using mentoring to support desistance and recovery

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Pages 37-46 | Received 13 Feb 2018, Accepted 21 Jul 2018, Published online: 18 Dec 2018
 

Abstract

In recent years, a proliferation of mentoring projects have been established in England and Wales, targeted at both offenders and drug users. This is, in part, a consequence of high-level encouragement to establish such schemes. Mentoring features throughout the Ministry of Justice’s Transforming Rehabilitation strategy as a tool to support offenders to ‘get their lives back on track’, and the 2017 drug strategy highlights the importance of peer mentoring for those engaged in treatment services. Using Kingdon’s multiple streams approach, the article accounts for the popularity of mentoring within criminal justice and drug policy despite a less than convincing evidence-base. His model is based upon an appreciation of three streams (problem, policies and politics) which coincide when a compelling problem is linked to a plausible solution that meets the test of political feasibility. It is argued that mentoring has come to be viewed as a cost-effective solution to reduce reoffending and improve drug treatment outcomes despite a lack of conclusive evidence. It has garnered support because of its fit with dominant political discourses around citizenship and civil society. Mentoring has received support from within and without government but its inherent appeal overshadows a lack of clarity of what mentoring is and insufficient theoretical understanding of why it might be effective. Consequently, it is proposed that the Good Lives Model, a strengths-based rehabilitation theory, might provide an appropriate theoretical base and inform discussions about the role of mentoring within desistance and recovery journeys.

Acknowledgements

I am grateful to the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive and supportive feedback on earlier drafts of the paper. I would also like to acknowledge that whilst the article is sole-authored the paper draws, in part, upon earlier work with Professor Anthea Hucklesby on mentoring prisoners.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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