“I’ve made more steps forward here than I have anywhere else”: a mixed methods exploration of a service to rehabilitate individuals with sexual convictions
Journal article
| Authors | Teague, K., Blagden, N. and Penford, E. |
|---|---|
| Abstract | Despite the need for holistic and well-rounded support during the transition from prison into the community for people convicted of sexual offending, and the empirical evidence that such support can keep individuals and communities safe, there are very few support services and fewer empirical opportunities to examine the impact of such services. The Safer Living Foundation (SLF) based in England, is one of the few charitable organisations working to reduce sexual (re)offending through rehabilitative, reintegrative and preventative initiatives. One of the core initiatives delivered by the SLF is the The Safer Living Centre (SLC), which seeks to address a gap in provision by offering a supportive environment geared towards facilitating reintegration, and desistance, and building protective factors. The study aims to ascertain whether the SLC supports people convicted of sexual offending back into the community, whether it contributes to changes on strength-based measures for the men, and to understand how the centre may help reintegrate individuals. This study uses a mixed-method approach with a convergent parallel design, incorporating repeated measures strength-based psychometrics and qualitative interviews. A total of n=61 participants were recruited for the study at timepoint 1, with n=29 available for data collection at timepoint 2, of which n=16 of those also participated in a qualitative study. Findings indicate significant improvements in participants' wellbeing, a reduction in shame, and enhanced hope over six months. However, despite these positive changes, baseline scores for depression, anxiety, and stress remained high, highlighting the ongoing, structural challenges faced by people with a sexual offence history. Qualitatively, the SLC helped participants belong, and find a The Safer Living Centre is, to the authors knowledge, the first of its kind globally. It represents a new way of trying to rehabilitate those with sexual convictions. This is then the first study to evaluate such an approach and consider its effectiveness. The study contributes towards the limited research into evidence-based reintegration initiatives for individuals with a sexual conviction. |
| Keywords | Rehabilitation; reintegration; men with sexual convictions; protective factors; community support; desistance |
| Year | 2025 |
| Journal | Journal of Criminal Psychology |
| Publisher | Emerald |
| ISSN | 2009-3829 |
| Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1108/JCP-10-2024-0100 |
| Web address (URL) | https://www.emerald.com/jcp/article-abstract/doi/10.1108/JCP-10-2024-0100/1271062/I-ve-made-more-steps-forward-here-than-I-have?redirectedFrom=fulltext |
| Accepted author manuscript | File Access Level Restricted |
| Publisher's version | File Access Level Restricted |
| Output status | Published |
| Publication dates | |
| Online | 06 Aug 2025 |
| Publication process dates | |
| Accepted | 29 Apr 2025 |
| Deposited | 20 Aug 2025 |
https://repository.derby.ac.uk/item/qyz3q/-i-ve-made-more-steps-forward-here-than-i-have-anywhere-else-a-mixed-methods-exploration-of-a-service-to-rehabilitate-individuals-with-sexual-convictions
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