Abstract
Abstract Increasing calls for ‘nothing about us without us’ envision marginalized people as valuable and necessary contributors to policies and practices affecting them. In this paper, we examine what this type of inclusion feels like for criminalized people who share their lived experiences in penal voluntary sector organizations. Focus groups conducted in England and Scotland illustrated how this work was experienced as both safe, inclusionary and rewarding and exclusionary, shame-provoking and precarious. We highlight how these tensions of ‘user involvement’ impact criminalized individuals and compound wider inequalities within this sector. The individual, emotional and structural implications of activating lived experience, therefore, require careful consideration. We consider how the penal voluntary sector might more meaningfully and supportively engage criminalized individuals in service design and delivery. These considerations are significant for broader criminal justice and social service provision seeking to meaningfully involve those with lived experience.
Highlights
Across social services, voluntary sector and lived experience involvement are increasingly prominent
We explore themes that emerged from workers activating their lived experiences of criminalization, focussing on the safety net, unbelonging
The safety net, represents a sense that the penal voluntary sector (PVS) can rescueservice users from dangerous pasts and presents blighted by anxiety and isolation
Summary
Voluntary sector and lived experience involvement are increasingly prominent. We centre the emotional experiences of criminalized individuals working for PVS organizations in England and Scotland.
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