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Session Submission Type: Complete Thematic Panel
This collection of papers from the upcoming DCS Handbook on Lived Experience, addresses the use of “lived experience” in research. Specifically, these papers address the topic of having individuals with “lived experience” in the system as key members of research projects. Thus, this panel provides key insight into how the field can adopt the “not about us, without us” mantra in its exploration of criminal-legal issues.
Navigating lived experiences: Professional entanglements and the role of Project Rebound - Annika Yvette Anderson, California State University, San Bernardino; Michael Griggs, California State University, San Bernardino; Carolyn McAllister, California State University, San Bernardino
Autoethnographic Notes on Role-conflict in Lived Experience: The Case of the Formerly-incarcerated Researcher - Carlos Sanchez, SMU Dedman School of Law; Andrew L. Davies, Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center, SMU Dedman School of Law
Reintegrating into the community: Knowledge from post-release case managers with lived experience - Tim Goddard, Florida International University; Wendy Dressler, The GEO Group, Inc.
Understanding life story and narrative in lived experience criminal legal scholarship - Philip Mulvey, Sam Houston State University; Leah Ouellet, Northwestern University; Dan P. McAdams, Northwestern University
My mind is the limit: Finding the eye of the hurricane - Jeanne Catherine-Gray, Innate Health Research; Beto Contreras, The Insight Alliance
Division on Corrections and Sentencing.