This paper argues that adopting sensory, atmospheric, and affective epistemologies is important in understanding and explicating parole as lived experience. Parole laws and policies must consider the realities of everyday life for parolees, aligning with a growing lived experience criminology paradigm emerging in the Global North, including in Australia. This paper employs autoethnography to explore the affective atmospheric, and sensory dimensions of parole, weaving personal narrative with critical analysis. It demonstrates how the promise of freedom shapes individual experiences, while underscoring the expertise and wisdom of currently and formerly incarcerated populations, voices too often overlooked. By situating these experiences within broader social and cultural contexts, the paper highlights the nuanced, embodied realities parolees confront. These insights reveal parole to be far more than a legal formality. It is a complex interplay of emotions, perceptions, and environments that impact how individuals reintegrate into society. Ultimately, this research underscores the urgent need for policies to be responsive to the lived experiences of parolees, fostering a deeper understanding that moves beyond procedural considerations alone.
Dwayne Antojado (Mon,) studied this question.
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