Occupational Ontology and Challenges for Muslim Prison Officers in Europe

Occupational Ontology and Challenges for Muslim Prison Officers in Europe

Occupational Ontology and Challenges for Muslim Prison Officers in Europe

Article: “‘Oh you’re on our side, you’re my brother’: Occupational Ontology and Challenges for Muslim Prison Officers in Europe”

Authors: Muzammil Quraishi and Matthew Wilkinson

Published in: Contemporary Islam, Vol. 17, Issue 3, pp. 411–431

Publication Date: May 3, 2023

Publisher: Springer

 

Abstract:

Filling a significant gap in prisons research, this paper articulates the experiences and perspectives of a group of Muslim prison officers interviewed as part of an international study examining Islam in prison. These Muslim prison officers occupied a precarious occupational cultural space between Us (prison officers) and Them (Muslim prisoners) which presented both risks of exclusion, religious and racial prejudices and opportunities to build bridges between prisoners and staff and to educate, especially in the dimension of religion.

Occupational Ontology and Challenges for Muslim Prison Officers in Europe
Prison occupational culture develops from early training during which loyalty to colleagues and cynicism and distrust of prisoners become core principles informing the role.

The very presence of Muslim prison officers in prisons challenged traditional occupational cultural stereotypes around both prison officers and Muslims. The disproportionately large numbers of Muslim prisoners in Europe and the haphazard way that Muslim prison officers often encounter the profession, suggest both that better training focused upon Islam in prison for existing prison officers is vital and that more directed recruitment of Muslim prison officers is needed.

 

Source: Springer

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