1st Edition

Youth Desistance in Transition Navigating Change in Late Adolescence

By Christopher Kay Copyright 2026
228 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

228 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book offers a new and innovative way of thinking about desistance from crime, fusing our understanding of desistance transitions, youth transitions, and the impact of significant policy change on people with convictions in a way which is yet to be seen in the available desistance literature. It offers a critical account of the ways in which young adults move away from involvement in crime,... Read more

1. Introduction, 2. Desistance from crime: A critical overview, 3. Developing a framework for understanding desistance in transition, 4. Talking transitions: researching change, 5. The commitment to desist for youth in transition: individual agency and discursive tools of desistance, 6. Social structures in transition: the quest for capital, 7. Youth desistance transitions within the context of 'Transforming Rehabilitation', 8. Conclusion

Biography

Christopher Kay is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Loughborough University. His interests lie in the areas of desistance from crime, youth transitions, and the role of sports-based interventions in facilitating both.

This is a timely and important contribution to desistance research. Drawing on rich, original data, this book sheds light on the transitions from youth to adulthood for those in the criminal justice system. Thoughtful, grounded and compassionate, it deepens our understanding of how young men on probation navigate identity, agency and social structures, and does so in a way that really matters.

Dr Jake Phillips, Associate Professor, Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge

This important book offers a compelling exploration of young men navigating desistance from crime in the context of youth transitions.  Grounded in rich narratives and practitioner insights, it illuminates how personal agency, social context, and policy intersect to shape early desistance and the journey into adulthood. It is essential reading.

Professor Nicola Carr, Trinity College Dublin

The transition to adulthood has always been central to criminology – the same act is labelled “delinquency” on one side of that transition and “crime” on the other. Yet, Kay’s rich data and insightful analysis suggest that the nature of this transition is changing as are the concepts of youth and adulthood, themselves. The book is an essential read for reimagining youth justice.

Professor Shadd Maruna, University of Liverpool