The Prison Self-harm project has now concluded following the completion of its 24-month outgoing phase and its return phase. Existing suicide prevention programmes in prisons often rely on rigid, clinical protocols that can feel punitive and overlook the intersecting impacts of gender, sexuality, race, and marginalisation. In response, this project adopted a queer theory lens to explore discourses and practices around self-harm, self-destruction, and suicide in prison settings.
During the outgoing phase, the researcher was based at UC Berkeley, where they engaged in advanced training in Queer Theory, Methodology, and Criminology, and participated in seminars and archival research. In the return phase, the research focused on fieldwork in the UK and collaborative work with grassroots organisations supporting incarcerated, formerly incarcerated, and queer individuals.
This approach moved beyond individualised and psychologising frameworks, instead centring structural, emotional, and embodied dimensions of self-harm. Through 18 qualitative interviews and quantitative analysis of the 2023 HMIP Prisoner Survey (n=5,781), the project illuminated how institutional responses often deepened harm, and how peer support emerged as a key source of care and solidarity.
The findings challenge dominant pathologising narratives and propose a spectrum-based model of self-destruction, grounded in trauma-informed, harm-reduction principles. A policy brief summarising the results was shared with stakeholders including the European Prison Observatory, UK parole officers, and mental health professionals, and contributed to the development of training materials.
Dissemination activities carried out during the final period of the project included:
– Presentations at the British Society of Criminology (Glasgow), the European Society of Criminology (Bucharest), and the American Society of Criminology (San Francisco)
– A public podcast episode featuring lived experience
– Five participatory workshops with community organisations in California and the UK
– A hybrid dissemination event in March 2025, attended by formerly incarcerated individuals, students, practitioners, and researchers
– Mentoring and prison engagement visits during the project period
– A follow-up workshop (forthcoming) with UK parole officers, focused on non-pathologising approaches to working with self-destructive behaviours in prison