Publication

Suicide in prison: The potentials and pitfalls of film-research collaborations

Buck, Gillian
Tomczak, Philippa
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EPub Date
Publication Date
2025-06-18
Submitted Date
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Abstract
Prisoner suicide rates are consistently higher than rates among communities outside prisons. Between 2012 and 2016, England and Wales’s prison suicide rates more than doubled, hitting record numbers in 2016. Often those most invested in prison safety are those personally impacted, and campaigns by prisoners’ families can have material effects on imprisonment. This article critically reflects on a collaboration between an academic research team (who authored this article), a bereaved mother and a theatre company, which aimed to raise awareness of prison suicide through verbatim film. Drawing upon interviews with the filmmakers and audience surveys, we examine the potentials and challenges of such collaborations. We conclude that film can engage audiences within and beyond social science, making complex subjects accessible, humanising marginalised people and potentially inspiring social change, but a sustained ethic of care is required to mitigate harms and manage expectations, which may involve difficult decisions for researchers.
Citation
Buck, G., & Tomczak, P. (2025). Suicide in prison: The potentials and pitfalls of film-research collaborations. Incarceration, vol(issue), pages. https://doi.org/10.1177/26326663251334711
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Journal
Incarceration
Research Unit
DOI
10.1177/26326663251334711
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Article
Language
Description
© The Author(s) 2025.
Series/Report no.
ISSN
EISSN
2632-6663
ISBN
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Sponsors
UKRI MR/T019085/1
Additional Links
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/26326663251334711