“…Moments of crisis, such as the Worboys case in England and Wales, or the Dutroux scandal in Belgium, continue to undermine public confidence in the parole system (see Fitzgerald et al, 2021), while a host of previously excluded policy actors are now ‘pressing in’ on prison release decision-making with growing assuredness (Annison, 2020: 11). Release from prison is subject to a plethora of licence conditions (Padfield, 2019) and parole boards are now firmly established within a broader apparatus of risk management, community supervision and control (Barry, 2021; Hannah-Moffatt and Yule, 2011). The extraordinary growth of indeterminate sentencing in some jurisdictions has seen the locus of sentencing discretion move ‘downstream’ from the criminal courts (Rhine et al, 2017) and an expanding cohort of recall prisoners has renewed longstanding concerns about executive overreach and the limits of the liberal democratic state (Padfield and Maruna, 2006).…”