| abstract |
After the 2012 terrorist attacks in France, prisons were increasingly framed as breeding grounds for radicalization. In 2015, facing a rise in terrorismrelated detentions, the French National Prison Service (DAP) launched a prevention strategy, introducing specialized units, risk assessment grids, and the recruitment of psychologists and educators within the Mission for the Prevention of Violent Radicalization (MCVR). Deployed alongside traditional prison staff, these professionals entered the field with vague mandates and minimal preparation, raising questions about their legitimacy. This article examines the inherent tensions surrounding their deployment, drawing on the idea that public policies materialize through the actions of frontline actors (Dubois, 2012). It analyses how these professionals, caught between conflicting institutional expectations (security vs. support), adapt their practices and negotiate their roles in an environment marked by urgency and ambiguity. |