Publication | Closed Access
Correlates of Institutional Misconduct Among State Prisoners
167
Citations
26
References
1983
Year
Criminal CodeCriminal Justice ReformLawCriminal LawSocial SciencesInstitutional MisconductDisciplinary ActivityMass Incarceration StudiesCorrectional PracticeRule InfractionsPrison ViolencePrison Disciplinary InfractionsPenologyDecarcerationOffender ClassificationCriminal JusticeSubstance AbuseSociologyCarceral SettingJustice
ABSTRACT* * * As with participation in illegitimate activities in the larger society, involvement in rule infractions within prisons is not normally distributed among prisoners. Rather, a small segment of the inmate population is disproportionately represented in official records of disciplinary activity. In this research, factors associated with differential levels of involvement in prison disciplinary infractions were examined. The findings indicate that the inmate's age at commitment, history of drug use, current offense (particularly homicide/nonhomicide categories), and the type of sentence that the inmate served were significantly related to high‐rate infraction status. For one subgroup of the inmate population, race was also significantly related to infraction‐rate status. However, these variables are not sufficiently predictive of institutional misconduct to justify their use as classification factors. The implications of the findings for the study of social control mechanisms in prisons are discussed.
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