• Title of article

    Sugar and spice and everything nice? Exploring institutional misconduct among serious and violent female delinquents

  • Author/Authors

    Blackburn، نويسنده , , Ashley G. and Trulson، نويسنده , , Chad R.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    1132
  • To page
    1140
  • Abstract
    Purpose e an emerging body of research on the institutional behavior and adjustment of delinquent males, there exists little information on the incarceration experiences of female delinquents. The present study explored the incidence, prevalence, and determinants of institutional misconduct among a sample of 139 serious and violent delinquent females sentenced to state juvenile incarceration. s ary data analysis was used for the present study. Data utilized were derived from information originally gathered by correctional staff during intake at a state Youth Correctional System (a pseudonym) and during an offenderʹs entire incarceration through on-site diagnostic processes, staff observations, official records, and offender self-reports. s s of the study sample engaged in roughly 700 incidents of major misconduct and more than 12,000 instances of minor institutional misconduct during their incarceration. Results from negative binomial regression models examining four different types of institutional misconduct revealed that age at commitment, offense type, mental health status, and gang affiliation were related to the expected rate of misconduct, although this varied by misconduct type. sions utionalization is not necessarily a period of desistance from offending for all delinquent girls. As institutional misconduct may impact post-release recidivism, it is important to identify and intervene with at-risk juveniles during periods of incarceration.
  • Journal title
    Journal of Criminal Justice
  • Serial Year
    2010
  • Journal title
    Journal of Criminal Justice
  • Record number

    1707263