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Criminal Justice and Behavior
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Exposure to Violent Crime During Incarceration

Effects on Psychological Adjustment Following Release

Paul Boxer

Rutgers University, pboxer{at}rutgers.edu

Keesha Middlemass

Rutgers University

Tahlia Delorenzo

Rutgers University

In this study, formerly incarcerated violent (n = 38) and nonviolent (n = 86) offenders were assessed for their experiences as witnesses to or victims of violent crime during incarceration as well as outside of the prison or jail setting. Participants also provided information on several indicators of their current psychological adjustment. Analyses showed that, after controlling the effects of exposure to violence outside of the prison setting as well as a number of demographic factors, encounters with violence during incarceration were significantly related to aggressive and antisocial behavioral tendencies as well as emotional distress. In general, individuals who were witnesses, as well as victims, of violent crime showed the poorest adjustment post-release. These effects were not modified by violent offender status or by time since release from incarceration. The findings presented here underscore important new directions for research on the effects of exposure to violence.

Key Words: exposure to violence • psychological adjustment • jails/prisons

This version was published on August 1, 2009

Criminal Justice and Behavior, Vol. 36, No. 8, 793-807 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0093854809336453


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