An Empirical Examination of the In-Prison Behaviors of Foreign-Born Individuals: Does Nationality Predict Misconduct?

IF 2.1 3区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Javier Ramos, Sylwia J. Piatkowska, Cristal N. Hernandez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The current study investigates how immigrants cope and adapt to the “pains of imprisonment” by examining a specific maladjustment outcome—disciplinary infractions. Like other groups (e.g., females, LGBTQ, elderly), immigrants are regarded as a special population in prison considering that they encounter a unique set of challenges that the typical incarcerated person does not. At the same time, immigrants are not a monolithic group, and there are reasons why misconduct may differ when we separate them by country of birth. To this end, we explore whether the frequency and probability for institutional misconduct varies across Cubans, Puerto Ricans, Haitians, Jamaicans, Mexicans, as well as immigrants from other countries. We also consider whether any nationality group exhibits a higher (or lower or similar) propensity for in-prison offending than the native-born. Our results reveal there are greater differences in disciplinary infractions among our foreign-born groups than between them and natives, a finding that is obscured when immigrants are lumped into a single measure (i.e., all foreign-born).
外国出生个人在狱中行为的实证研究:国籍是否预示着不当行为?
目前的研究调查了移民如何应对和适应“监禁的痛苦”,通过检查一个具体的不适应结果-违纪行为。与其他群体(如女性、LGBTQ、老年人)一样,移民被视为监狱中的特殊群体,因为他们面临着典型囚犯所没有的一系列独特挑战。与此同时,移民并不是一个单一的群体,当我们按出生国将他们分开时,不当行为可能会有所不同,这是有原因的。为此,我们探讨了机构不当行为的频率和概率在古巴人、波多黎各人、海地人、牙买加人、墨西哥人以及来自其他国家的移民之间是否存在差异。我们还考虑是否有任何国籍的群体比本土出生的人表现出更高(或更低或相似)的入狱犯罪倾向。我们的研究结果显示,在违章行为方面,外国出生的群体比他们和本国人之间存在更大的差异,当移民被集中到一个单一的衡量标准(即所有外国出生的人)中时,这一发现就变得模糊了。
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来源期刊
Race and Justice
Race and Justice Multiple-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
19.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Race and Justice: An International Journal serves as a quarterly forum for the best scholarship on race, ethnicity, and justice. Of particular interest to the journal are policy-oriented papers that examine how race/ethnicity intersects with justice system outcomes across the globe. The journal is also open to research that aims to test or expand theoretical perspectives exploring the intersection of race/ethnicity, class, gender, and justice. The journal is open to scholarship from all disciplinary origins and methodological approaches (qualitative and/or quantitative).Topics of interest to Race and Justice include, but are not limited to, research that focuses on: Legislative enactments, Policing Race and Justice, Courts, Sentencing, Corrections (community-based, institutional, reentry concerns), Juvenile Justice, Drugs, Death penalty, Public opinion research, Hate crime, Colonialism, Victimology, Indigenous justice systems.
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