把查特曼带回监狱:对生命理论的全面反思

J. Garner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的在现代监狱语境中检验查特曼的“圆形生活”理论的有效性。特别地,它检验了她理论中的命题5和命题6。设计/方法/方法通过106项调查和27次半结构化访谈收集了来自最高、中等和最低安全设施的澳大利亚成年男女囚犯寻求信息行为的数据。与会者介绍了从监狱“小世界”的内部和外部来源寻求信息的情况。针对Chatman的“生命循环”理论,考察了参与者的信息行为,以确定其在监狱情境中的适用性。调查结果收集的数据并不支持查特曼的“生活在圆形”理论,尽管该理论是在监狱背景下发展起来的。查特曼理论的命题五和命题六在目前的数据下都不能被支持。研究局限/启示由于数据无法支持Chatman的理论,需要对该理论的适用性进行重新评估,至少是对监狱环境的适用性。由于该理论部分来源于一项监狱研究,因此对该理论的基本理解可能会受到当前研究的质疑。原创性/价值虽然Chatman的理论已经与其他“小世界”社区的信息行为进行了检验,但这些研究都没有将该理论带回到该理论形成的监狱背景。这项研究也是新颖的,因为它的发现不支持查特曼的理论,与其他先前发表的研究相反。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Taking Chatman back to prison: rethinking the theory of life in the round
PurposeThis paper serves to test the validity of Chatman’s theory of “Life Lived in the Round” within a modern prison context. In particular, it examines Propositions Five and Six of her theory.Design/methodology/approachData regarding the information-seeking practices of Australian adult female and male prisoners from maximum-, medium- and minimum-security facilities was gathered through 106 surveys and 27 semi-structured interviews. Participants’ information-seeking from sources internal and external to the “small world” of the prison was described. The information behaviours of the participants were examined against Chatman’s theory of “Life in the Round” to determine its applicability in the prison context.FindingsThe data gathered does not support Chatman’s theory of “Life Lived in the Round”, despite that theory being developed in a prison context. Neither Proposition Five nor Proposition Six of Chatman’s theory can be supported when examined in the light of the current data.Research limitations/implicationsThe inability of the data to support Chatman’s theory requires a reassessment of the applicability of the theory, at least to the prison context. As the theory was generated in part from a prison study, the foundational understandings of the theory could be questioned as a result of this current research.Originality/valueAlthough Chatman’s theory has been examined against the information behaviours of other “Small World” communities, none of these studies have taken the theory back to the prison context from which the theory was developed. This study is also novel as its findings do not support Chatman’s theory, in contrast to other previously published examinations.
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