Using a sample of 288 men and 183 women selected from prisons in two states, the study used receiver operating characteristics analyses to assess the potential of these three measures to predict threatened, physical, or sexual prison violence measured in two ways: inmate self-report and formal institutional infractions. Findings show that all three instruments demonstrated moderate to good levels of predictive accuracy for both the male and female inmates, a finding that suggests actuarial, structured professional judgment and personality measures perform in a broadly comparable manner in assessing institutional violence for both men and women. The findings varied, however, based on how violence was measured. Women self-reported significantly higher levels of prison violence than was suggested by their institutional infractions, and the associative power of the instruments diminished substantially, particularly among the men, when institutional infractions alone were used in the analyses. These findings suggest that the three risk measures are likely to be gender neutral in their association with prison violence, albeit with gender-related differences in the frequency of violent behavior and the relevance of particular subscales. (publisher abstract modified)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Does Future Orientation Moderate the Relationship Between Impulse Control and Offending? Insights From a Sample of Serious Young Offenders
- Correlation of Vapor Phase Infrared Spectra and Regioisomeric Structure in Synthetic cannabinoids
- A Comparison of the Effects of PCR Inhibition in Quantitative PCR and Forensic STR Analysis