Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Managing the Threat of Violence: Coping Strategies among Juvenile Inmates

This article reports findings on violence, safety, and coping strategies from interviews conducted with 281 male youth incarcerated in California's Division of Juvenile Justice (DJJ). Descriptive analyses revealed that youth report that violence is a common occurrence and that some locations, such as school or housing units, were particularly dangerous. 

Analysis of how youth avoid violence revealed three distinct precautionary or coping strategies. These three categories highlight a range of conflict management techniques from avoidance to aggression. 
  • Those youth who were younger, sex offenders, or newer to the facility used more passive avoidance techniques,
  • While gang members and those more active in violent misconduct used more aggressive techniques. 
  • A third group, those youth proactively navigating their interactions, had spent more time in their current institution and were marginally more likely to be adult court commitments. 
Intervention and policy implications of this study are also discussed.

Purchase full article at:  http://goo.gl/5kdnyD

By:  Reid SE1Listwan SJ2.
  • 1University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA.
  • 2University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA slistwan@uncc.edu. 




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