Do Perceptions of Legitimacy and Fairness Matter in Prison? Examining How Procedural and Distributive Justice Relate to Misconduct

Recent scholarship suggests disciplinary protocols and incarcerated individuals’ perceptions of procedural justice toward correctional officers may be important in influencing one’s behavior and prison order. This study provides an examination of procedural and distributive justice in prison. We sur...

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Veröffentlicht in:Criminal justice and behavior 2020-12, Vol.47 (12), p.1630-1653
Hauptverfasser: Campbell, Christopher M., Labrecque, Ryan M., Schaefer, Roger L., Harvis, Molly, Zavita, Karma Rose, Reddy, Leah, Labranche, Kayla
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container_end_page 1653
container_issue 12
container_start_page 1630
container_title Criminal justice and behavior
container_volume 47
creator Campbell, Christopher M.
Labrecque, Ryan M.
Schaefer, Roger L.
Harvis, Molly
Zavita, Karma Rose
Reddy, Leah
Labranche, Kayla
description Recent scholarship suggests disciplinary protocols and incarcerated individuals’ perceptions of procedural justice toward correctional officers may be important in influencing one’s behavior and prison order. This study provides an examination of procedural and distributive justice in prison. We surveyed a stratified random sample of 144 respondents incarcerated in Maine state prisons about their perceptions toward the disciplinary process and corrections officers to assess the relationship between such views and patterns of institutional misconduct. Findings provide partial support for the procedural justice perspective in prison. Normative perceptions (e.g., legitimacy) are positively associated with voluntary deference measures while instrumental perceptions of officer effectiveness in controlling behavior are positively associated with respondent perceived risk. These results supply insight into theory development related to voluntary deference. Similarly, these findings can inform which relationships between officers and respondents may hold the potential to promote rule compliance and prison order.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0093854820916901
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); HeinOnline Law Journal Library; SAGE Complete
subjects Correctional personnel
Deference
Distributive justice
Imprisonment
Insight
Legitimacy
Misconduct
Prisoners
Prisons
Procedural justice
Respondents
Risk perception
title Do Perceptions of Legitimacy and Fairness Matter in Prison? Examining How Procedural and Distributive Justice Relate to Misconduct
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