Serious, Violent, and Chronic Prison Misconduct: Are the Predictors the Same for Women and Men?

AuthorMatthew W. Logan,Joshua Long,Matt DeLisi,Andrea R. Hazelwood
DOIhttp://doi.org/10.1177/00328855221139855
Published date01 January 2023
Date01 January 2023
Subject MatterArticles
Serious, Violent, and
Chronic Prison
Misconduct: Are the
Predictors the Same for
Women and Men?
Matthew W. Logan
1
,
Joshua Long
2
, Matt DeLisi
3
,
and Andrea R. Hazelwood
4
Abstract
Inmate misconduct is a focal concern among those who live and work in pri-
sons, and is committed primarily by a few offenders with discernable back-
grounds. The current study examines the most prolif‌ic rule violators (the
top 1 and 10%) among a large sample of inmates housed across Ohio correc-
tional facilities. We focus on the characteristics that predict membership
into these categories and whether differences in their rates of occurrence
exist between males and females. Findings show more similarities than differ-
ences between groups. Implication for theory and practice are discussed, as
well as suggestions for future research.
Keywords
institutional misconduct, prison, prison violence, gender
1
Texas State University, San Marcos, TX, USA
2
University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MS, USA
3
Iowa State University, Ames, IA, USA
4
Penn State University, University Park, PA, USA
Corresponding Author:
Matthew W. Logan, Texas State University School of Criminal Justice & Criminology, 601
University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA.
Email: mwl39@txstate.edu
Article
The Prison Journal
2023, Vol. 103(1) 2344
© 2022 SAGE Publications
Article reuse guidelines:
sagepub.com/journals-permissions
DOI: 10.1177/00328855221139855
journals.sagepub.com/home/tpj
Introduction
On March 23, 2021, at the Anamosa State Penitentiary in Iowa, two male
inmates serving 50- and 25-year sentences, respectively, murdered a correc-
tional off‌icer and nurse, and nearly murdered another inmate during a
failed escape attempt. The perpetrators, both with extensive criminal
history, currently face prosecution for two counts of f‌irst-degree murder,
attempted murder, and kidnapping. Although the prevalence of extremely
violent incidents such as this is relatively rare in correctional facilities, the
event underscores the signif‌icant challenges of maintaining institutional
security and safety in American prisons where nearly 5,000 inmate homi-
cides, inmate suicides, and staff homicides have occurred since 2001
(Carson & Cowhig, 2020). Data from the National Institute of Justice
further shows that inmates injure approximately 2,000 correctional staff annu-
ally, while the Bureau of Justice Statistics reports a fatality rate of 2.7 per
100,000 full-time correctional staff40% of which are inmate-related
(Brower, 2013). Evidence-based assessment of offenders in prison who are
most likely to engage in serious and violent institutional misconduct is there-
fore critical. Ascertaining the correlates of who are the most antisocial and
noncompliant inmates also informs a diametric purpose; namely, understand-
ing the correlates of compliant inmates who are unlikely to engage in institu-
tional misconduct, and who are potentially the best candidates for release via
parole, sentencing modif‌ication, or COVID-19 mitigation.
Maladaptive Behavior in Prison
Early penological studies, which employed a structural perspective that high-
lights the assorted deprivations and institutional norms of prison life (e.g.,
Clemmer, 1938; Fox, 1958; Garabedian, 1963; Hanks, 1939; Sykes, 1956),
also show the variance with which inmates adjust to prison, engage in rule
violations and other institutional misconduct, and threaten institutional
order. Although this body of scholarship indicates that most prisoners
adjust relatively well to conf‌inement, comply with vocational, treatment,
and educational programs, and generally pose little threat to the functioning
of the facility, a small cadre of inmates exhibit signif‌icant adjustment prob-
lems. Whereas the former inmates appear to be in the process of rehabilitation
to prepare for release, the latter appear unwilling to desist from criminal activ-
ity (Adams, 1977; Coe, 1961; Drury & DeLisi, 2010; Trulson et al., 2011).
This pattern is evinced in the now-classic 1976 documentary Inside San
Quentin, where an unnamed prison psychiatrist poignantly explained the
culture of violence in that facility:
24 The Prison Journal 103(1)

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