000 01957nab a22003257a 4500
999 _c7344
_d7344
005 20250625151559.0
008 211108s2021 ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aWolff, Nancy
_910383
245 _aViolence against incarcerated women :
_bpredicting risk through the lens of childhood harm
_cNancy Wolff, Eva Aizpurua and Dan Peng
260 _bSage,
_c2021
500 _aViolence Against Women, 2021, First published 16 October 2021
520 _aVictimization is common inside prisons and much remains unknown about the predictors of violence against incarcerated women. A sample of 564 incarcerated women was used to examine the link between in-prison victimization, childhood (physical, sexual, and emotional) harm, and mental illness. Nearly half or more of women reported childhood harm and over one-quarter experienced in-prison victimization. Childhood harm fell into four latent classes and low sexual abuse and high abuse classes predicted resident-on-resident sexual victimization, as did single types of childhood harm. Current depressive symptoms and perceptions of overcrowding predicted physical and sexual victimization perpetrated by residents and correctional staff. (Authors' abstract). Record #7344
650 4 _945
_aADULT SURVIVORS OF CHILD ABUSE
650 4 _aADULT SURVIVORS OF SEXUAL ABUSE
_946
650 _aADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES
_94089
650 4 _aPREVALENCE
_9457
650 _aPRISONERS
_9460
650 4 _aSEXUAL VIOLENCE
_9531
650 _aWOMEN PRISONERS
_910607
650 0 _aINSTITUTIONAL ABUSE
_98209
651 _aINTERNATIONAL
_93624
651 4 _aUNITED STATES
_92646
700 _aAizpurua, Eva
_910384
700 _aPeng, Dan
_910385
773 0 _tViolence Against Women, 2021, First published 16 October 2021
830 _aViolence Against Women
_94609
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/10778012211035814
_zDOI: 10.1177/10778012211035814
942 _2ddc
_cARTICLE