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Inmates' Cultural Beliefs About Sexual Violence and Their Relationship to Definitions of Sexual Assault

NCJ Number
230674
Journal
Journal of Offender Rehabilitation Volume: 49 Issue: 3 Dated: April 2010 Pages: 180-199
Author(s)
Shannon K. Fowler; Ashley G. Blackburn; James W. Marquart; Janet L. Mullings
Date Published
April 2010
Length
20 pages
Annotation
This study examined inmate perceptions of prison sexual assault.
Abstract
Effective strategies aimed at prison sexual assault require inmates to possess the same definition of sexual assault as prison administrations. This article argues that prison culture is rape-supportive and inmates may not define sexual assault as such. After analyzing questionnaire responses given by male and female inmates in a large Southern prison system, results suggest that increases in subscriptions to inmate rape-supportive beliefs restrict acts of sexual violence from being defined as sexual assaults. Policy recommendations focus on changing inmate culture in addition to informing inmates about what behaviors constitute prison organizations' definition of sexual assault. Tables, notes, references, and appendix (Published Abstract)