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Leave It at the Gate: Job Stress and Satisfaction in Correctional Staff

NCJ Number
244297
Journal
Criminal Justice Studies Volume: 26 Issue: 3 Dated: September 2013 Pages: 308-325
Author(s)
V. Wolfe Mahfood; Wendi Pollock; Dennis Longmire
Date Published
September 2013
Length
18 pages
Annotation
This study uses a faceted approach to explore underlying relationships between organizational, job, and personal characteristics of correctional staff and causes of job stress and satisfaction.
Abstract
Though academic literature firmly establishes an inverse relationship between job stress and job satisfaction, global correctional studies fail to examine the extent of that affiliation on overall correctional job satisfaction. As such, this study uses a faceted approach to explore underlying relationships between organizational, job, and personal characteristics of correctional staff and causes of job stress and satisfaction. Using the Job Satisfaction Survey, nine aspects of job satisfaction are considered. The Work Stress Scale for Correctional Officers' analyses of five areas of stress directly related to correctional environments. This study examines both uniform and nonuniform staff assigned to a minimum security prison. On average, staff scored well below the average American worker on the Job Satisfaction Survey. Job satisfaction was predicted exclusively by job characteristics or stressors, including the job itself, role conflict, and ambiguity, and the physical condition of the prison, while employee demographic variables and variables that measure healthy lifestyles (such as sleep and exercise) were not significant predictors. While job stress does predict a substantively significant portion of job satisfaction (21 percent), there is still room to improve prediction. Abstract published by arrangement with Taylor and Francis.