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NCJRS Abstract


The document referenced below is part of the NCJRS Library collection.
To conduct further searches of the collection, visit the NCJRS Abstracts Database.

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NCJ Number: NCJ 213365   Add to Shopping cart
Title: Prison Rape: A Critical Review of the Literature, Executive Summary
Author(s): Gerald G. Gaes ; Andrew L. Goldberg
Corporate Author: US Dept of Justice
National Institute of Justice
United States
Sale: National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849
United States
Document Url: PDF 
Publication Date: 03/2004
Pages: 71
Type: Issue overviews
Origin: United States
Language: English
Note: Downloaded March 9, 2006.
Annotation: This paper presents a critical review of the published research on prison sexual victimization and offers suggestions for measuring the prevalence and incidence of sexual victimization in prison.
Abstract: The problem of prison rape is a difficult problem to address for many reasons, including difficulties in estimating the prevalence and nature of prison rape. The first section of this paper focuses on the goals and findings of the Prison Elimination Act of 2003, a public law that called attention to the lack of research on the extent of prison rape and sets a zero-tolerance standard for the offense, making prison rape elimination a top priority in every prison system throughout the United States. The second section of the paper reviews the current research on the prevalence of jail and prison sexual victimization. The authors find that current research is plagued by the stigma associated with sexual victimization and by the problem of relying on self-report measures for sensitive topics, such as rape. The third section focuses on the different methods that have been used by researchers to study sensitive behaviors, such as illicit drug use or abortion, including computer assisted techniques and self-administered surveys. The next section addresses the validity of self-report measures and investigates how self-report survey data can be verified using more objective measures. Finally, the difficulties involved with rank ordering prisons according to their sexual victimization rates are probed, including the observation that certain types of prisons will likely have higher sexual victimization rates because of their security status, institutional operations, and type and composition of the inmates. In the end, the task of estimating the problem of prison rape, required by the Prison Elimination Act of 2003, is a formidable one, yet is well worth the resources and effort it will take. Table, references, figure
Main Term(s): Prisoner sexual assault
Index Term(s): Rape ; Inmates ; Research methods ; Research and development ; Federal legislation
 
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=234861

* A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.


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