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Prison Life and Prior Social Experiences: Understanding their Importance for Indigenous Peoples’ Re-entry Outcomes

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This study explores whether differences in Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples' risk of reincarceration can partially be explained by their social experiences prior-To-prison and their prison-life experiences. Using administrative and self-report… Click to show full abstract

This study explores whether differences in Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples' risk of reincarceration can partially be explained by their social experiences prior-To-prison and their prison-life experiences. Using administrative and self-report data from 1,238 incarcerated Indigenous (n =303) and non-Indigenous (n = 935) people in Australia, we conducted a series of Cox proportional hazards regressions. We found that Indigenous people had a significantly increased risk of reincarceration compared to non-Indigenous people, and that this can partially be explained by social experiences prior-To-prison. However, after conducting multivariate analyses, the association between prison life-experiences and reincarceration was attenuated to the null. The implications for policy and theory are discussed.

Keywords: non indigenous; social experiences; prison life; indigenous peoples

Journal Title: British Journal of Criminology
Year Published: 2019

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