2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.01.004
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Doing your own time: Peer integration, aggression and mental health in Dutch male detainment facilities

Abstract: Background Prior research demonstrates a strong positive association between social integration (e.g., strong social ties) and individual health. However, researchers also emphasize that this correlation may vary by context and potentially reverse direction under certain conditions. In this study, we draw on competing criminological theories of peer relations to examine if social integration, measured by trust in peers, is positively or negatively associated with violence and mental health of men detained in p… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Alternatively, prisons are atypical environments that place people convicted of serious crimes into close proximity, increasing the potential for personal conflicts, stress, and peer influence toward poor health behaviors. Under these conditions, inmates most embedded in peer networks may have worse health behaviors than those who "keep their heads down" and avoid peer ties (Kreager, Palmen, et al 2016). These processes may also depend on the health outcome of interest-a tight-knit peer network may increase social support and decrease depressive symptoms or stress-related illnesses but simultaneously promote the diffusion of infectious disease or high-risk health behaviors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, prisons are atypical environments that place people convicted of serious crimes into close proximity, increasing the potential for personal conflicts, stress, and peer influence toward poor health behaviors. Under these conditions, inmates most embedded in peer networks may have worse health behaviors than those who "keep their heads down" and avoid peer ties (Kreager, Palmen, et al 2016). These processes may also depend on the health outcome of interest-a tight-knit peer network may increase social support and decrease depressive symptoms or stress-related illnesses but simultaneously promote the diffusion of infectious disease or high-risk health behaviors.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With a larger network of people to choose from, and prisoners held for longer periods of time, it is likely that more social ties come to develop. Moreover, as was found by Kreager, Palmen, et al (2016), having few prison ties may be adaptive for prisoners with short sentences, as there is less incentive to embed oneself in the prison social structure given impending release and community reentry. Nonetheless, as is apparent in Figure 1, few prisoners in the Dutch prison units had no social ties at all (so-called "isolates").…”
Section: Prison Network Structurementioning
confidence: 89%
“…The current study set out to examine the network structure of social relations among prisoners using a social network perspective (cf. Kreager, Palmen, et al, 2016). The advantage of a social network perspective is that it acknowledges the interdependence between individuals and their social contexthere referring to the web of relationships between prisoners within Dutch prison unitsand that characteristics of individuals as well as characteristics of their social ties and structure at large can be modeled simultaneously.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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