2015
DOI: 10.1080/08974454.2014.989305
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Gendered Pathways to Recidivism: Differential Effects of Family Support by Gender

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Cited by 21 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Instrumental family support did not significantly relate to offending between individuals. Another study published by Taylor (2015a) using the same data and measures found that emotional support was more strongly associated with desistance for females than males. Finally, using a sample of 255 returning individuals, Barrick, Lattimore, and Visher (2014) used identical questions as Taylor (2016) to examine how family emotional support and instrumental support related to reincarceration.…”
Section: Empirical Research On Family Support and Reentrymentioning
confidence: 78%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Instrumental family support did not significantly relate to offending between individuals. Another study published by Taylor (2015a) using the same data and measures found that emotional support was more strongly associated with desistance for females than males. Finally, using a sample of 255 returning individuals, Barrick, Lattimore, and Visher (2014) used identical questions as Taylor (2016) to examine how family emotional support and instrumental support related to reincarceration.…”
Section: Empirical Research On Family Support and Reentrymentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Despite Taylor’s (2015a, 2016) and Barrick et al’s (2014) important findings, two important questions remain unanswered. First, as each of these studies used the same data and identical measures, the factor structure among these items may demonstrate that family support is comprised of more than two factors.…”
Section: Empirical Research On Family Support and Reentrymentioning
confidence: 97%
“…This finding further blurs the relationship between marriage and recidivism. Taylor (2015) views "propensity to marry" as a series of factors pertaining to educational expectations, work experiences, relationship perceptions, etc. which cast the variable in light of the desirable/undesirable aspects one might find in a female partner.…”
Section: Community Ties and Relationship Statusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, other research shows results are mixed. Most importantly, very little previous research has examined whether protective factor correlates are gendered in their impact on reoffending (see Bates and Mears, 2008;Makarios et al, 2010;Olson et al, 2016;Taylor, 2015;Tietjen et al, 2018) or represent support for an importation or deprivation model of prison. This study assesses the correlates of protective factors education, community ties and relationship status (importation), and protective factor programming (deprivation) on reoffending by gender.…”
Section: Community Ties and Relationship Statusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More has been revealed about the experiences of contemporary female offenders who are also mothers or primary caregivers to children [12,77,78,112], and some of these studies have also explored the moderating effect that age imposes upon motherhood and desistance. To begin, it is important to note that nearly two thirds of women serving sentences in state prisons had children before they committed the offense for which they are now serving time [46,115,121].…”
Section: Review Of Empirical Literature On Age and Women's Desistancementioning
confidence: 99%