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Comparing Gender Across Risk and Recidivism in Nonviolent Offenders

NCJ Number
243373
Journal
Women & Criminal Justice Volume: 23 Issue: 2 Dated: April - June 2013 Pages: 143-162
Author(s)
Leah A. McCoy; Holly A. Miller
Date Published
April 2013
Length
20 pages
Annotation
The purpose of this study was to examine whether gender differences exist in the rate, type, and general predictors of recidivism for nonviolent offenders.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine whether gender differences exist in the rate, type, and general predictors of recidivism for nonviolent offenders. A total of 328 male and female Texas State jail offenders were matched on current offense, total number of arrests, age, and race. Contrary to previous findings, the results demonstrated no significant gender differences for recidivism rates, although significant gender differences were found for those who had reoffended with property and prostitution offenses. Similar to previous findings, age and total arrests were significant predictors for both male and female offenders. In the current sample, substance abuse was predictive for male offenders only. Although no gender differences were found across the recidivism predictors of static and criminogenic need, the protective factors of positive social support significantly predicted recidivism for female offenders and not male offenders. The current results add to the understanding of gender differences for the assessment, risk prediction, and treatment of offenders. Abstract published by arrangement with Taylor and Francis.