NCJ Number
              83648
          Journal
  Deviant Behavior Volume: 3 Issue: 3 Dated: (April-June 1982) Pages: 203-218
Date Published
  1982
Length
              16 pages
          Annotation
              The way inmate roles are used by juvenile offenders as a method of coping with and adjusting to confinement in a training school parallels many of the socialization functions of inmate roles found in adult institutions. This study examines seven adjustment patterns of confined offenders in a juvenile correctional system located in a southeastern state.
          Abstract
              Significant differences occur between various combinations of sex and race categories in terms of participation in different types of aggressive roles, manipulative roles, and passive roles.  White males and black males appear at opposite ends of a dominance-exploitation spectrum. Black males, American Indian males, and black females tend to use aggressive inmate roles and thereby dominate life within the inmate social system. White males and Indian females employ passive and manipulative roles in order to cope with confinement. (Publisher abstract)
          