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The Sociology of Contraband: Examining the Correlates of Illicit Drugs, Cellphones, and Weapons in U.S. Prisons

NCJ Number
308854
Journal
The Prison Journal Volume: Online Dated: 2024
Author(s)
Bryce E. Peterson; Ki Deuk Kim; Rochisha Shukla
Date Published
2024
Annotation

This article reports on a research study examining facility-level and correctional population characteristic correlates of contraband in prisons across six states, discussing methodology, findings, and implications for practice.

Abstract

Contraband negatively affects the safety and security of correctional institutions. Extant research has relied on descriptive analyses or limited measures of contraband. Drawing upon established theories of institutional misbehavior—the deprivation model, importation model, and management perspective–the study examines facility-level and correctional population characteristic correlates of contraband in 301 prisons across six U.S. states. Findings confirm the relevance of individually examining risk factors by type of contraband, including drugs, cell phones, weapons, and total contraband. Lower security prisons, prisons providing substance use treatment, and those employing more women staff had fewer contraband drugs, weapons, and cellphones. Providing outside work opportunities and work-release programs also reduced contraband weapons. (Published Abstract Provided)