Literature DB >> 22327209

Relationships among race, education, criminal thinking, and recidivism: moderator and mediator effects.

Glenn D Walters1.   

Abstract

Moderator and mediator relationships linking variables from three different theoretical traditions-race (subcultural theory), education (life-course theory), and criminal thinking (social learning theory)-and recidivism were examined in 1,101 released male federal prison inmates. Preliminary regression analyses indicated that racial status (White, Black, Hispanic) moderated the relationship between criminal thinking, as measured by the General Criminal Thinking (GCT) score of the Psychological Inventory of Criminal Thinking Styles (PICTS), and recidivism. Further analysis, however, revealed that it was not racial status, per se, that moderated the relationship between the PICTS and recidivism, but educational attainment. Whereas the PICTS was largely effective in predicting recidivism in inmates with 12 or more years of education, it was largely ineffective in predicting recidivism in inmates with fewer than 12 years of education. When education and the GCT score were compared as possible mediators of the race-recidivism relationship only the GCT successfully mediated this relationship. Sensitivity testing showed that the GCT mediating effect was moderately robust to violations of the sequential ignorability assumption on which causal mediation analysis rests. Moderator and mediator analyses are potentially important avenues through which theoretical constructs can be integrated and assessment strategies devised.

Keywords:  criminal thinking; education; mediation; moderation; race; recidivism

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22327209     DOI: 10.1177/1073191112436665

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Assessment        ISSN: 1073-1911


  2 in total

1.  Psychometric validation of a simplified form of the PICTS for low-reading level populations.

Authors:  David J Disabato; Johanna B Folk; John Wilson; Sharen Barboza; Jordan Daylor; June Tangney
Journal:  J Psychopathol Behav Assess       Date:  2015-12-19

2.  Does substance misuse moderate the relationship between criminal thinking and recidivism?

Authors:  Michael S Caudy; Johanna B Folk; Jeffrey B Stuewig; Alese Wooditch; Andres Martinez; Stephanie Maass; June P Tangney; Faye S Taxman
Journal:  J Crim Justice       Date:  2015 January-February
  2 in total

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