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Policy briefs present approach for understanding prison violence

01.31.25 | University of California - Irvine

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Prison violence remains a significant yet underreported issue in the U.S. criminal justice system, leading to unsafe conditions for both incarcerated persons and staff. To address this pressing problem, a team of researchers has conducted a study aimed at understanding prison violence to develop strategies for reducing and preventing it in correctional facilities nationwide.

The researchers present their work in two recently released policy briefs — “ The Dark Figure of Prison Violence: A Multi-Strategy Approach to Uncovering the Prevalence of Prison Violence ” and “ Sources and Consequences of Prison Violence: Key Findings and Recommendations from the Prison Violence Consortium .”

“Our work aims to shift the paradigm in how prison violence is understood, addressed and, most critically, prevented,” the authors note. “By providing a nuanced, data-driven perspective on this complex issue, we hope to catalyze meaningful changes in policy and practice. The ultimate goal is not just to reduce violence within correctional facilities, but to contribute to a more just, humane and effective criminal justice system overall.”

The work comes from the Prison Violence Consortium, a project made possible by funding from Arnold Ventures . The goal was to conduct a comprehensive review into the nature, causes and effects of prison violence. Led by Nancy Rodriguez, UC Irvine professor of criminology, law and society, the research team includes correctional experts H. Daniel Butler of Iowa State University, Natasha A. Frost of Northeastern University, Melinda Tasca of University of Texas at El Paso and Jillian J. Turanovic of University of Colorado Boulder.

Consortium members include the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry; Colorado Department of Corrections; Massachusetts Department of Corrections; Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction; Oregon Department of Corrections; Pennsylvania Department of Corrections; and the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Among their findings:

The researchers present several recommendations, including:

Additionally, they recommend providing evidence-based treatment programs, expanding staff training and enhancing mental health resources and support to address prison violence effectively.

Now, as Rodriguez described, the Prison Violence Consortium is expanding to include additional state prison systems and working with existing partners to design state-specific solutions.

“Our work illustrates how independent researchers and government can work in meaningful partnerships to co-develop solutions for complex problems,” Rodriguez explained on Episode 10 of the Pracademically Speaking, a podcast of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections’ Bureau of Planning, Research & Statistics .

By implementing the Consortium’s recommendations and building on its work, she said, state correctional systems can work toward developing reliable metrics of violence, understanding and addressing institutional mechanisms that hinder accurate violence reporting, and pursuing interventions that will significantly reduce the harm experienced by incarcerated persons and staff.

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Contact Information

Mimi Ko Cruz
University of California - Irvine
mkcruz@uci.edu

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of California - Irvine. (2025, January 31). Policy briefs present approach for understanding prison violence. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDE67YK8/policy-briefs-present-approach-for-understanding-prison-violence.html
MLA:
"Policy briefs present approach for understanding prison violence." Brightsurf News, Jan. 31 2025, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LDE67YK8/policy-briefs-present-approach-for-understanding-prison-violence.html.