Moore Kelly E, Tangney June P
George Mason University.
J Soc Issues. 2017 Jun;73(2):322-340. doi: 10.1111/josi.12219. Epub 2017 Jun 19.
People with concealable stigmatized identities, such as a criminal record, often anticipate stigma from others. Anticipated stigma is thought to cause withdrawal from situations in which there is the potential for discrimination, which then negatively impacts behavior and functioning. This may have implications for offenders reentering the community, possibly hindering community integration and encouraging maladaptive behavior postrelease. Drawing upon a sample of 197 male jail inmates, we examine a theoretical model in which anticipated stigma during incarceration predicts behavioral outcomes 1 year after release from jail (i.e., recidivism, substance use disorder symptoms, mental health symptoms, community adjustment) through social withdrawal. Anticipated stigma during incarceration predicted social withdrawal three months postrelease, which then predicted more mental health problems 1 year postrelease. Stigma resistance and optimism buffered the effect of anticipated stigma on social withdrawal. Race moderated multiple paths in the model, suggesting that the relations between anticipated stigma, social withdrawal, and adjustment are more pronounced for White offenders.
有可隐瞒的污名化身份的人,比如有犯罪记录的人,常常预期会受到他人的歧视。预期歧视被认为会导致人们从可能存在歧视的情境中退出,进而对行为和机能产生负面影响。这可能会对重新融入社区的罪犯产生影响,有可能阻碍社区融合,并助长释放后的适应不良行为。基于197名男性监狱囚犯的样本,我们检验了一个理论模型,在该模型中,监禁期间的预期歧视通过社交退缩来预测出狱一年后的行为结果(即再犯、物质使用障碍症状、心理健康症状、社区适应情况)。监禁期间的预期歧视预测了出狱三个月后的社交退缩,而这又预测了出狱一年后更多的心理健康问题。对歧视的抵抗和乐观情绪缓冲了预期歧视对社交退缩的影响。种族在模型中调节了多条路径,这表明预期歧视、社交退缩和适应之间的关系在白人罪犯中更为显著。