Research |
DISSERTATION
My dissertation examines both misconduct and victimization experiences of incarcerated persons. The first study investigates how sentencing practices and crime control polices have affected the prison population. Specifically, it focuses on whether there are cohort and period effects that explain variations in misconduct over time. Changes in the characteristics of the prison population may be associated with changes in the propensity to offend in prison. Second, I examine age differences in misconduct and victimization with a unique focus on aging prisoners (age 50 and older). The prison population is “greying” and there is now a greater number of aging prisoners incarcerated than ever before. What is unknown is what factors predict offending and victimization among those older prisoners and whether the same factors influence offending and victimization among older and younger inmates. In this paper I investigate whether there are age-invariant or age-specific predictors of misconduct and victimization among prisoners. The final paper examines the the victim-offender overlap within the prison context. The paper investigates the factors that predict being a victim only, offender only, or a victim-offender in prison and whether these risk factors are gender specific.
PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES
*graduate student; ** undergraduate student; † manuscripts produced as a result of statistical consulting through ISSR
- Konkel, R. H., & Daquin, J.C. (2020). From the streets to prison and back: An examination of continuity of behaviors among offenders. Corrections: Policy, Practice, and Research. DOI: 10.1080/23774657.2020.1808116 (Published Online)
- Daquin, J.C., & Daigle, L.E. (2020). The victim-offender overlap within prison: Examining the predictors of being a non-victim/non-offender, victim, offender, or both. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. DOI: 10.1177/0886260519898427. (Published Online)
- Azimi, A. M.; & Daquin, J. C.,& Hoppe, S. (2019). Identifying patterns of victimization among prisoners: A latent class analysis approach. Journal of Interpersonal Violence. DOI: 10.1177/0886260519876021. (Published Online)
- Cox, J., Meaux, L T.., Stanziani, M., Coffey, C. A., & Daquin, J.C. (2019). Partiality in prosecution? Discretionary prosecutorial decision making and intimate partner violence.” Journal of Interpersonal Violence. DOI: 10.1177/0886260519849689 (Published Online)
- Birdsong, C., Johnson, I.M., Daquin, J.C., & Williams, J. (2018). Skin tone: An examination of trustworthiness and innocence among college students. Journal of Criminal Justice Education. DOI: 10.1080/10511253.2018.1482935
- Daquin, J.C., & Daigle, L. E. (2017). Mental disorder and victimisation in prison: Examining the role of mental health treatment. Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health, DOI: 10.1002/cbm.2056.
- Daquin, J.C., Daigle, L.E., & Listwan, S.J. (2016). Vicarious victimization: Examining the effects of witnessing victimization while incarcerated on offender reentry. Criminal Justice & Behavior, 28, 141-151.
- Teasdale, B., Daigle, L., Hawk, S.R., & Daquin, J.C. (2016). Violent victimization in the prison context: An examination of the gendered context of prison. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 60, 995-1015.
UNDER REVIEW
- †Cox, J., Daquin, J. C., & Neal, T. M. S. “Bias in discretionary prosecutorial decision making: Gender and sexual orientation in intimate partner violence.”
WORKING PAPERS
*graduate student; ** undergraduate student; † manuscripts produced as a result of statistical consulting through ISSR
- Chama, S., & Daquin, J.C. “African American student perceptions of the criminal justice system.”
- Daquin, J.C. “No reason to be good? Examining the relationship between determinate sentencing and misconduct over time”.
- Daquin, J. C., & Azimi, A.M. “Identifying gendered patterns of victimization among prisoners: A latent class analysis approach.”
- Daquin, J.C., & Daigle, L.E. “Prison misconduct among older incarcerated persons: Are the risk factors age invariant?”
- Daquin, J.C., & Daigle, L.E. “Prison victimization among older incarcerated persons: An application of Classification and Regression Tree Analysis”
- Daquin, J.C., Daigle, L.E., & Clipper, S.J. “Intergenerational offending and prison adaptation: Investigating the relationship of family incarceration history and prison outcomes using Propensity Score Analysis.”
- Daquin, J.C., Daigle, L.E., & Listwan, S.J. “What happens in prison doesn’t stay in prison: Examining the effect of witnessing victimization while incarcerated on post-prison psychological well-being and reentry outcomes.”
- Gray, T. R.*, Daquin, J.C., & Carmichael, S.** “Comparative analysis of state and federal compassionate release policies.”
- Storey, E.*, & Daquin, J.C. “Examining the relationship between female gang membership and prison misconduct.”
RESEARCH GRANTS & CONTRACTS
Funded
- Elevate Tuscaloosa Park Services Survey. City of Tuscaloosa, Urban Development, $11,000 (with Sarah Dunlap).
- Research Grants Committee (RGC) - $5,500, University of Alabama, 2018-2019.
- College Academy for Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity (CARSCA) Grant - $1,663, University of Alabama, 2018-2019.
- "Women's Risk Needs Assessment Validation Study" (with Jennifer Kenney, Peggy Shippen, Matthew Dolliver, Leah Cheatham, Nicholas Derzis, & Lesley Williams Reid) - $1,948,638, Alabama Department of Corrections Contract