Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview

Although prison violence has been studied in developed countries, there is little empirical evidence of the phenomenon in developing countries. This article analyzes violence within Chilean facilities, specifically two of its most common manifestations: inmate-inmate violence and guard-inmate. To d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Guillermo E. Sanhueza, Reuben J. Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedad Española de Investigación Criminológica 2016-01-01
Series:Revista Española de Investigación Criminológica
Online Access:https://reic.criminologia.net/index.php/journal/article/view/95
id doaj-cde4c8492a034902bde4eb730566cdb3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cde4c8492a034902bde4eb730566cdb32021-02-08T21:24:50ZengSociedad Española de Investigación CriminológicaRevista Española de Investigación Criminológica1696-92192016-01-011410.46381/reic.v14i0.95Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overviewGuillermo E. SanhuezaReuben J. Miller Although prison violence has been studied in developed countries, there is little empirical evidence of the phenomenon in developing countries. This article analyzes violence within Chilean facilities, specifically two of its most common manifestations: inmate-inmate violence and guard-inmate. To do so, this study uses both administrative data from Gendarmeria de Chile as well as survey data from the First Survey on Inmates’ Perceptions of Prison Life (Espinoza, Martínez & Sanhueza, 2014). Results show that inmate-inmate violence is more likely to occur in prisons with higher concentrations of young inmates (IRR = 0.786), the proportion of inmates classified with high criminal contagion (IRR = 1.042) and a greater total population (IRR = 1.0008). On the other hand, violence from guard to inmates is more likely to affect men (OR = 3.37) and those who live in private prisons (OR = 1.64); on the contrary, having suffered physical mistreatment from guards is less likely when inmates are visited more often (OR = 0.77), when they knew how to fill out grievances (OR = 0.75), and when inmates had a better perception of prison infrastructure (OR = 0.68). Finally, implications for public policy and new questions are suggested https://reic.criminologia.net/index.php/journal/article/view/95
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Guillermo E. Sanhueza
Reuben J. Miller
spellingShingle Guillermo E. Sanhueza
Reuben J. Miller
Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
Revista Española de Investigación Criminológica
author_facet Guillermo E. Sanhueza
Reuben J. Miller
author_sort Guillermo E. Sanhueza
title Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
title_short Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
title_full Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
title_fullStr Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
title_full_unstemmed Prison violence in Chilean facilities: A first overview
title_sort prison violence in chilean facilities: a first overview
publisher Sociedad Española de Investigación Criminológica
series Revista Española de Investigación Criminológica
issn 1696-9219
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Although prison violence has been studied in developed countries, there is little empirical evidence of the phenomenon in developing countries. This article analyzes violence within Chilean facilities, specifically two of its most common manifestations: inmate-inmate violence and guard-inmate. To do so, this study uses both administrative data from Gendarmeria de Chile as well as survey data from the First Survey on Inmates’ Perceptions of Prison Life (Espinoza, Martínez & Sanhueza, 2014). Results show that inmate-inmate violence is more likely to occur in prisons with higher concentrations of young inmates (IRR = 0.786), the proportion of inmates classified with high criminal contagion (IRR = 1.042) and a greater total population (IRR = 1.0008). On the other hand, violence from guard to inmates is more likely to affect men (OR = 3.37) and those who live in private prisons (OR = 1.64); on the contrary, having suffered physical mistreatment from guards is less likely when inmates are visited more often (OR = 0.77), when they knew how to fill out grievances (OR = 0.75), and when inmates had a better perception of prison infrastructure (OR = 0.68). Finally, implications for public policy and new questions are suggested
url https://reic.criminologia.net/index.php/journal/article/view/95
work_keys_str_mv AT guillermoesanhueza prisonviolenceinchileanfacilitiesafirstoverview
AT reubenjmiller prisonviolenceinchileanfacilitiesafirstoverview
_version_ 1724279288382881792