Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige

abstract: More than 450,000 people work in public and private correctional institutions in the United States, collectively supervising over 2.2 million jail and prison inmates. The nature of correctional officers' work exposes them to numerous stressors which can have harmful effects on their...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Vickovic, Sam (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29795
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-29795
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-297952018-06-22T03:06:05Z Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige abstract: More than 450,000 people work in public and private correctional institutions in the United States, collectively supervising over 2.2 million jail and prison inmates. The nature of correctional officers' work exposes them to numerous stressors which can have harmful effects on their health and their job performance. Several studies have examined the significance of environmental factors on work outcomes among prison staff. Less attention has been paid to external stressors such as negative images of correctional officers held by the community and correctional officers' perception of their own occupational prestige. This is an important omission considering the negative stereotypes associated with correctional officers and the tendency for media and entertainment outlets to perpetuate these stereotypes. The aim of this dissertation is to examine how perceived occupational prestige among correctional officers influences job stress. Specifically, the perceived occupational prestige associated with family and friends, the general public, and the media are assessed. To do so, the study employs multivariate analyses of data from a survey of 641 correctional officers employed in one Western prison system to examine the impact of perceived occupational prestige on an attitudinal and health measure of job stress. First, correctional officers believe that friends and family hold the most positive opinions about their profession, while the media has the most negative. Second, perceived occupational prestige among correctional officers does not appear to be a significant stressor, except for perceived occupational prestige associated with the media when predicting health job stress. Finally, when possible mediating variables are assessed for officers that had tenure longer than nine years perceived occupational prestige associated with the media has a significant effect on attitudinal and health job stress. In addition, for officers who identified themselves as non-White perceived occupational prestige associated with family and friends is a significant predictor of attitudinal job stress and perceived occupational prestige associated with the general public is a significant predictor of health job stress. This study concludes with a summary of these findings as well as its key limitations, and offers insight into potential policy implications and avenues of future research. Dissertation/Thesis Vickovic, Sam (Author) Griffin, Marie L (Advisor) Hepburn, John R (Committee member) White, Michael D (Committee member) Fradella, Henry F (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Criminology Correctional Officers Corrections Job Stress Occupational Prestige eng 158 pages Doctoral Dissertation Criminology and Criminal Justice 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29795 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Criminology
Correctional Officers
Corrections
Job Stress
Occupational Prestige
spellingShingle Criminology
Correctional Officers
Corrections
Job Stress
Occupational Prestige
Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
description abstract: More than 450,000 people work in public and private correctional institutions in the United States, collectively supervising over 2.2 million jail and prison inmates. The nature of correctional officers' work exposes them to numerous stressors which can have harmful effects on their health and their job performance. Several studies have examined the significance of environmental factors on work outcomes among prison staff. Less attention has been paid to external stressors such as negative images of correctional officers held by the community and correctional officers' perception of their own occupational prestige. This is an important omission considering the negative stereotypes associated with correctional officers and the tendency for media and entertainment outlets to perpetuate these stereotypes. The aim of this dissertation is to examine how perceived occupational prestige among correctional officers influences job stress. Specifically, the perceived occupational prestige associated with family and friends, the general public, and the media are assessed. To do so, the study employs multivariate analyses of data from a survey of 641 correctional officers employed in one Western prison system to examine the impact of perceived occupational prestige on an attitudinal and health measure of job stress. First, correctional officers believe that friends and family hold the most positive opinions about their profession, while the media has the most negative. Second, perceived occupational prestige among correctional officers does not appear to be a significant stressor, except for perceived occupational prestige associated with the media when predicting health job stress. Finally, when possible mediating variables are assessed for officers that had tenure longer than nine years perceived occupational prestige associated with the media has a significant effect on attitudinal and health job stress. In addition, for officers who identified themselves as non-White perceived occupational prestige associated with family and friends is a significant predictor of attitudinal job stress and perceived occupational prestige associated with the general public is a significant predictor of health job stress. This study concludes with a summary of these findings as well as its key limitations, and offers insight into potential policy implications and avenues of future research. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Criminology and Criminal Justice 2015
author2 Vickovic, Sam (Author)
author_facet Vickovic, Sam (Author)
title Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
title_short Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
title_full Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
title_fullStr Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
title_full_unstemmed Correctional Officer Job Stress: The Influence of Perceived Occupational Prestige
title_sort correctional officer job stress: the influence of perceived occupational prestige
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29795
_version_ 1718700727315988480