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Journal Article

Citation

Wells JB, Minor KI, Lambert EG, Reeves A. Crim. Justice Policy Rev. 2021; 32(4): 374-402.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0887403420919478

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Staff are essential to running safe and humane correctional institutions. To this end, staff sometimes need to report coworker misconduct. Doing so requires a propensity to engage in whistleblowing, a topic that has received very little attention in the criminal justice literature. Using results from the Work Experiences Questionnaire (WEQ), an instrument designed to measure various features of correctional work environments, we found several exploratory variables to be significantly associated with individual whistleblowing propensity. Specifically, male staff, White staff, and staff with college degrees had higher propensity scores. Increases in job satisfaction and organizational whistleblowing propensity were also related to greater willingness to report wrongdoing, whereas affective organizational commitment had a negative effect. To the extent replicated, such findings can guide policy and practice concerning the reporting of correctional staff wrongdoing.


Language: en

Keywords

jail staff; whistleblowing; work environment; wrongdoing

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