Psychometric properties of Scheier and Carver's life orientation test in a sample of Australian prisoners
Keywords
Life Orientation TestLOT
adult prisoner
public prison
Australian prisoners
prisoner education
Psychology
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
The psychometric properties of Scheier and Carver's 1985 Life Orientation Test (LOT), which is a measure of optimism, were examined as part of a study of education, training, work experience, and expectations of sentenced adult prisoners in Western Australia. All prisoners at five metropolitan public prisons were invited to participate and 453 accepted. This represented a response rate overall of about 41%, with response rates at each of the individual prisons ranging from 13% to 90%. The average age of the prisoner sample was 34.4 yr. (SD= 10.2 yr.). The proportion of men in the sample was 79.7%. Mean sentence length was 66.9 mo. (58.5 for women and 69.2 for men), and the number of months of sentence remaining averaged 44.4 mo. (41.0 for women and 45.3 for men). Means and standard deviations of the LOT scores for prisoners were similar to those of other groups, and demographic differences between prisoners were not statistically significantly related to scores. The internal reliability of the LOT scores was acceptable. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the two-factor item-keying model fitted the prisoner data better than a one-factor model. However, the two factors did not simply reflect underlying optimism and pessimism constructs but were substantially affected by item keying.Date
2008-01-01Type
journalarticleIdentifier
oai:ro.ecu.edu.au:ecuworks-1763http://ro.ecu.edu.au/ecuworks/764
http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.103.1.305-322
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Family-Centred Healing At Home: A Samoan Epistemology of Samoan Families’ Experiences of Home Dialysis and Home Detention in Aotearoa/New ZealandHowden-Chapman, Philippa L.; Dean, Sarah; Tiatia, Ramona (University of Otago, 2014-07-10)Home dialysis and home detention are home-based public services increasingly used in Samoan households living in Aotearoa/New Zealand. They are cheaper than institutionally-provided hospital and correctional services and save the government millions of dollars; savings which do not seem to be transferred to the households which switch to home-based services. This thesis considers the role of housing in Samoan families living in Aotearoa/New Zealand, both symbolically and practically. It analyses in depth the way these two different public services are adapted within the home built environment and the effect these have on the lives of Samoan occupants. 
 
 The quality of housing and built environments are a vital and significant component of home-based services, yet, largely ignored in the literature and state policies as having an effect on the health of occupants. In this qualitative research I used a multiple-case study approach to investigate the housing experiences of five Samoan dialysis patients (n=4) and their carers (n=8); and two Samoan home detainees (n=2) and a sponsor (n=1). Using an iterative approach of the Photovoice method, disposable cameras were used by the participants to produce photographs about their experiences. 
 
 In consultation with Samoan elders, I also developed an epistemological model of Samoan health and well-being based on the traditional house and descriptions of tides and winds. The participants’ photographs and in-depth interviews in the Samoan and English languages were matched to the three stratified areas of the Samoan traditional dwelling: front of house, middle of house and back of house. Key informant interviews with public service officials were also analysed to provide important information about the Wellington Hospital Renal Unit (n=2) and the New Zealand Prison Services of the Corrections Department (n=5). 
 
 Home-based services, when compared to hospital and prison institutional services, gave the participants many advantages. These included the convenience of being at home, reduced transport and travelling costs, spending more time with family and friends and in some cases participation in vocational and rehabilitation programmes. Samoan culture provided a useful framework for families to respond to the sensitive issues and obligations associated with palliative renal care, death, spirituality, gender arrangements, transplantation, cultural identity and restorative justice. 
 
 Other unexpected and less favourable outcomes associated with home-dialysis were fuel poverty, lack of indoor storage, minimal spatial heating and issues of waste disposal. Samoan participants expected far more support at home from public authorities than they in fact received and many of them experienced stigmatisation and social isolation. These everyday experiences forced some dialysis patients to give up home-based services and return to hospital services, which are more expensive. For some home detainees, spousal violence and problems with other family members increased because they were confined at home. They also failed to gain access to vocational and rehabilitation programmes. 
 
 Finally, while there was general agreement by participants that home-based services are a positive and effective way of increasing individuals’ independence and freedom, greater improvement of home built environments as well as increased assistance from public authorities is needed so that families can better meet the formal requirements of home dialysis and home detention. The results, recommendations and the photographs produced by the participants were reported directly to the key governmental stakeholders supporting the study.
-
Histoire des prisons et de l’administration pénitentiaire française de l’Ancien Régime à nos joursChristian Carlier (Criminocorpus, 2009-02-01)Les ambitions de cette synthèse sont modestes : indiquer à grands traits l’évolution de l’administration pénitentiaire française, depuis les dernières années de l’Ancien Régime jusqu’à nos jours (début du XXIe siècle).Ce texte a été complété par une bibliographie sommaire (ci-dessous). Il peut servir d’introduction à la chronologie des textes relatifs aux peines et aux prisons.La plupart des illustrations de cet article ont été puisées dans les richesses, à mon gré trop méconnues, du Musée national des prisons de Fontainebleau (voir le site web) et profité de la généreuse disponibilité de sa conservatrice, Catherine Prade.
-
Venezuelan Prisons' Human Rights Violations and Suggested Reforms Based on the Success of Norway's Restorative Justice-Focused Approach to IncarcerationSingh, Nadiya (BrooklynWorks, 2021-12-01)Venezuela holds the title for having the highest crime index in the world, serving as a microcosm of the country’s widespread and devastating political and humanitarian inadequacies. Its prisons are rife with deadly disease, severe overcrowding, and starving prisoners whose entry into these facilities calls into question their guaranteed human rights under the Venezuelan Constitution. This Note highlights these injustices and argues that the starvation, physical and mental abuse, and extreme neglect that Venezuela’s prisoners are subject to, violate the protection of their guaranteed human rights under Articles 46 and 83 of Venezuela’s Constitution. A comparative analysis of Norway, which has one of the lowest rates of recidivism and follows a restorative justice-focused approach to incarceration, is offered as a progressive model for Venezuela to follow.