Meet Me at the Rock: The Behavioral Patterns of Collective Violence in Prison
摘要
This study explores the behavioral dynamics of collective violence in prisons, focusing on the largest prison riot in the United States in twenty-five years at Lee Correctional Institution, using an ethnographic approach and Crime Script Analysis (CSA). The sample consisted of twenty-five incarcerated men, predominantly African American, aged 25 to 61, with extensive incarceration histories, experiences of violence, and influencer status within the prison community. It identifies key factors such as situational awareness, gang affiliations, and chronic understaffing that escalate violence. Themes include the "pressure cooker" environment, elevated tensions, and stages of confrontation, escalation, and de-escalation. A key finding is that collective violence in prison is predictable and follows a routine, making it amenable to policy interventions. Policy implications, grounded in Routine Activities Theory, recommend increasing capable guardians, enhancing surveillance, and involving incarcerated individuals in violence-prevention initiatives to reduce the frequency and severity of institutional violence.