RT Article T1 Desisting from Crime: in-Prison Behaviour and Cognition as Predictors of Post-Release Success JF Canadian journal of criminology and criminal justice VO 62 IS 3 SP 11 OP 28 A1 Walters, Glenn D. 1954- LA English YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1742743625 AB To test the possibility that in-prison behaviour and cognition provide information useful in predicting future desistance from crime, two in-prison variables and nine pre-prison and demographic control variables were correlated with post-prison release success in a group of 1,101 male inmates released from federal prison. A Cox regression proportional hazards survival analysis revealed that fewer disciplinary infractions and lower criminal thinking predicted future desistance, as measured by the absence of post-release arrests or a longer time until first arrest for those who were arrested, net the effects of the pre-prison variables and demographic measures. When disciplinary infractions were subclassified as aggressive (fighting, assault, threatening) or non-aggressive (disobedience, theft, use of intoxicants), only the non-aggressive category achieved significance. Likewise, when criminal thinking was subdivided into proactive and reactive criminal thinking, only the reactive dimension achieved significance. These findings suggest that behaviour and cognition assessed in prison may have value both in predicting desistance upon a person's release from prison and in clarifying the nature of post-prison release success. (English) K1 Behaviour K1 Cognition K1 Crime K1 Desistance from crime K1 Prison psychology K1 Prison release K1 Traffic violations K1 Criminal thinking K1 Desistance K1 Prison K1 Tournants K1 Turning points DO 10.3138/cjccj.2019-0068