RT Article T1 The Impact of Occupational Characteristics and Victimization on Job Burnout Among South Korean Correctional Officers JF Criminal justice and behavior VO 47 IS 7 SP 905 OP 923 A1 Choi, Jaeyong A2 Kim, Yeonsoo A2 Kruis, Nathan E. LA English YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/176811255X AB Prior research on correctional officer burnout has focused almost exclusively on the effects of job characteristics. To date, this line of inquiry has largely failed to consider one important factor associated with the unique nature of prison work—direct exposure to interpersonal victimization (e.g., individuals in custody-on-officers). This article uses data from 269 correctional officers working in four South Korean facilities to examine the differential impact of experienced individuals in custody-on-officers aggression (i.e., verbal violence, minor and serious physical violence) and job characteristics (e.g., role clarity) on three dimensions of job burnout (i.e., emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and a sense of a lack of personal accomplishment). Results show that verbal victimization is more impactful on correctional officer burnout than physical victimization. However, the results also suggest that job characteristics may be more impactful on predicting certain dimensions of correctional officer burnout than experienced victimization. Potential policy implications are discussed. K1 Correctional Officers K1 job burnout K1 Job satisfaction K1 Role clarity K1 role overload K1 Victimization DO 10.1177/0093854820923024