RT Article T1 Victimization in Prison. A Study of Victimization and Prison Climate Dimensions in Belgian Prisons JF Victims & offenders VO 20 IS 2 SP 387 OP 421 A1 Goossens, Elien A2 Maes, Eric A2 Robert, Luc A2 Daems, Tom A2 and Mertens, Anouk LA English YR 2025 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1920367896 AB Prisoner victimization introduces significant challenges to penal institutions worldwide. Researchers across the globe already provided extensive knowledge on risk factors from community crime theories for prison victimization. Other scholars are focusing on prison climate. The present study contributes to previous works by exploring both the role of community crime theory (individual, prisoner related) risk factors and prison climate dimensions in explaining prisoner victimization in Belgium. Three climate dimensions – relationships, safety and autonomy – were analyzed. Specifically, the study examined a sample of 1,006 prisoners using bivariate and multivariate regression analyses. The multivariate results showed that prison climate dimensions significantly contribute to explaining prisoner victimization, in addition to the other risk factors. These findings suggest that deprivation and strain theories remain relevant for understanding prison violence. Future researchers should study other prison climate dimensions, as well as environmental characteristics that may facilitate victimization. This paper also highlights the importance of investments in prison climate, such as dynamic security through relationships, in addition to hard security. K1 Prison climate K1 Prison K1 Victimization DO 10.1080/15564886.2023.2282978