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Justin Landwehr

Researcher at RTI International

Publications -  14
Citations -  211

Justin Landwehr is an academic researcher from RTI International. The author has contributed to research in topics: Brief intervention & Prison. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 14 publications receiving 122 citations.

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Partnerships after prison: Couple relationships during reentry

TL;DR: This article used quantitative and qualitative data from the Multi-Site Family Study on Incarceration, Parenting, and Partnering (MFS-IP) to examine couple relationships during men's reen...
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The costs of incarceration for families of prisoners

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw upon data from a mixed-methods study to elucidate the costs of detention on families of prisoners and demonstrate that financial, social and emotional costs associated with imprisonment of a family member are interrelated and often compound each other, indicating the importance of addressing them in a holistic framework.
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“Always having hope”: Father–child relationships after reentry from prison

TL;DR: This article studied how incarceration affects the father-child relationship, and how fathers connect with and support their children during their incarceration, and found that incarceration affects both the father and the child.
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Family life before and during incarceration

TL;DR: The authors analyzed data from 1,482 incarcerated men and their partners to examine the assets and challenges that families brought with them into the incarceration experience; their considerable efforts to maintain family life during an incarceration in the face of physical separation and other obstacles; and the areas of convergence and divergence in their expectations for family life after the male partner's release.
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Suicide etiology in youth: Differences and similarities by sexual and gender minority status

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of constructs from the general population-based interpersonal-psychological theory of suicide and the SGM-specific minority stress theory in suicide ideation and attempt was assessed using data from a social media-based sample of SGM and non-SGM youth ages 14-21.