Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’

This study explored potential associations between students’ attitudes toward rehabilitation of convicted offenders and factors such as the emotional impact of social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic and their knowledge about criminology and criminal justice. The pandemic’s social isolation co...

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Main Authors: Ronit Peled-Laskov, Lior Gideon, Lutzy Cojocaru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-08-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2543571
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author Ronit Peled-Laskov
Lior Gideon
Lutzy Cojocaru
author_facet Ronit Peled-Laskov
Lior Gideon
Lutzy Cojocaru
author_sort Ronit Peled-Laskov
collection DOAJ
description This study explored potential associations between students’ attitudes toward rehabilitation of convicted offenders and factors such as the emotional impact of social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic and their knowledge about criminology and criminal justice. The pandemic’s social isolation context enabled the measurement of the emotional experience (affective component) on punitive and rehabilitative attitudes. The study analyzed quantitative data from a voluntary sample of 192 criminology and criminal justice undergraduate students from two different countries using web-based surveys to measure rehabilitative and punitive attitudes. The aim was to examine potential relationships between isolation experiences, knowledge, cultural differences, selected demographic variables, and attitudes toward rehabilitation. U.S. students reported experiencing more difficulties than their Israeli counterparts. The latter expressed significantly less supportive attitudes toward rehabilitation than did the U.S. students. Findings from this study indicate the importance of examining the potential associations between both emotional/affective and cognitive components and attitudes toward rehabilitation. Students who reported being more affected emotionally by isolation tended to exhibit more supportive attitudes toward rehabilitation. Additionally, those with greater knowledge about rehabilitation tended to express more supportive views. This research highlights the potential value of considering both emotional experiences and knowledge when examining attitudes toward offenders’ rehabilitation.
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spelling doaj-art-3ee426b9eee144ff9ff8cc199df1f3e12025-08-20T03:38:22ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862025-08-0111110.1080/23311886.2025.2543571Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’Ronit Peled-Laskov0Lior Gideon1Lutzy Cojocaru2Department of Criminology, Ashkelon Academic College, IsraelDepartment of Criminology and Criminal Justice, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, USADepartment of Economics, Ashkelon Academic College, IsraelThis study explored potential associations between students’ attitudes toward rehabilitation of convicted offenders and factors such as the emotional impact of social isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic and their knowledge about criminology and criminal justice. The pandemic’s social isolation context enabled the measurement of the emotional experience (affective component) on punitive and rehabilitative attitudes. The study analyzed quantitative data from a voluntary sample of 192 criminology and criminal justice undergraduate students from two different countries using web-based surveys to measure rehabilitative and punitive attitudes. The aim was to examine potential relationships between isolation experiences, knowledge, cultural differences, selected demographic variables, and attitudes toward rehabilitation. U.S. students reported experiencing more difficulties than their Israeli counterparts. The latter expressed significantly less supportive attitudes toward rehabilitation than did the U.S. students. Findings from this study indicate the importance of examining the potential associations between both emotional/affective and cognitive components and attitudes toward rehabilitation. Students who reported being more affected emotionally by isolation tended to exhibit more supportive attitudes toward rehabilitation. Additionally, those with greater knowledge about rehabilitation tended to express more supportive views. This research highlights the potential value of considering both emotional experiences and knowledge when examining attitudes toward offenders’ rehabilitation.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2543571Rehabilitationrehabilitative attitudespunitive attitudesisolationchanging attitudesaffective cognitive components
spellingShingle Ronit Peled-Laskov
Lior Gideon
Lutzy Cojocaru
Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
Cogent Social Sciences
Rehabilitation
rehabilitative attitudes
punitive attitudes
isolation
changing attitudes
affective cognitive components
title Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
title_full Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
title_fullStr Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
title_full_unstemmed Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
title_short Assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the COVID-19 pandemic: an explorative study of two samples using natural ‘intervention’
title_sort assessing attitudes toward rehabilitation during the covid 19 pandemic an explorative study of two samples using natural intervention
topic Rehabilitation
rehabilitative attitudes
punitive attitudes
isolation
changing attitudes
affective cognitive components
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2543571
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AT liorgideon assessingattitudestowardrehabilitationduringthecovid19pandemicanexplorativestudyoftwosamplesusingnaturalintervention
AT lutzycojocaru assessingattitudestowardrehabilitationduringthecovid19pandemicanexplorativestudyoftwosamplesusingnaturalintervention