2018
DOI: 10.1080/13218719.2018.1469436
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Judicial stress: the roles of gender and social support

Abstract: Because judges experience a myriad of occupational stressors, they are at risk of experiencing secondary trauma, burnout, negative mental/physical health, poor job performance and low job satisfaction. These experiences might not be uniform, however, as gender and social support might mitigate such stress-related outcomes. Judges from two states in the United States completed a variety of stress and subjective performance measures. Social support was related to less perceived stress, less burnout, and more job… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…Admittedly, overall stress level was researchers’ subjective coding based on each comment, but there was a high level of consistency across coders for these ratings (86%) and many judges—approximately 73%—showed symptoms of at least one stress type. This comports with previous findings (Flores et al., 2008‐9; Jaffe et al., ; Miller, Reichert, et al., ) and suggests that this substantial minority of judges who experience STS is worthy of attention and is an important group to study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…Admittedly, overall stress level was researchers’ subjective coding based on each comment, but there was a high level of consistency across coders for these ratings (86%) and many judges—approximately 73%—showed symptoms of at least one stress type. This comports with previous findings (Flores et al., 2008‐9; Jaffe et al., ; Miller, Reichert, et al., ) and suggests that this substantial minority of judges who experience STS is worthy of attention and is an important group to study.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The present study analyzed qualitative secondary data that allowed us to examine how judges personally perceive and experience secondary stress and its correlates. We expanded on past literature (Flores et al., 2008‐9; Lustig et al., ; Miller, Edwards, et al., ; Miller, Reichert, et al., ; Resnick et al., ) by assessing judges’ secondary stress from a simple yes or no question and any elaboration they saw fit. Although some codes pertained to only a limited number of comments, the data reflect a substantial presence of STS and related stress theories and foundations in judges in that aspects of these stress theories were consistently mentioned despite being unprompted.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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