“…Legal conceptualizations tend to highlight sanctions arising from policy or law as collateral consequences, which has remained the norm even in the psychological literature (Kirk & Wakefield, 2018). Thus, a more psychosocially oriented operational definition, building off themes from prior research, defined collateral consequences operationally as (a) experiences of discrimination, loss, suppression, or negative affect (e.g., Frenzel et al, 2014); (b) originating societally, interpersonally, or intrapersonally (Logan, 2013); (c) arising as a result of the sexual offender status or policies though independent of law or legal statute (would not be present without subjection to sexual offender policies or label; O’Reilly, 2018); and (4) unintended either in its basic existence or in terms of duration (lasting past the punishment phase; Uggen & Stewart, 2014) or severity (Hamilton, 2020). For example, having one’s personal information posted by a third-party website may be categorized as an incident of discrimination, arising societally/interpersonally, as a result of one’s sexual offender status through independent of legal statute and unintended in its basic existence (not identified as an intended consequence of punishment at the time of conviction).…”