|
- The ‘Generational Curse’ Holding Back Children of Incarcerated Fathers
Black Americans have long described mass incarceration as a “generational curse” bedeviling impoverished communities New research by a Duke graduate student drives that point home with empirical evidence
- Explainer: The Cycle of Intergenerational Incarceration
Intergenerational incarceration is a term used to describe when family members from more than one generation enter the justice system For example, a father and son who both spend time in prison experience intergenerational incarceration Often, the cycle extends far beyond two generations
- A Generational Shift: Race and the Declining Lifetime Risk of . . .
We demonstrate that incarceration has undergone a widespread reduction across every state and for every racial, ethnic, and gender group (except White women), with Black men and women experiencing the greatest declines
- Incarceration: A Generational Cycle for Many Families Across the U. S.
My nephews were becoming more angry, disrespectful and violent Life seemed to start aligning with studies about the antisocial behavior of kids with incarcerated parents
- For 50 years, mass incarceration has hurt American . . . - The Source
“Taken together, family incarceration may send generational ripples that impact the health of the entire family,” Lee said Incarceration is a breaking point for families But Lee and Wildeman’s review highlights how poorly, on average, families were fairing even before experiencing parental incarceration
- Generational effects of incarceration | School of Social Sciences | UCI . . .
Conditions out of a person’s control can have a tremendously negative impact on health, behavior, and later life outcomes UCI sociologist Kristin Turney knows this to be true; her work takes an intergenerational look at heavy topics like long-term consequences of foster care and incarceration
- Measuring the Intergenerational Effects of Incarceration
incarceration may impact child outcomes The main theories in this literature on (i) the focus loss of parental socialization through role modeling, support, and supervision, (ii) the strains of
- Breaking Generational Curses: Success and Opportunity among Black . . .
Black children are disproportionately represented among the children of incarcerated mothers and fathers in the United States Research has largely focused on negative life outcomes (e g , incarceration, negative behaviors, school dropout rates) of these children
|
|
|