YesResearch with prisoners’ families is limited in the context of learning difficulties/disabilities (LD) and autism spectrum. Life-story interviews with mothers reveal an extended period of emotional and practical care labour, as the continuous engagement with their son’s education and experiences of physical and emotional abuse are explored. Prior to their son’s incarceration, mothers spoke of stigma and barriers to support throughout their childrearing, as well as limited or absent preventative/positive care practices. Subsequently prisons and locked wards seem to feature as a progression. Mothers have experienced abuse; physical and/or emotional, as well as lives that convey accounts of failure. Not their failure, but that of the system...
Between 1980 and 2011, the number of incarcerated women increased by more than 700% (The Sentencing ...
This study presents a single case that illustrates the special concerns of incarcerated mothers with...
Statement of Problem: Prison not only punishes the one locked away; it also punishes the families “l...
Research with prisoners’ families is limited in the context of learning difficulties/disabilities (L...
Research with prisoner’s families, especially those who have a ‘disabled’ son or daughter as a resul...
Prior research highlights how criminalized mothers may be particularly at risk of negative judgement...
Women are the fastest growing prison population in the world (ICPR, 2017). This holds true in the Ca...
Incarcerating Motherhood explores how initial short period in prisons can negatively impact mothers ...
This research is an empirical ethics study of parenting support delivered within a UK prison mother ...
Introduction: All countries have female prisoners, many of whom are mothers. In most cases imprisonm...
Exploring the untold experiences of family members and friends caring for the children of female pri...
There are over 200, 000 children in the UK who are affected by parental imprisonment (Barnardo’s, 20...
The United States Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that women continue to be incarcerated at rec...
Although women only comprise around 5% of the prison population in England (Ministry of Justice, 201...
The rate of maternal incarceration has significantly increased throughout the past forty years. A ri...
Between 1980 and 2011, the number of incarcerated women increased by more than 700% (The Sentencing ...
This study presents a single case that illustrates the special concerns of incarcerated mothers with...
Statement of Problem: Prison not only punishes the one locked away; it also punishes the families “l...
Research with prisoners’ families is limited in the context of learning difficulties/disabilities (L...
Research with prisoner’s families, especially those who have a ‘disabled’ son or daughter as a resul...
Prior research highlights how criminalized mothers may be particularly at risk of negative judgement...
Women are the fastest growing prison population in the world (ICPR, 2017). This holds true in the Ca...
Incarcerating Motherhood explores how initial short period in prisons can negatively impact mothers ...
This research is an empirical ethics study of parenting support delivered within a UK prison mother ...
Introduction: All countries have female prisoners, many of whom are mothers. In most cases imprisonm...
Exploring the untold experiences of family members and friends caring for the children of female pri...
There are over 200, 000 children in the UK who are affected by parental imprisonment (Barnardo’s, 20...
The United States Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that women continue to be incarcerated at rec...
Although women only comprise around 5% of the prison population in England (Ministry of Justice, 201...
The rate of maternal incarceration has significantly increased throughout the past forty years. A ri...
Between 1980 and 2011, the number of incarcerated women increased by more than 700% (The Sentencing ...
This study presents a single case that illustrates the special concerns of incarcerated mothers with...
Statement of Problem: Prison not only punishes the one locked away; it also punishes the families “l...