The United States has entered its fourth decade of high imprisonment levels. It is now possible to assess the impact of parental imprisonment on children who have completed the transition to adulthood. We elaborate the role of parental incarceration from a life course perspective on intergenerational social exclusion in young adulthood. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health [Add Health] representatively sampled the historically unique national cohort born in the 1980s, during the onset of mass incarceration. Four waves of the Add Health survey provide a valuable moving window on incarcerated parents and the transitions of their children from adolescence, through school, to young adulthood. We focus on four young adult outcome...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...
The fact that parental incarceration has become a common event in the life course of many children i...
For many American families, incarceration has become a way of life. Per the National Resource Center...
The United States has entered its fourth decade of high imprisonment levels. It is now possible to a...
The United States is faced with a growing number of children who have incarcerated parents and nearl...
In 2007, it was estimated that 2.3% of all children in the U.S. under the age of 18 had a parent cur...
The incarceration of parents has become a concern for the social, behavioral, and psychological deve...
A review of available statistical information shows the irreversible and detrimental impact on paren...
This article argues that the intergenerational implications of mass incarceration have promoted the ...
The incarceration boom in the United States has resulted in high rates of parents serving time. Acc...
Recent literature has documented the negative intergenerational effects of parental incarceration on...
Mass incarceration has been a dominant concern within the criminal justice system since the 1970s. C...
Each year over a million individuals are held in U.S. jails or prisons. Even as research has been de...
Nearly one quarter of American children fail to complete high school. Parental behavior is identifie...
Many children in the United States have experienced the imprisonment of a parent, given the country\...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...
The fact that parental incarceration has become a common event in the life course of many children i...
For many American families, incarceration has become a way of life. Per the National Resource Center...
The United States has entered its fourth decade of high imprisonment levels. It is now possible to a...
The United States is faced with a growing number of children who have incarcerated parents and nearl...
In 2007, it was estimated that 2.3% of all children in the U.S. under the age of 18 had a parent cur...
The incarceration of parents has become a concern for the social, behavioral, and psychological deve...
A review of available statistical information shows the irreversible and detrimental impact on paren...
This article argues that the intergenerational implications of mass incarceration have promoted the ...
The incarceration boom in the United States has resulted in high rates of parents serving time. Acc...
Recent literature has documented the negative intergenerational effects of parental incarceration on...
Mass incarceration has been a dominant concern within the criminal justice system since the 1970s. C...
Each year over a million individuals are held in U.S. jails or prisons. Even as research has been de...
Nearly one quarter of American children fail to complete high school. Parental behavior is identifie...
Many children in the United States have experienced the imprisonment of a parent, given the country\...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...
The fact that parental incarceration has become a common event in the life course of many children i...
For many American families, incarceration has become a way of life. Per the National Resource Center...