Each year, about 40,000 pregnant women are incarcerated in the U.S. The infants are usually taken from their mothers within the first 24-48 hours of birth and placed in foster care or kinship foster care. Only ten of the fifty states allow for women to keep their babies with them in prison if they have a non-violent record and only 18 months left on their sentence. Attachment Theory states that the relationship formed between infants and their parents mirrors a behavioral system that has adapted to bolster survival and proficient functioning as a child and later on in adulthood. When babies are taken from their mothers due to the mothers' incarceration, relationship bonds are severed that can be detrimental to the child's later wellbeing. I...
Women in prison assert that separation from their children is one of the most traumatic aspects of t...
The United States holds 30% of the world’s incarcerated women and the laws protecting their specific...
Children-in-prison programs reflect a commendable sympathy for the lifelong disadvantage and depriva...
While the number of women is increasing among the prison population, so too is the need to accommoda...
Between 1980 and 2011, the number of incarcerated women increased by more than 700% (The Sentencing ...
Over the past century, while advocates of prison nurseries have applauded their individual and socie...
This note opens the prison doors and delves into the United States female prison system, primarily f...
The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers...
Mothers in prison separated from their young children are an overlooked group. Attachment theory cou...
Society\u27s traditional approach to women offenders has been focused on women as prisoners and not...
The number of women involved in the criminal justice system has dramatically increased over the year...
Prison nurseries are used throughout the world as a way to strengthen the initial mother-child bond ...
Mothers in prison represent a high-risk parenting population. New Beginnings is an attachment-based ...
Through my research, I analyzed prison nursery programs in the United States. Prison nurseries are p...
Raising an Infant in a Jumpsuit: Canada’s need for a more contemporary approach to prison nurseries ...
Women in prison assert that separation from their children is one of the most traumatic aspects of t...
The United States holds 30% of the world’s incarcerated women and the laws protecting their specific...
Children-in-prison programs reflect a commendable sympathy for the lifelong disadvantage and depriva...
While the number of women is increasing among the prison population, so too is the need to accommoda...
Between 1980 and 2011, the number of incarcerated women increased by more than 700% (The Sentencing ...
Over the past century, while advocates of prison nurseries have applauded their individual and socie...
This note opens the prison doors and delves into the United States female prison system, primarily f...
The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers...
Mothers in prison separated from their young children are an overlooked group. Attachment theory cou...
Society\u27s traditional approach to women offenders has been focused on women as prisoners and not...
The number of women involved in the criminal justice system has dramatically increased over the year...
Prison nurseries are used throughout the world as a way to strengthen the initial mother-child bond ...
Mothers in prison represent a high-risk parenting population. New Beginnings is an attachment-based ...
Through my research, I analyzed prison nursery programs in the United States. Prison nurseries are p...
Raising an Infant in a Jumpsuit: Canada’s need for a more contemporary approach to prison nurseries ...
Women in prison assert that separation from their children is one of the most traumatic aspects of t...
The United States holds 30% of the world’s incarcerated women and the laws protecting their specific...
Children-in-prison programs reflect a commendable sympathy for the lifelong disadvantage and depriva...