Mass incarceration is a sociostructural driver of profound health inequalities in the United States. The political and economic forces underpinning mass incarceration are deeply rooted in centuries of the enslavement of people of African descent and the genocide and displacement of Indigenous people and is inextricably connected to labor exploitation, racial discrimination, the criminalization of immigration, and behavioral health problems such as mental illness and substance use disorders. This article focuses on major public health crises and advances in state and federal prisons and discusses a range of practical strategies for health scholars, practitioners, and activists to promote the health and dignity of incarcerated people. It begi...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015According to a report from the Council of State Gov...
Incarcerated individuals, over 95% of whom are eventually released, experience high burdens of chron...
With 2.1 million Americans behind bars, the United States incarcerates more people per capita than a...
Mass incarceration in the United States is a civil rights, human rights, and public health crisis th...
With 2.1 million Americans behind bars, the United States incarcerates more people per capita than a...
The social, economic, and health consequences of incarceration can no longer be ignored. The dispari...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
More than 735,000 inmates are released from U.S. prisons annually, many of whom have mental and phys...
More than 735,000 inmates are released from U.S. prisons annually, many of whom have mental and phys...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
Prison organizations are not isolated institutions, thus social and economic change in the wider soc...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015According to a report from the Council of State Gov...
Incarcerated individuals, over 95% of whom are eventually released, experience high burdens of chron...
With 2.1 million Americans behind bars, the United States incarcerates more people per capita than a...
Mass incarceration in the United States is a civil rights, human rights, and public health crisis th...
With 2.1 million Americans behind bars, the United States incarcerates more people per capita than a...
The social, economic, and health consequences of incarceration can no longer be ignored. The dispari...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
Mass incarceration refers to the system of social and racial control in the United States that arres...
More than 735,000 inmates are released from U.S. prisons annually, many of whom have mental and phys...
More than 735,000 inmates are released from U.S. prisons annually, many of whom have mental and phys...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
The world prison population is growing at a rate that exceeds the rate of population growth. This is...
Prison organizations are not isolated institutions, thus social and economic change in the wider soc...
While decarceration has become fashionable, American penology remains in the throes of a penal harm ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015According to a report from the Council of State Gov...
Incarcerated individuals, over 95% of whom are eventually released, experience high burdens of chron...