Despite reasons to believe that paternal incarceration has heterogeneous consequences for children, little research explores the processes underlying variation in children’s responses to this adverse event. We use data from the Jail and Family Life Study, an in-depth interview study of incarcerated fathers and their family members (including their children), to understand the heterogeneous processes linking paternal incarceration to children’s well-being. Children commonly reported that their father’s incarceration restructured their lives by altering their emotional and instrumental responsibilities. Within each of these domains, though, children expressed considerable variation in their responses, with some children seamlessly stepping in...
With more than 2 million citizens incarcerated, the United States currently has the largest prison p...
Abstract: Though sociologists have examined how mass incarceration affects stratification, remarkabl...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...
Reading comprehension, social skills, and engagement at school are important for child development a...
Although father–child relationships (FCRs) are central to children’s experience of paternal imprison...
High rates of incarceration among American men, coupled with high rates of fatherhood among men in p...
Father involvement plays an important role in the development of children, and for fathers who are i...
This study extends research on the consequences of mass imprisonment and the causes of children’s be...
After nearly four decades of unabated expansion, mass incarceration in the United States has become ...
Parents are the ones who teach children how to get in touch with the inner and outer world. Mother i...
High U.S. incarceration rates have motivated recent research on the negative effects of imprisonment...
According to the Bureau of Justice’s special report on “Parents in Prison and Their Minor Children”,...
Despite a growing interest, both nationally and internationally, in the experiences of children with...
Each year over a million individuals are held in U.S. jails or prisons. Even as research has been de...
In the age of mass incarceration, over five million children have experienced parental incarceration...
With more than 2 million citizens incarcerated, the United States currently has the largest prison p...
Abstract: Though sociologists have examined how mass incarceration affects stratification, remarkabl...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...
Reading comprehension, social skills, and engagement at school are important for child development a...
Although father–child relationships (FCRs) are central to children’s experience of paternal imprison...
High rates of incarceration among American men, coupled with high rates of fatherhood among men in p...
Father involvement plays an important role in the development of children, and for fathers who are i...
This study extends research on the consequences of mass imprisonment and the causes of children’s be...
After nearly four decades of unabated expansion, mass incarceration in the United States has become ...
Parents are the ones who teach children how to get in touch with the inner and outer world. Mother i...
High U.S. incarceration rates have motivated recent research on the negative effects of imprisonment...
According to the Bureau of Justice’s special report on “Parents in Prison and Their Minor Children”,...
Despite a growing interest, both nationally and internationally, in the experiences of children with...
Each year over a million individuals are held in U.S. jails or prisons. Even as research has been de...
In the age of mass incarceration, over five million children have experienced parental incarceration...
With more than 2 million citizens incarcerated, the United States currently has the largest prison p...
Abstract: Though sociologists have examined how mass incarceration affects stratification, remarkabl...
Over the past two decades, the number of imprisoned adults in the United States has quadrupled. Mirr...