This article is part of a UCLA Law Review symposium, “Overpoliced and Underprotected: Women, Race, and Criminalization.” It analyzes how the U.S. prison and foster care systems work together to punish black mothers in a way that helps to preserve race, gender, and class inequalities in a neoliberal age. The intersection of these systems is only one example of many forms of overpolicing that overlap and converge in the lives of poor women of color. I examine the statistical overlap between the prison and foster care populations, the simultaneous explosion of both systems in recent decades, the injuries that each system inflicts on black communities, and the way in which their intersection in the lives of black mothers helps to make social...
As the fastest growing prison population worldwide, more and more women are living in cages and most...
This research explores answers to the questions, "Do black men and women drug offenders receive simi...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...
This article is part of a UCLA Law Review symposium, “Overpoliced and Underprotected: Women, Race, a...
This article complicates Wacquant\u27s three-sided schema of race, class and state by adding a focus...
This article will explore the growth in the incarceration of women over the past three decades. Rece...
In this article-based dissertation, I investigate how Black women navigate the everyday challenges t...
The institutions of welfare and incarceration are central in poverty governance. My dissertation bui...
Today’s mass incarceration is a contemporary phenomenon that entraps black and brown people in an ex...
As the rates of incarceration continue to rise, women are increasingly subject to draconian criminal...
Mass incarceration has had several negative outcomes for poor communities of color. The past thirty...
textIn light of the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States, black women have become t...
Using a feminist standpoint epistemological framework, this article reports the findings from 26 int...
The incarceration rates of Black women in America surpass even all other demographics. Yet, Black wo...
This Article discusses the hidden costs of incarceration that most legislators, scholars, journalist...
As the fastest growing prison population worldwide, more and more women are living in cages and most...
This research explores answers to the questions, "Do black men and women drug offenders receive simi...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...
This article is part of a UCLA Law Review symposium, “Overpoliced and Underprotected: Women, Race, a...
This article complicates Wacquant\u27s three-sided schema of race, class and state by adding a focus...
This article will explore the growth in the incarceration of women over the past three decades. Rece...
In this article-based dissertation, I investigate how Black women navigate the everyday challenges t...
The institutions of welfare and incarceration are central in poverty governance. My dissertation bui...
Today’s mass incarceration is a contemporary phenomenon that entraps black and brown people in an ex...
As the rates of incarceration continue to rise, women are increasingly subject to draconian criminal...
Mass incarceration has had several negative outcomes for poor communities of color. The past thirty...
textIn light of the phenomenon of mass incarceration in the United States, black women have become t...
Using a feminist standpoint epistemological framework, this article reports the findings from 26 int...
The incarceration rates of Black women in America surpass even all other demographics. Yet, Black wo...
This Article discusses the hidden costs of incarceration that most legislators, scholars, journalist...
As the fastest growing prison population worldwide, more and more women are living in cages and most...
This research explores answers to the questions, "Do black men and women drug offenders receive simi...
My research is concerned with the effects of mass incarceration on American families, particularly o...