More than twenty-five states allow courts to consider parental incarceration or conviction of a crime in determining whether to terminate parental rights. This problem is of increasing significance as a result of dramatic growth in incarceration rates, particularly among women who were often the primary and sole caretaker of their children before their imprisonment. Social scientists have recognized that the reality for parents in many communities is one of widespread and repeated incarceration, which has a devastating effect on families and communities. The problem is magnified by a failed drug policy and the Adoption and Safe Families Act, which, in many cases, requires states to institute termination proceedings against a parent whose ch...
Approximately 10 million children have experienced parental incarceration at some point in their liv...
From 2006 to 2016, 32,000 incarcerated parents in the United States permanently lost their parental ...
Parental incarceration thwarts the relationships of children with their parents. Nurturing family bo...
More than twenty-five states allow courts to consider parental incarceration or conviction of a crim...
This Note seeks to understand how people in prison may lose their parental rights as a result of the...
Hundreds of thousands of incarcerated persons are parents; in many instances, their incarceration ha...
In the United States, where government policies have resulted in extremely high incarcera...
As the growing prison population continues, children from all over face the many challenges and adve...
In the past decade, the number of female prisoners in New York state and city jails has risen dramat...
Children of incarcerated parents, the invisible victims of mass incarceration, suffer tremendous phy...
Disruption of families through incarceration of parents has become an increasingly serious problem o...
A review of available statistical information shows the irreversible and detrimental impact on paren...
For most of America’s history, the common law deemed the family a “private sphere” into which the go...
This brief builds upon information presented to and gathered by the Missouri Children's Services Com...
Historically, child support policy has targeted absent parents with aggressive enforcement measures....
Approximately 10 million children have experienced parental incarceration at some point in their liv...
From 2006 to 2016, 32,000 incarcerated parents in the United States permanently lost their parental ...
Parental incarceration thwarts the relationships of children with their parents. Nurturing family bo...
More than twenty-five states allow courts to consider parental incarceration or conviction of a crim...
This Note seeks to understand how people in prison may lose their parental rights as a result of the...
Hundreds of thousands of incarcerated persons are parents; in many instances, their incarceration ha...
In the United States, where government policies have resulted in extremely high incarcera...
As the growing prison population continues, children from all over face the many challenges and adve...
In the past decade, the number of female prisoners in New York state and city jails has risen dramat...
Children of incarcerated parents, the invisible victims of mass incarceration, suffer tremendous phy...
Disruption of families through incarceration of parents has become an increasingly serious problem o...
A review of available statistical information shows the irreversible and detrimental impact on paren...
For most of America’s history, the common law deemed the family a “private sphere” into which the go...
This brief builds upon information presented to and gathered by the Missouri Children's Services Com...
Historically, child support policy has targeted absent parents with aggressive enforcement measures....
Approximately 10 million children have experienced parental incarceration at some point in their liv...
From 2006 to 2016, 32,000 incarcerated parents in the United States permanently lost their parental ...
Parental incarceration thwarts the relationships of children with their parents. Nurturing family bo...