1932

Abstract

The US prison boom has resulted in the mass incarceration of parents in the United States. We review recent scholarship on the relationship between parental incarceration and child inequality and social exclusion over the life course. We develop a multilevel social exclusion framework to stimulate future research on the effects of paternal and maternal incarceration. This framework is intergenerational in its focus on incarcerated parents and their children, interinstitutional in its attention to state and school regimes, and intersectional in its consideration of the role of gender and race and ethnic contingencies. It is also systemic in its focus on multiple chosen and overlapping institutional policy domains of exclusion. We address both mediators and moderators of the effects of parental incarceration on child outcomes. We emphasize the underresearched importance of meso-level (e.g., school) and macro-level (e.g., state and cross-national) exclusionary and inclusionary regimes in understanding the effects of parental incarceration. We propose hypotheses to synthesize current research on the impact of maternal and paternal incarceration on children.

Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-soc-073014-112437
2015-08-14
2024-04-18
Loading full text...

Full text loading...

/deliver/fulltext/soc/41/1/annurev-soc-073014-112437.html?itemId=/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-soc-073014-112437&mimeType=html&fmt=ahah

Literature Cited

  1. Andersen SH, Wildeman C. 2014. The effect of paternal incarceration on children's risk of foster care placement. Soc. Forces 93(1)269–98
  2. Aneshensel CS, Rutter CM, Lachenbruch PA. 1991. Social structure, stress, and mental health: competing conceptual and analytic models. Am. Sociol. Rev. 56:166–78 [Google Scholar]
  3. Arditti JA. 2012. Parental Incarceration and the Family: Psychological and Social Effects of Imprisonment on Children, Parents and Caregivers New York: New York Univ. Press
  4. Arditti JA. 2015. Family process perspective on the heterogeneous effects of maternal incarceration on child wellbeing. Criminol. Public Policy 14:1–14 [Google Scholar]
  5. Barker V. 2009. The Politics of Imprisonment: How the Democratic Process Shapes the Way America Punishes Offenders New York: Oxford Univ. Press
  6. Beckett K, Sasson T. 2004 (2000). The Politics of Injustice: Crime and Punishment in America. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
  7. Beckett K, Western B. 2001. Governing social marginality: welfare, incarceration, and the transformation of state policy. Mass Imprisonment: Social Causes and Consequences D Garland 35–50 Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage [Google Scholar]
  8. Besemer S, Van Der Geest V, Murray J, Bijleveld CCJH, Farrington DP. 2011. The relationship between parental imprisonment and offspring offending in England and the Netherlands. Br. J. Criminol. 51:413–37 [Google Scholar]
  9. Bever Nichols E, Loper AB. 2012. Incarceration in the household: academic outcomes of adolescents with an incarcerated household member. J. Youth Adolesc. 41:1455–71 [Google Scholar]
  10. Bohnke P. 2006. Am Rande der Gesellschaft: Risiken Sozialer Ausgrenzung Opladen, Ger.: Burich
  11. Braman D. 2004. Doing Time on the Outside: Incarceration and Family Life in Urban America Ann Arbor, MI: Univ. Mich. Press
  12. Brooks-Gunn J, Duncan GJ, Aber JL. 1997. Neighborhood Poverty 1 Context and Consequences for Children New York: Russell Sage Found.
  13. Brown C. 2013. Modern American incarceration and labor economics PhD Thesis, Middle Tennessee State Univ., Murfreesboro
  14. Buck N. 2001. Identifying neighborhood effects on social exclusion. Urban Stud. 38:2251–75 [Google Scholar]
  15. Bussell TJ. 2013. The effect of parental incarceration on high school outcomes MSW Thesis, Calif. State Univ., Los Angeles
  16. Campbell MC, Schoenfeld H. 2013. The transformation of America's penal order: a historicized political sociology of punishment. Am. J. Sociol. 118:1375–423 [Google Scholar]
  17. Carson EA. 2014. Prisoners in 2013 Bur. Justice Stat., Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p13.pdf
  18. Carson EA, Golinelli D. 2013. Prisoners in 2012: trends in admissions and releases, 1991–2012 Bur. Justice Stat., Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p12tar9112.pdf
  19. Cho RM. 2009a. Impact of maternal imprisonment on children's probability of grade retention. J. Urban Econ. 65:11–23 [Google Scholar]
  20. Cho RM. 2009b. The impact of maternal imprisonment on children's educational achievement: results from children in Chicago public schools. J. Hum. Resour. 44:772–97 [Google Scholar]
  21. Cho RM. 2010. Maternal incarceration and children's adolescent outcomes: timing versus dosage. Soc. Serv. Rev. 84:257–82 [Google Scholar]
  22. Cho RM. 2011. Understanding the mechanism behind maternal imprisonment and adolescent school dropout. Fam. Relat. 60:272–89 [Google Scholar]
  23. Cho S, Crenshaw KW, McCall L. 2013. Toward a field of intersectionality studies: theory, applications, and praxis. Signs 38:785–810 [Google Scholar]
  24. Christle C, Jolivette K, Nelson M. 2005. Breaking the school to prison pipeline: identifying school risk and protective factors for youth delinquency. Exceptionality 13:69–88 [Google Scholar]
  25. Clear TR. 2007. Imprisoning Communities: How Mass Incarceration Makes Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Worse New York: Oxford Univ. Press
  26. Clear TR, Frost NA. 2014. The Punishment Imperative: The Rise and Fall of Mass Incarceration in America New York: New York Univ. Press
  27. Comfort M. 2007. Punishment beyond the legal offender. Annu. Rev. Law Soc. Sci. 3:271–96 [Google Scholar]
  28. Dallaire DH, Ciccone A, Wilson LC. 2010. Teacher's experiences with and expectations of children with incarcerated parents. J. Appl. Dev. Psychol. 31:281–90 [Google Scholar]
  29. Elder G. 1998. The life course as developmental theory. Child Dev. 69:1–12 [Google Scholar]
  30. Esping-Anderson G. 1990. The Three Worlds of Welfare Capitalism Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press
  31. Feagin JR. 2001 (2000). Racist America: Roots, Current Realities and Future Reparations New York: Routledge
  32. Fenning P, Rose J. 2007. Over-representation of African American students in exclusionary discipline: the role of school policy. Urban Educ. 42:536–59 [Google Scholar]
  33. Foster H, Hagan J. 2007. Incarceration and intergenerational social exclusion. Soc. Probl. 54:399–433 [Google Scholar]
  34. Foster H, Hagan J. 2009. The mass incarceration of American parents: issues of race/ethnicity, collateral consequences, and prisoner re-entry. Ann. Am. Acad. Polit. Soc. Sci. 623:195–213 [Google Scholar]
  35. Foster H, Hagan J. 2013. Maternal and paternal imprisonment in the stress process. Soc. Sci. Res. 42:650–69 [Google Scholar]
  36. Foster H, Hagan J. 2015. Maternal and paternal imprisonment and children's social exclusion in young adulthood. J. Crim. Law Criminol. 105:2In press [Google Scholar]
  37. Frank J, Hong CS, Subramanian SV, Wang EA. 2013. Neighborhood incarceration rate and asthma prevalence in New York City: a multilevel approach. Am. J. Public Health 103:e38–44 [Google Scholar]
  38. Friedman S, Esselstyn TC. 1965. The adjustment of children of jail inmates. Fed. Probat. 4:55–59 [Google Scholar]
  39. Fritsch TA, Burkhead JD. 1981. Behavioral reactions of children to parental absence due to imprisonment. Fam. Relat. 30:83–88 [Google Scholar]
  40. Frost NA. 2006. The Punitive State: Crime, Punishment and Imprisonment across the United States New York: LFB
  41. Garland D. 1996. The limits of the sovereign state: strategies of crime control in contemporary society. Br. J. Criminol. 36:445–71 [Google Scholar]
  42. Garland D. 2001a. Mass Imprisonment: Social Causes and Consequences London: Sage
  43. Garland D. 2001b. The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  44. Geller A, Garfinkel I, Cooper CE, Mincy RB. 2009. Parental incarceration and child well-being: implications for urban families. Soc. Sci. Q. 90:1186–202 [Google Scholar]
  45. Geller A, Garfinkel I, Western B. 2011. Paternal incarceration and support for children in fragile families. Demography 48:25–47 [Google Scholar]
  46. Giele JZ. 2009. Life stories to understand diversity: variations by class, race and gender. The Craft of Life Course Research GH Elder Jr, JZ Giele 236–57 New York: Guildford [Google Scholar]
  47. Gilmore R. 2007. Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California Berkeley: Univ. Calif. Press
  48. Giordano PC. 2010. Legacies of Crime: A Follow-Up of the Children of Highly Delinquent Girls and Boys New York: Cambridge Univ. Press
  49. Glaze LE, Maruschak LM. 2008. Parents in prison and their minor children BJS Spec. Rep. Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/pptmc.pdf
  50. Goodman SH, Gotlib IH. 1999. Risk for psychopathology in the children of depressed mothers: a developmental model for understanding mechanisms of transmission. Psychol. Rev. 106:458–90 [Google Scholar]
  51. Gran BK. 2010. Comparing children's rights: introducing the Child's Rights Index. Int. J. Child. Rights 18:1–17 [Google Scholar]
  52. Grattet R, Lin J, Petersilia J. 2011. Supervision regimes, risk and official reactions to parolee deviance. Criminology 49:371–99 [Google Scholar]
  53. Guerino P, Harrison PM, William JS. 2011. Prisoners in 2010 Bur. Justice Stat., Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p10.pdf
  54. Hagan J. 1989. Why is there so little criminal justice theory? Neglected macro- and micro-level links between organization and power. J. Res. Crime Delinq. 26:116–35 [Google Scholar]
  55. Hagan J. 2010. Who Are the Criminals? The Politics of Crime Policy from the Age of Roosevelt to the Age of Reagan Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press
  56. Hagan J, Dinovitzer R. 1999. Collateral consequences of imprisonment for children, communities, and prisoners. Crime Justice 26:121–62 [Google Scholar]
  57. Hagan J, Foster H. 2012a. Children of the American prison generation: the paradoxical “spillover” school effects of incarcerating mothers. Law Soc. Rev. 46:37–69 [Google Scholar]
  58. Hagan J, Foster H. 2012b. Intergenerational school effects of mass imprisonment in America. Sociol. Educ. 85:259–86 [Google Scholar]
  59. Hagan J, Foster H. 2014. From mass incarceration to the Great Recession: a human security perspective on parental imprisonment and young adult economic insecurity in America Presented at Russell Sage Foundation Conference on Severe Deprivation New York:
  60. Hagan J, Foster H. 2015. Review of Sara Wakefield and Christopher Wildeman. Children of the Prison Boom New York, Oxford Univ Press. Am. J. Sociol. 121:5In press [Google Scholar]
  61. Hagan J, Payne M, Shedd C. 2005. Race, ethnicity, and youth perceptions of criminal injustice. Am. Sociol. Rev. 70:381–407 [Google Scholar]
  62. Hagan J, Plickert G, Palloni A, Headworth S. 2015. Making punishment pay: the political economy of revenue, race and regime in the California prison boom. Du Bois Rev 12(1)95–118
  63. Hamilton C. 2014. Reconceptualizing penality: towards a multidimensional measure of punitiveness. Br. J. Criminol. 54:321–43 [Google Scholar]
  64. Haskins AR. 2014. Unintended consequences: effects of paternal incarceration on child school readiness and later special education placement. Sociol. Sci. 1:141–58 [Google Scholar]
  65. Hatzenbuehler ML, Keyes K, Hamilton A, Uddin M, Galea S. 2015. The collateral damage of mass incarceration: risk of psychiatric morbidity among nonincarcerated residents of high-incarceration neighborhoods. Am. J. Public Health 105:138–43 [Google Scholar]
  66. Hipp J, Janetta J, Shah R, Turner S. 2009. Parolees' physical closeness to health service providers: a study of California parolees. Health Place 15:679–88 [Google Scholar]
  67. Hirschfield PJ. 2008. Preparing for prison? The criminalization of school discipline in the USA. Theor. Criminol. 12:79–101 [Google Scholar]
  68. Huebner BM, Gustafson R. 2007. The effect of maternal incarceration on adult offspring involvement in the criminal justice system. J. Crim. Justice 35:283–96 [Google Scholar]
  69. Johnson EI, Waldfogel J. 2004. Children of incarcerated parents: multiple risks and children's living arrangements. Imprisoning America: The Social Effects of Mass Incarceration M Pattillo, D Weiman, B Western 97–131 New York: Russell Sage Found. [Google Scholar]
  70. Kahn AJ, Kammerman SB. 2002. Beyond Child Poverty: The Social Exclusion of Children New York: Inst. Child Fam. Policy, Columbia Univ.
  71. Kinner SA, Alati R, Najman JM, Williams GM. 2007. Do paternal arrest and imprisonment lead to child behaviour problems and substance use? A longitudinal analysis. J. Child Psychol. Psychiatry 48:1148–56 [Google Scholar]
  72. Kirk DS, Papachristos AV. 2011. Cultural mechanisms and the persistence of neighborhood violence. Am. J. Sociol. 116:1190–233 [Google Scholar]
  73. Kruttschnitt C. 2010. The paradox of women's imprisonment. Daedalus 139:32–42 [Google Scholar]
  74. Kupchicka A, Monahan T. 2006. The new American school: preparation for post-industrial discipline. Br. J. Sociol. Educ. 27:617–31 [Google Scholar]
  75. Kutateladze B. 2009. Is America Really So Punitive? Exploring a Continuum of U.S. State Criminal Justice Policies. El Paso, TX: LFB
  76. Lee H, Porter LC, Comfort M. 2014. Consequences of family member incarceration: impacts on civic participation and perceptions of the legitimacy and fairness of government. Ann. Am. Acad. Polit. Soc. Sci. 651:44–73 [Google Scholar]
  77. Lee RD, Fang X, Luo F. 2013. The impact of parental incarceration on the physical and mental health of young adults. Pediatrics 131:e1188–95 [Google Scholar]
  78. Manza J, Uggen C. 2006. Locked Out: Felon Disenfranchisement and American Democracy New York: Oxford Univ. Press
  79. Mathis CW. 2013. Children's delinquency after paternal incarceration PhD Thesis, Texas A&M Univ., College Station
  80. Matsueda RL. 2013. Rational choice research in criminology: a multi-level framework. Handbook of Rational Choice Social Research R Wittek, T Snijders, V Nee 283–321 Palo Alto, CA: Stanford Univ. Press [Google Scholar]
  81. Mauer M, Ghandnoosh N. 2014. Fewer Prisoners, Less Crime: A Tale of Three States Washington, DC: Sentencing Proj.
  82. Mauer M, King RS. 2007. Uneven Justice: State Rates of Incarceration by Race and Ethnicity Washington, DC: Sentencing Proj.
  83. Mayer KU, Schoepflin U. 1989. The state and the life course. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 15:187–209 [Google Scholar]
  84. McCall L. 2005. The complexity of intersectionality. Signs 30:1771–800 [Google Scholar]
  85. Micklewright J. 2002. Social exclusion and children: a European view for a U.S. debate. Beyond Child Poverty: The Social Exclusion of Children AJ Kahn, SB Kammerman 91–129 New York: Inst. Child Fam. Policy, Columbia Univ. [Google Scholar]
  86. Morenoff J, Harding DJ. 2014. Incarceration, prisoner reentry and communities. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 40:411–29 [Google Scholar]
  87. Mumola CJ. 2000. Incarcerated parents and their children BJS Spec. Rep., Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/iptc.pdf
  88. Murnane RJ, Maynard RA, Ohls JC. 1981. Home resources and children's academic achievement. Rev. Econ. Stat. 63:369–77 [Google Scholar]
  89. Murray J. 2007. The cycle of punishment: social exclusion of prisoners and their children. Criminol. Crim. Justice 7:55–81 [Google Scholar]
  90. Murray J, Bijleveld CCJH, Farrington DP, Loeber R. 2014. Effects of Parental Incarceration on Children: Cross-National Comparative Studies Washington, DC: Am. Psychol. Assoc.
  91. Murray J, Farrington DP. 2008. The effects of parental imprisonment on children. Crime Justice 37:133–206 [Google Scholar]
  92. Murray J, Farrington DP, Sekol I. 2012a. Children's antisocial behavior, mental health, drug use, and educational performance after parental incarceration: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychol. Bull. 138:175–210 [Google Scholar]
  93. Murray J, Janson C-G, Farrington DP. 2009. Crime in adult offspring of prisoners: a cross-national comparison of two longitudinal samples. Crim. Justice Behav. 34:133–49 [Google Scholar]
  94. Murray J, Loeber R, Pardini D. 2012b. Parental involvement in the criminal justice system and the development of youth theft, marijuana use, depression and poor academic performance. Criminology 50:255–302 [Google Scholar]
  95. National Research Council 2014. The Growth of Incarceration in the United States: Exploring Causes and Consequences Washington, DC: Natl. Acad. Press
  96. Nebbitt V, Tirmazi TM, Lombe M, Cryer-Coupet Q, French S. 2013. Correlates of the sex trade among African-American youth living in urban public housing: assessing the role of parental incarceration and parental substance use. J. Urban Health 91:383–93 [Google Scholar]
  97. Nesmith A, Ruhland E. 2008. Children of incarcerated parents: challenges and resiliency, in their own words. Child. Youth Serv. Rev. 30:1119–30 [Google Scholar]
  98. Novero CM, Loper AB, Warren JI. 2011. Second-generation prisoners: adjustment patterns for inmates with a history of parental incarceration. Crim. Justice Behav. 38:761–78 [Google Scholar]
  99. Page J. 2011a. Fear of change: prison officer unions and the perpetuation of mass imprisonment. Presented at Am. Sociol. Assoc. Annu. Meet., Aug 20–23 Las Vegas, NV
  100. Page J. 2011b. The Toughest Beat: Politics, Punishment, and the Prison Officers Union in California New York: Oxford Univ. Press
  101. Pager D. 2007. Marked: Race, Crime and Finding Work in an Era of Mass Incarceration Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  102. Pettit B. 2012. Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress New York: Russell Sage Found.
  103. Pettit B, Western B. 2004. Mass imprisonment and the life course. Am. Sociol. Rev. 69:151–69 [Google Scholar]
  104. Phelps M. 2013. The paradox of probation: community supervision in the age of mass incarceration. Law Policy 35:51–80 [Google Scholar]
  105. Raeder MS. 2014. Preserving family ties for domestic violence survivors and their children by invoking a human rights approach to avoid the criminalization of mothers based on the acts and accusations of their batterers. J. Gender Race Justice 17:105–36 [Google Scholar]
  106. Raudenbush SW, Bryk AS. 2002. Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
  107. Roettger ME, Boardman JD. 2012. Parental incarceration and gender-based risks for increased body mass index: evidence from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health in the United States. Am. J. Epidemiol. 175:636–44 [Google Scholar]
  108. Roettger ME, Swisher RR. 2011. Associations of father's history of incarceration with sons' delinquency and arrest among Black, White, and Hispanic males in the United States. Criminology 49:1109–47 [Google Scholar]
  109. Roettger ME, Swisher RR, Kuhl DC, Chavez J. 2010. Paternal incarceration and trajectories of marijuana and other illegal drug use from adolescence into young adulthood: evidence from longitudinal panels of males and females in the United States. Addiction 106:121–32 [Google Scholar]
  110. Room G, Britton N. 2006. The dynamics of social exclusion. Int. J. Soc. Welf. 15:280–89 [Google Scholar]
  111. Sacks V, Murphey D, Moore K. 2014. Adverse childhood experiences: national and state-level prevalence Research Brief. Child Trends. Publ. No. 2014-28, Bethesda
  112. Sampson RJ. 1997. The embeddedness of child and adolescent development: a community-level perspective on urban violence. Childhood and Violence in the Inner City J McCord 31–77 New York: Cambridge Univ. Press [Google Scholar]
  113. Sampson RJ. 2012. Great American City: Chicago and the Enduring Neighborhood Effect Chicago: Univ. Chicago Press
  114. Sampson RJ, Bartusch DJ. 1998. Legal cynicism and (subcultural?) tolerance of deviance: the neighborhood context of racial differences. Law Soc. Rev. 32:777–804 [Google Scholar]
  115. Sampson RJ, Raudenbush SW, Earls FJ. 1997. Neighborhoods and violent crime: a multilevel study of collective efficacy. Science 277:918–24 [Google Scholar]
  116. Sander J. 2010. School psychology, juvenile justice, and the school to prison pipeline. Communique 39:4 [Google Scholar]
  117. Schnittker J, Bacak V. 2013. A mark of disgrace or a badge of honor? Subjective status among former inmates. Soc. Probl. 60:234–54 [Google Scholar]
  118. Schoenfeld H. 2010. Mass incarceration and the paradox of prison conditions litigation. Law Soc. Rev. 44:731–68 [Google Scholar]
  119. Schwartz-Soicher O, Geller A, Garfinkel I. 2011. The effect of paternal incarceration on material hardship. Soc. Serv. Rev. 85:447–73 [Google Scholar]
  120. Shlafer RJ, Poehlmann J, Donelan-McCall N. 2012. Maternal jail time, conviction, and arrest as predictors of children's 15-year antisocial outcomes in the context of a nurse home visiting program. J. Clin. Child Adolesc. Psychol. 41:38–52 [Google Scholar]
  121. Siegel JA. 2011. Disrupted Childhoods: Children of Women in Prison New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers Univ. Press
  122. Silver H. 2007. The process of social exclusion: the dynamics of an evolving concept CPRC Work. Pap. 95, Chronic Poverty Res. Cent., Brown Univ.
  123. Solomon RP. 2004. Schooling in Babylon, Babylon in school: when racial profiling and zero tolerance converge. Can. J. Educ. Adm. Policy Issue No 33
  124. Stanton AM. 1980. When Mothers Go to Jail Lexington, MA: Lexington Books
  125. Swann CA, Sylvester MS. 2006. The foster care crisis: What caused caseloads to grow?. Demography 43:309–35 [Google Scholar]
  126. Swisher RR, Roettger ME. 2012. Father's incarceration and youth delinquency and depression: examining differences by race and ethnicity. J. Res. Adolesc. 22:597–603 [Google Scholar]
  127. Tasca M, Turanovic JJ, White C, Rodriguez N. 2014. Prisoners' assessments of mental health problems among their children. Int. J. Offender Ther. Comp. Criminol. 58:154–73 [Google Scholar]
  128. Thornberry T, Freeman-Gallant A, Lizotte AJ, Krohn MD, Smith CA. 2003. Linked lives: the intergenerational transmission of antisocial behavior. J. Abnorm. Child Psychol. 31:171–84 [Google Scholar]
  129. Thornberry T, Krohn M, Freeman-Gallant A. 2006. Intergenerational roots of early onset substance use. J. Drug Issues 36:1–28 [Google Scholar]
  130. Tonry M. 2007. Determinants of penal policies. Crime Justice 36:1–48 [Google Scholar]
  131. Tonry M. 2010. The social, psychological and political causes of racial disparities in the American criminal justice system. Crime Justice 39:273–312 [Google Scholar]
  132. Travis J. 2002. Invisible punishment: an instrument of social exclusion. Invisible Punishment: The Collateral Consequences of Mass Imprisonment M Mauer, M Chesney-Lind 15–36 New York: New Press [Google Scholar]
  133. Turanovic JJ, Rodriguez N, Pratt TC. 2012. The collateral consequences of incarceration revisited: a qualitative analysis of the effects on caregivers of children of incarcerated parents. Criminology 50:913–59 [Google Scholar]
  134. Turney K. 2014a. The consequences of paternal incarceration for maternal neglect and harsh parenting. Soc. Forces 92:1607–36 [Google Scholar]
  135. Turney K. 2014b. The intergenerational consequences of mass incarceration: implications for children's co-residence and contact with grandparents. Soc. Forces 93:299–327 [Google Scholar]
  136. Turney K, Haskins AR. 2014. Falling behind? Children's early grade retention after paternal incarceration. Sociol. Educ. 87:241–58 [Google Scholar]
  137. Turney K, Schnittker J, Wildeman C. 2012. Those they leave behind: paternal incarceration and maternal instrumental support. J. Marriage Fam. 74:1149–65 [Google Scholar]
  138. Turney K, Wildeman C. 2013. Redefining relationships: explaining the countervailing consequences of paternal incarceration for parenting. Am. Sociol. Rev. 78:949–79 [Google Scholar]
  139. Turney K, Wildeman C. 2014. Detrimental for some? The heterogeneous effects of maternal incarceration on child wellbeing Work. Pap., Dep. Sociol., Princeton Univ. http://crcw.princeton.edu/workingpapers/WP14-02-FF.pdf
  140. Turney K, Wildeman C. 2015. Detrimental for some? Heterogeneous effects of maternal incarceration on child wellbeing. Criminol. Public Policy 14:125–56 [Google Scholar]
  141. Turney K, Wildeman C, Schnittker J. 2013. As fathers and felons: explaining the effects of current and recent incarceration on major depression. J. Health Soc. Behav. 53:465–81 [Google Scholar]
  142. Tuzzolo E, Hewitt D. 2006/2007. Rebuilding inequity: the re-emergence of the school-to-prison pipeline in New Orleans. High School J. 90:59–68 [Google Scholar]
  143. Umberson D. 2003. Death of a Parent: Transition to a New Adult Identity Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press
  144. Umberson D, Chen MD. 1994. Effects of a parent's death on adult children: relationship salience and reaction to loss. Am. Sociol. Rev. 59:152–68 [Google Scholar]
  145. Wakefield S, Uggen C. 2010. Incarceration and stratification. Annu. Rev. Sociol. 36:387–406 [Google Scholar]
  146. Wakefield S, Wildeman C. 2011. Mass imprisonment and racial disparities in childhood behavioral problems. Criminol. Public Policy 10:793–817 [Google Scholar]
  147. Wakefield S, Wildeman C. 2014. Children of the Prison Boom: Mass Incarceration and the Future of American Inequality New York: Oxford Univ. Press
  148. West HC, Sabol WJ, Greenman SJ. 2010. Prisoners in 2009 Bur. Justice Stat., Washington, DC. http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/p09.pdf
  149. Western B. 2006. Punishment and Inequality in America New York: Russell Sage Found.
  150. Western B, Pettit B. 2010. Incarceration and social inequality. Daedalus 139:8–19 [Google Scholar]
  151. Wickrama KAS, Conger R, Wallace L, Elder G. 1999. The intergenerational transmission of health risk behaviors: adolescent lifestyles and gender moderating effects. J. Health Soc. Behav. 40:258–72 [Google Scholar]
  152. Wightman P, Danziger SH. 2014. Multi-generational income disadvantage and the educational attainment of young adults. Res. Soc. Stratif. Mobil. 35:53–69 [Google Scholar]
  153. Wildeman C. 2009. Parental incarceration, the prison boom, and the concentration of childhood disadvantage. Demography 46:265–80 [Google Scholar]
  154. Wildeman C. 2010. Parental incarceration and children's physically aggressive behaviors: evidence from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study. Soc. Forces 89:285–310 [Google Scholar]
  155. Wildeman C. 2012. Imprisonment and infant mortality. Soc. Probl. 59:228–57 [Google Scholar]
  156. Wildeman C. 2014. Parental incarceration, child homelessness, and the invisible consequences of mass imprisonment. Ann. Am. Acad. Polit. Soc. Sci. 651:74–96 [Google Scholar]
  157. Wildeman C, Andersen SH, Lee H, Karlson KB. 2014. Parental incarceration and child mortality in Denmark. Am. J. Public Health 104:428–33 [Google Scholar]
  158. Wildeman C, Muller C. 2012. Mass imprisonment and inequality in health and family life. Annu. Rev. Law Soc. Sci. 8:11–30 [Google Scholar]
  159. Wildeman C, Schnittker J, Turney K. 2012. Despair by association? The mental health of mothers with children by recently incarcerated fathers. Am. Sociol. Rev. 77:216–43 [Google Scholar]
  160. Wildeman C, Turney K. 2014. Positive, negative, or null? The effects of maternal incarceration on children's behavior problems. Demography 51:1041–68 [Google Scholar]
  161. Wu P, Kandel D. 1995. The roles of mothers and fathers in intergenerational behavioral transmission: the case of smoking and delinquency. Drugs, Crime and other Deviant Adaptations: Longitudinal Studies HB Kaplan 49–81 New York: Plenum [Google Scholar]
/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-soc-073014-112437
Loading
/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-soc-073014-112437
Loading

Data & Media loading...

  • Article Type: Review Article
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error