|
Product Description
Winner of the 2014 Outstanding Book Award presented by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences
Over 2% of U.S.children under the age of 18—more than 1,700,000 children—have a parent in prison. These children experience very real disadvantages when compared to their peers: they tend to experience lower levels of educational success, social exclusion, and even a higher likelihood of their own future incarceration. Meanwhile, their new caregivers have to adjust to their new responsibilities as their lives change overnight, and the incarcerated parents are cut off from their children’s development.
Parental Incarceration and the Family brings a family perspective to our understanding of what it means to have so many of our nation’s parents in prison. Drawing from the field’s most recent research and the author’s own fieldwork, Joyce Arditti offers an in-depth look at how incarceration affects entire families: offender parents, children, and care-givers. Through the use of exemplars, anecdotes, and reflections, Joyce Arditti puts a human face on the mass of humanity behind bars, as well as those family members who are affected by a parent’s imprisonment. In focusing on offenders as parents, a radically different social policy agenda emerges—one that calls for real reform and that responds to the collective vulnerabilities of the incarcerated and their kin.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Parental Incarceration
- Until We Reckon: Violence, Mass Incarceration, and a Road to Repair
- All Alone in the World: Children of the Incarcerated
- Action Research: Improving Schools and Empowering Educators
- Effects of Parental Incarceration on Children: Cross-National Comparative Studies (Psychology, Crime, and Justice)
- What Will Happen to Me: Every Night, Approximately Three Million Children Go To Bed With A Parent In Pri
- Your Early Childhood Practicum and Student Teaching Experience: Guidelines for Success (3rd Edition)
- Imprisoning Communities: How Mass Incarceration Makes Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Worse (Studies in Crime and Public Policy)
- Doing Time Together: Love and Family in the Shadow of the Prison
- Without You - Children and Young People Growing Up with Loss and its Effects
*If this is not the "Parental Incarceration and the Family: Psychological and Social Effects of Imprisonment on Children," product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 16, 2024 12:49 +08.