Creasie Finney Hairston,
"Introduction"
(page 2 of 3)
In many ways this issue of The Scholar & Feminist Online
involves the type of knowledge dissemination and scholarship endorsed by the
roundtable participants. It provides a forum for enhancing
understanding of family dynamics and issues involved in criminal justice
processing. The issues of children whose parents are incarcerated are
seldom the focus of scholarly inquiries, public discourse, or social
policies. Yet, the number of these children is huge and steadily
growing. At any given time, millions of children have a parent in
prison or jail; millions more have had a parent incarcerated at some
point during their childhood, and millions grow up while their parents
are in prison.
Although intended as individual punishment, incarceration is a family
matter. Involvement in the criminal justice system affects not only
individuals but also can be devastating for their children and families
and their broader community. Notwithstanding the fact that some
parents were absent or not parenting in the most responsible way at the
time of their arrest, parental incarceration creates disruptions in
children's daily lives. Numerous children must move to other homes when
their parents are sent away, often facing great challenges and risks
throughout the process. National statistics indicate, for example, that
40% of mothers in prison and 15% of fathers were their child or
children's sole caregiver prior to incarceration. Other children,
though able to remain in the same home, may be emotionally or
financially deprived of the care previously provided by the now absent
parent. Even parents who did not live in the same home with their
children often contributed to their care.
Research on parenting during and after incarceration and children's
responses to having an incarcerated parent is not extensive. The
studies that have been conducted usually point to negative consequences
for prisoners' children. Problems noted include emotional difficulties,
disobedience and acting out, and engagement in delinquent behavior.
More so than other children, they also experience problems in school,
including suspensions and grade failure. Research and professional
observations generally indicate that children do better when they are
able to maintain relationships with their incarcerated parents and
participate in extended family networks; their caregivers maintain a
stable and caring home environment; and they are able to talk about what
is happening to them and to their parents in a safe place. They also
fare better when they are viewed as normal children with special
challenges, rather than as potential risks for becoming "just like their
fathers or mothers."[1]
The Scholar & Feminist Online is an appropriate venue for
critically examining, through multiple lenses, the topic of parental
incarceration and children. The issues raised by incarceration and the
justice system's impact on women's caregiver roles are feminist issues,
and a feminist perspective and examination can contribute not only to
new understandings of these issues, but can also result in progressive
action. Rarely acknowledged, incarceration in the United States is very
much a women's issue. Women make up only about 7%
of the prison population, but the recent rate of increase has exceeded
that for men.[2]
In addition, the nature of women's involvement in
crime is more complex and more extensive than it was years ago. The
majority of women arrested and sentenced are parents of dependent
children for whom they had some responsibility prior to incarceration.
Women are often the primary caregivers for the children of imprisoned fathers
as well as mothers. They make up the majority of prison visitors, and
provide the homes to which male and female prisoners return. As
mothers, sisters, aunts, wives, lovers, and friends, they are often male
and female prisoners' and former prisoners' primary sources of emotional
support and concrete help. The rules of engagement that govern prison
life and the return home are forces that shape their daily lives as
women and their families' and communities' well-being.
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