Denise Johnston,
"A Developmental Approach to Work with Children of Prisoners: Mother-Child Reunification"
(page 3 of 5)
The Minnesota Parent-Child Project found that children who experience
high levels of developmental stressors and insults in the face of
inadequate developmental resources and supports will demonstrate the
most negative outcomes. In prisoners' children, these circumstances
lead to school behavior and performance problems, mental health problems
and the childhood prototypes of adult criminal behavior—fighting,
lying and stealing.[7]
Children with these behaviors are more likely to
experience school failure, associate with antisocial peers, engage in
delinquency, and become involved in the juvenile or criminal justice
systems.[8]
Most children of women offenders are at greater disadvantage because
they have two parents entangled in the criminal justice
system.[9] As
a result, these children are more likely to have two absent parents and
both sides of their family involved in drugs and/or crime. Such
circumstances significantly reduce the resources available to support
child development.
When Natalia gave birth while incarcerated, the Child
Protective Services refused to approve the baby's placement with
Natalia's 27-year-old sister because the sister had been convicted of
trespassing at age 18. The baby was placed with Natalia's mother, who
had initially refused to take her.
Their maternal grandfather Reggie regularly brought the
twins to visit with Dominique in ChildSpace. When Reggie failed to
renew his visitor permit in a timely manner, he was prohibited from
coming into the prison. The ChildSpace Coordinator attempted to find
another adult caregiver to bring the babies to visit but none of their
local maternal or paternal relatives could be cleared to enter the
prison because all had been arrested within the previous 10
years.
It's important to note that there is no reliable evidence that
parental incarceration itself creates negative developmental outcomes
among prisoners' children. About 40% of these children have never lived
with their parents who have been incarcerated, and the direct effects of
parental crime, arrest and incarceration on their lives are
minimal.[10]
Large-scale studies suggest that the outcomes seen among children
of criminal offenders are attributable to the caregiving they receive
and childhood experiences their caregiving engenders.[11]
The Conceptual Basis for the Center's Work
At the time the Center was founded, few agencies working with
children of incarcerated parents had identified a theoretical foundation
for their work. It was widely assumed that the children had been in the
primary care of their parents prior to parental
arrest[12] and that the
effects of the arrest/incarceration of their parents led to their
outcomes,[13]
but there was no empirical support for those
propositions. Theories from the fields of criminology and sociology
seemed no better at explaining intergenerational crime and
incarceration.
After her arrest, a social worker at the jail told
Natalia that it would be better for her baby to go to a foster home
after birth. "Your father was a criminal and you learned from him. Now
you've ended up having a baby in jail," the worker said to Natalia.
"Don't you think your baby deserves a chance to learn something else?"
Natalia told the social worker that she had never lived with her father
and had learned almost nothing from him.
Originally housed at and influenced by the approach of Pacific Oaks
College, an upper division and graduate institution in Pasadena, California
specializing in child development and early childhood education, the
Center chose to ground its work in developmental and specifically
attachment theory. Applied to criminal justice populations, these
theories have improved our understanding of the outcomes seen among
prisoners' children, including intergenerational crime, arrest and/or
incarceration. We have applied the following concepts to our work:
- Development occurs through successive adaptations to the
environment.[14]
At each stage of development, developmental outcomes
are the result of children's cumulative history plus the effects of
current challenges and supports.[15]
This means that children's
experiences are highly important and have lasting developmental
significance.
- Among the most critical experiences in development is the primary
attachment relationship between infant and caregiver, usually the
mother. Early attachment is categorized by the way infants organize
their attachment behaviors; these categories are reflected in children's
developmental pathways from birth through adulthood.[16]
- An infant's capacity for attachment at one-year can be predicted
prior to birth from the mother's state of mind with respect to her own
primary attachment relationships in childhood.[17]
Children's later developmental outcomes can be predicted from their primary attachment
experiences, the quality of later care they receive from their
caregivers, the context of that care (i.e. stressors and supports
experienced by the caregivers) and the quality of the children's
relationships with peers.[18]
While emerging issues at each stage of
development offer the possibility that outcomes can be changed, a
child's early relationships and continuing care are most significant in
determining who the child becomes.
- The developmental process is characterized by the interplay of
children's experience and their representations ("working models") of
that experience. Children's representations of their experience guide
their future expectations.[19]
For example, from their earliest
experiences with primary caregivers, children develop "working models"
of how humans function in relation to one another; these models then
guide children's future expectations of themselves and others in
relationships.
- Parents' "state of mind with respect to attachment," or internal
working models, can be changed by healthy, appropriate relationships
with other adults.[20]
In addition, their ability to provide
responsive care for their children can be improved by reducing parent
stressors and providing parent support.[21]
Applying a developmental perspective that included many of these
principles, the Center conducted a series of research projects examining
the lives and experiences of the children of criminal offenders in the
communities where they lived.[22]
These investigations produced
different information than most previous studies on children of
incarcerated parents, finding the major influences in the lives of the
children of criminal offenders to be: 1) an inadequate quality of care,
largely due to the effects of poverty; 2) a lack of emotional and
material supports, due to high levels of family stress; and 3) traumatic
experiences. We did not find parental incarceration to be a critical or
distinguishing feature of these children's lives.
The findings of this research were and continue to be consistent with
both developmental theory and the experience of Center practitioners
with their clients.
Page: 1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5
Next page
|