TY - JOUR
T1 - Interrupting Intergenerational Offending in the Context of America’s Social Disaster of Mass Imprisonment
AU - Roettger, Michael E.
AU - Dennison, Susan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 SAGE Publications.
PY - 2018/10/1
Y1 - 2018/10/1
N2 - Paralleling the growth of the U.S. criminal justice system in recent decades, American families have increasingly experienced a social disaster of parents, and subsequently their children, undergoing imprisonment. Adopting a life course perspective to examine the likely drivers of the intergenerational transmission of offending and incarceration, we contextualize the development of antisocial behavior in an era of mass imprisonment. In doing so, we draw from the literature on the sociology of disasters to examine how traumas related to intergenerational incarceration may be both understood and ameliorated through appropriate policies and interventions. We argue that it is possible to better frame how risk factors for antisocial behavior, such as prenatal maternal stress, exposure to trauma, and deviant peer groups, may be integrated with factors that promote resilience and recovery. This includes improving safety, self-efficacy, and connectedness to prevent intergenerational offending and incarceration and facilitate desistance. By framing mass incarceration as a social disaster, a multifaceted, comprehensive approach takes on new urgency so as to reduce the prevalence of intergenerational offending and incarceration among millions of families in the United States.
AB - Paralleling the growth of the U.S. criminal justice system in recent decades, American families have increasingly experienced a social disaster of parents, and subsequently their children, undergoing imprisonment. Adopting a life course perspective to examine the likely drivers of the intergenerational transmission of offending and incarceration, we contextualize the development of antisocial behavior in an era of mass imprisonment. In doing so, we draw from the literature on the sociology of disasters to examine how traumas related to intergenerational incarceration may be both understood and ameliorated through appropriate policies and interventions. We argue that it is possible to better frame how risk factors for antisocial behavior, such as prenatal maternal stress, exposure to trauma, and deviant peer groups, may be integrated with factors that promote resilience and recovery. This includes improving safety, self-efficacy, and connectedness to prevent intergenerational offending and incarceration and facilitate desistance. By framing mass incarceration as a social disaster, a multifaceted, comprehensive approach takes on new urgency so as to reduce the prevalence of intergenerational offending and incarceration among millions of families in the United States.
KW - adverse childhood experiences
KW - antisocial behavior in the life course
KW - development
KW - intergenerational delinquency
KW - mass imprisonment
KW - trauma
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85053713926&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0002764218796995
DO - 10.1177/0002764218796995
M3 - Article
SN - 0002-7642
VL - 62
SP - 1545
EP - 1561
JO - American Behavioral Scientist
JF - American Behavioral Scientist
IS - 11
ER -