Empowering Incarcerated Families: Incarceration affects entire families and communities

Resources for Families




We hope that the following resources can be helpful for those with incarcerated loved ones.

The National Resource Center on Children and Families of the Incarcerated

Located at Rutgers University, NRCCFI is the oldest and largest organization in the U.S. focused on children and families of the incarcerated and programs that serve them. They work to disseminate accurate and relevant information; guide the development of family strengthening policy and practice; train, prepare, and inspire those working in the field; and include the families in defining the issues and designing solutions.

See Us, Support Us: New York Initiative for Children of Incarcerated Parents
See Us, Support Us (SUSU) raises awareness about and increases support for children of incarcerated parents.

National Institute of Corrections (NIC): Resources for Children of Incarcerated Parents
The arrest of a parent can be traumatic for many children. These resources aim to help children cope with this loss and to maintain a relationship with their parent throughout their sentence.

Population Reference Bureau
A study conducted by sociologist Dr. Kristin Turney found that U.S. children of incarcerated parents are an extremely vulnerable group, and much more likely to have behavioral problems and physical and mental health conditions than their peers. Dr. Turney is She is also among a group of researchers using the Fragile Families and Wellbeing Study to understand the effects of incarceration on crucial aspects of child development, including parent-child relationships, school difficulties, and homelessness.

The Marshall Project: Families of the Incarcerated
Since 2014, The Marshall Project has been curating some of the best criminal justice reporting from around the web. In these records you will find the most recent and the most authoritative articles on the topics, people and events that are shaping the criminal justice conversation including content relevant to families of the incarcerated.

The Annie E. Casey Foundation: Parental Incarceration
Parental incarceration breaks up families — the building blocks of our communities and nation — and creates an unstable environment for kids that can have lasting effects on their development and well-being. The Annie E. Casey Foundation supports important research that furthers these conversations.

The Sentencing Project: Parents in Prison
This fact sheet provides key facts on parents in prison and policies that impede their ability to care for their children when released from prison.

Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS): Incarcerated Parents and Their Children
This report presents data from the 1997 Surveys of Inmates in State and Federal Correctional Facilities concerning inmates with children under the age of 18, whether or not inmates lived with their children prior to admission, and the children's current care givers.

Prison Policy Initiative - Both Sides of the Bars: How Mass Incarceration Punishes Families
This report shares results from the BJS's 2016 Survey of Prison Inmates, which revealed the ways in which prisons fail entire families — and society more broadly — by separating millions of children from their parents, and by enforcing harmful policies that perpetuate cycles of poverty and disadvantage.

Holt Miller Prisoner and Family Relationship Recidivism Study (1972)
The central finding of this research is that a strong and consistent positive relationship exists between parole success and maintaining strong family ties while in prison.

Boston Public Library: Reentry Resources for Returning Citizens, Their Families, and Loved Ones
This library guide contains information for individuals formally incarcerated or detained in county, state, or federal institutions, and are returning to or living in the state of Massachusetts.

Vera Institute of Justice: More Than 5 Million Children Have had an Incarcerated Parent
This page focuses more specifically on the numbers of incarcerated mothers and impact on their children.

The video below features Shaquille Mualimm-ak, from incarceratednationcampaign.org, who shares about his experience coping with having a parent behind bars. This video also includes an interview with and author and professor Alan Singer to discuss the causes and effects of having a parent incarcerated.





United States Department of Health and Human Services's report entitled "Incarceration and the Family: A Review of Research and Promising Approaches for Serving Fathers and Families" provides an overview of the current research underlying Marriage, and Family Strengthening Grants for Incarcerated Fathers and Their Partners (MFS-IP) and addresses issues concerning incarcerated men, their partner and parenting relationships, and the policies and programs that may assist them in their rehabilitation in prison and after release.

Summary Points

For more information, please browse the report below.


RAND's report entitled "Programs for Incarcerated Parents" illustrates findings from a pilot study that explored the current landscape of prison-based programs for incarcerated parents and investigated the extent to which programs seek to mitigate the effects of policies and practices that disproportionately affect Black and Latinx families.

Key Findings

RecommendationsFor more information, please browse the report below.



 

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