Effects on Future Generation and Children with Incarcerated Parents

1875 Words4 Pages

The United States of America has the highest incarceration rate in the world, imprisoning different people categorizing them from race, age, gender, religious beliefs, etc… (Nicolas 1455) These people behind the bars include parents that are missing out on maintaining relationships and educating their own children. For imprisoned parents, especially for mothers, the greatest punishments and concerns are being separated from their children and worrying as to "what is happening". (Flint 717) But a question arises as to which races or types of citizens of parents do this issue more specifically target, also why is it effecting massive incarceration and future stereotypes in society. My goal in this paper is to examine the impacts of the increasing rate of incarceration on imprisoned parent children's developments (mental health, environment, education, second generation offense, etc...) and how these affect the future generations; finally, the reasoning behind massive incarceration and the hardships faced by formerly imprisoned parents.
Few assumptions and questions guided my examination of this issue. First, I assumed that the gender of the incarcerated parent had to deal with the level of impact. The absence of the mother must be different from the father. Second, I questioned who would be taking care of the children while the parent's time in prison. Third, I assumed that formerly incarcerated parents would have difficulties taking care of the child after release due to their own mental recovery and other hardships, such as housing, food, employment, etc... Finally, what boundaries (physical, legal and economical) play a role on massive incarceration and thus in what ways effecting the children. In this paper, I will explain my re...

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