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Mass incarceration, race inequality, and health: Expanding concepts and assessing impacts on well-being

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  • Blankenship, Kim M.
  • del Rio Gonzalez, Ana Maria
  • Keene, Danya E.
  • Groves, Allison K.
  • Rosenberg, Alana P.

Abstract

We explore race differences in how individuals experience mass incarceration, as well as in mass incarceration's impacts on measures of well-being that are recognized as major social determinants of health. We draw on baseline data from a sample of 302 men and women recently released from prison/jail or placed directly onto probation in New Haven, Connecticut (CT) for drug related offenses and followed at 6-month intervals for two years (2011–2014). We describe race differences in experiences of mass incarceration and in its impacts on well-being; and we conduct mediation analyses to analyze relationships among race, mass incarceration, and well-being. Blacks reported fewer adult convictions than whites, but an average of 2.5 more adult incarcerations. Blacks were more likely to have been incarcerated as a juvenile, spent time in a juvenile facility and in an adult facility as a juvenile, been on parole, and experienced multiple forms of surveillance. Whites were more likely to report being caught by the police doing something illegal but let go. Blacks were more likely to report any impact of incarceration on education, and dropping out of school, leaving a job, leaving their longest job, and becoming estranged from a family member due to incarceration. Whites were more likely to avoid getting needed health or social services for fear of arrest. Overall, Blacks reported a larger number of impacts of criminal justice involvement on well-being than whites. Number of adult incarcerations and of surveillance types, and being incarcerated as a juvenile, each mediated the relationship among race, mass incarceration, and well-being. Though more research is necessary, experiences of mass incarceration appear to vary by race and these differences, in turn, have implications for interventions aimed at addressing the impacts of mass incarceration on health and well-being.

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  • Blankenship, Kim M. & del Rio Gonzalez, Ana Maria & Keene, Danya E. & Groves, Allison K. & Rosenberg, Alana P., 2018. "Mass incarceration, race inequality, and health: Expanding concepts and assessing impacts on well-being," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 215(C), pages 45-52.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:socmed:v:215:y:2018:i:c:p:45-52
    DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.08.042
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    3. Sattler, Kierra M.P. & Herd, Toria & Font, Sarah A., 2023. "Foster care, kinship care, and the transition to adulthood: Do child welfare system processes explain differences in outcomes?," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 153(C).
    4. Testa, Alexander & Jackson, Dylan B. & Vaughn, Michael G. & Bello, Jennifer K., 2020. "Incarceration as a unique social stressor during pregnancy: Implications for maternal and newborn health," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 246(C).
    5. Testa, Alexander & Rennó Santos, Mateus & Weiss, Douglas B., 2020. "Incarceration rates and hospital beds per capita: A cross-national study of 36 countries, 1971–2015," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 263(C).
    6. Rosenberg, Alana & Keene, Danya E. & Schlesinger, Penelope & Groves, Allison K. & Blankenship, Kim M., 2021. "“I don't know what home feels like anymore”: Residential spaces and the absence of ontological security for people returning from incarceration," Social Science & Medicine, Elsevier, vol. 272(C).
    7. Catherine Hu & Jessica Jurgutis & Dan Edwards & Tim O’Shea & Lori Regenstreif & Claire Bodkin & Ellen Amster & Fiona G Kouyoumdjian, 2020. "“When you first walk out the gates…where do [you] go?”: Barriers and opportunities to achieving continuity of health care at the time of release from a provincial jail in Ontario," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 15(4), pages 1-13, April.
    8. Semenza, Daniel C. & Silver, Ian A., 2022. "Stuck in the cycle? Assessing a reciprocal model of incarceration, health, and relative risk over twenty-five years," Journal of Criminal Justice, Elsevier, vol. 82(C).

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