Nearly Half of African-American Women
Have a Family Member in Prison
Peter Kelley, UW Today, June 11, 2015
Have a Family Member in Prison
Peter Kelley, UW Today, June 11, 2015
African-American
adults — particularly women — are much more likely to know or be related to
someone behind bars than whites, according to the first national estimates of
Americans’ ties to prisoners.
The research, led by
Hedwig Lee, University of Washington associate professor of sociology, reveals
the racial inequality wrought by the U.S. prison boom, with potentially
harmful consequences to families and communities left lacking social supports
for raising children and managing households.
In an articlepublished
May 20 in the Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, Lee and
co-authors analyzed data from the 2006 General Social Survey, which involved
about 4,500 respondents. They studied blacks and whites’ self-reported ties to
acquaintances, family members, neighbors or people they trust in state or
federal prison.
The data tell a grim
story:
- 44
percent of black women and 32 percent of black men have a family member in
prison, compared to 12 percent of white women and 6 percent of white men.
- Black
women are far more likely to have an acquaintance (35 percent vs. 15
percent), family member (44 percent vs. 12 percent), neighbor (22 percent
vs. 4 percent), or someone they trust (17 percent vs. 5 percent) in prison
than are white women.
The authors note
that while research has considered the cause of the “prison boom” and its
effect on crime rates and on those imprisoned, the “spillover effects” of that
imprisonment trend have been elusive until now.
Lee said, “Our
results extend previous research on connectedness to show just how pervasive
contact with prisoners is for Americans ― especially black women. We make
visible a large group of women dealing with the consequences of having a family
member in prison. Mass imprisonment has reshaped inequality not only for those
in prison, but also for those intimately connected to them.”
The researchers
write in the paper that it is likely that mass imprisonment has reshaped
inequality, not only for the men “for whom imprisonment has become so common,”
but also for their families, friends, neighbors and confidants “who bear the
stigma of incarceration along with them.”
Co-author Christopher
Wildeman of Cornell
University said the
estimates show deeper racial inequities in connectedness to prisoners than
implied by previous work.
“Because
imprisonment has negative consequences not only for the men and women who cycle
through the system but also for the parents, partners and progeny they leave
behind,” Wildeman said. “Mass imprisonment’s long-term consequences of racial
inequity in the United
States might be even greater than any of us
working in this area had originally suspected.”
In the past four
decades, the U.S.
incarceration rate has soared to the highest in the world. According to recent
estimates, the U.S.
imprisonment rate is 716 per 100,000 individuals, outpacing repressive nations
such as Russia
and well beyond other developed countries. Currently, one in every 15 adult
black men is behind bars, compared to one in every 106 adult white men.
Lee said for future
research along these lines, the team would like to examine how connections to
prisons vary not only by race and gender, but also by class.
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