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First published online March 12, 2019

Low-Income Black Mothers Parenting Adolescents in the Mass Incarceration Era: The Long Reach of Criminalization

Abstract

Punitive and disciplinary forms of governance disproportionately target low-income Black Americans for surveillance and punishment, and research finds far-reaching consequences of such criminalization. Drawing on in-depth interviews with 46 low-income Black mothers of adolescents in urban neighborhoods, this article advances understanding of the long reach of criminalization by examining the intersection of two related areas of inquiry: the criminalization of Black youth and the institutional scrutiny and punitive treatment of Black mothers. Findings demonstrate that poor Black mothers calibrate their parenting strategies not only to fears that their children will be criminalized by mainstream institutions and the police, but also to concerns that they themselves will be criminalized as bad mothers who could lose their parenting rights. We develop the concept of “family criminalization” to explain the intertwining of Black mothers’ and children’s vulnerability to institutional surveillance and punishment. We argue that to fully grasp the causes and consequences of mass incarceration and its disproportionate impact on Black youth and adults, sociologists must be attuned to family dynamics and linkages as important to how criminalization unfolds in the lives of Black Americans.

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Biographies

Sinikka Elliott is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at The University of British Columbia. Her research broadly focuses on family dynamics, intersecting inequalities, and social policy.
Megan Reid has a PhD in sociology from the University of Texas at Austin and has served as a National Poverty Fellow at the University of Wisconsin’s Institute for Research on Poverty and a Project Director at the National Development and Research Institutes in New York City. Her scholarship primarily examines families, social inequality, and social policy.

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Article first published online: March 12, 2019
Issue published: April 2019

Keywords

  1. criminalization
  2. mothering
  3. racism
  4. adolescence
  5. mass incarceration

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Sinikka Elliott
University of British Columbia
Megan Reid
University of Wisconsin-Madison

Notes

Sinikka Elliott, University of British Columbia, 6303 NW Marine Drive, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z1 Email: [email protected]

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