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Shlafer, Rebecca; Hindt, Lauren A.; Saunders, Jennifer B. – ZERO TO THREE, 2020
A growing body of evidence indicates that mass incarceration has devastating consequences for children, families, and communities. Estimates from the National Survey of Children's Health indicate that more than 5 million children have had a parent who lived with them go to jail or prison. Yet, most states do not systematically collect information…
Descriptors: Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions, Parents, Family Relationship
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Ryder, Phyllis Mentzell – Community Literacy Journal, 2016
This essay considers the difficulty of seeing systems of oppression--a challenging first step of writing for social change. I argue that service-learning faculty and public writing scholars have relied on outdated ways of thinking about racism and oppression, treating social issues as isolated instances of discrimination. Instead, by drawing from…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Social Bias, Racial Bias, Social Change
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Tilton, Jennifer – Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 2021
A growing number of service learning classes bring students into jails and prisons, stepping across what Alexander (2010) might call the new Jim Crow color line created by mass incarceration. Many of these courses are part of the innovative Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, which brings inside and outside students together in a shared college…
Descriptors: Race, Service Learning, Correctional Institutions, College Students
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Larson, Doran – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2015
This chapter describes methods for funding community programs in prison in the context of national and international political economy of mass incarceration.
Descriptors: Community Programs, Financial Support, Political Issues, Economic Factors
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Justice, Benjamin – History of Education, 2014
Like laws for formal education, laws for crime and punishment shape the relationship between the citizen and the state. They could, in fact, be equally powerful in building or breaking the civic spirit. In the past three decades, a revolution has occurred in the United States that is as insidious as it is unprecedented: the rise of the American…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Racial Bias, Racial Differences
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Power, Lori G.; Sistare, Heidi – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
This article introduces an innovative model of social work course development, teaching, and implementation. Using the principles of antioppressive education and community-engaged learning, the authors (a former student and faculty member) codeveloped and subsequently taught a course that explored writing, voice, social justice, and the…
Descriptors: Caseworkers, Social Work, College Students, Institutionalized Persons
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DeFina, Robert; Hannon, Lance – Crime & Delinquency, 2013
During the past 30 years, U.S. poverty has remained high despite overall economic growth. At the same time, incarceration rates have risen by more than 300%, a phenomenon that many analysts have referred to as mass incarceration. This article explores whether the mass incarceration of the past few decades impeded progress toward poverty reduction.…
Descriptors: Poverty, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions, Crime
National Council of Teachers of English, 2016
The School-to-Prison Pipeline (STPP) is an injurious yet growing system of institutional inequity that funnels young people from schools to prisons. As part of the crisis of mass incarceration, STPP is a dimension of Jim Crow, redesigned. It is a disturbing national trend wherein children are policed out of public schools and into the juvenile and…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, English Teachers, Advocacy
Kindle, Peter A.; Delavega, Elena – Multicultural Education, 2018
This study explored the degree of change, if any, in student perceptions of race and the American criminal justice system from completing an undergraduate or foundation year graduate social welfare policy class that incorporated Alexander's understanding of the new racial caste system that has evolved as a product of mass incarceration since 1980.…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Social Work, Advantaged, White Students
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Castro, Erin L.; Brawn, Michael – Harvard Educational Review, 2017
In this article, Michael Brawn, an incarcerated student, and Erin L. Castro, a nonincarcerated instructor, engage in a dialogue about the politics of using critical pedagogies in prisons, where teaching and learning processes are severely restricted by the constraints of mass incarceration. Situated within the broader politics of postsecondary…
Descriptors: Correctional Education, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions, Teaching Methods
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Curran, Laura; Sanchez Mayers, Raymond; DiMarcantonio, Laura; Fulghum, Fontaine H. – Journal of Social Work Education, 2020
This article examines U.S.-based MSW programs' admissions practices and policies toward applicants with criminal convictions. Despite national attention to mass incarceration and its impact on college admissions, there is a dearth of empirical investigation in this area. Through a national survey of MSW programs' admissions personnel (n = 146),…
Descriptors: Social Work, Masters Programs, Admission Criteria, School Policy
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Robinson, Marvin; Zalut, Lauren – Journal of Museum Education, 2018
In an effort to humanize the issues surrounding mass incarceration, and to foster empathy in historic site visitors, Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site launched a pilot tour program that hired formerly incarcerated people to give tours of the building. These 15-minute tours allowed visitors to hear personal stories of incarceration alongside…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Historic Sites, Museums, Institutionalized Persons
Christal M. Clark – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Legislators and correctional administrators are tasked with problem-solving current issues of mass incarceration and high criminal recidivism rates. Part of the solution is to implement successful rehabilitative initiatives through reentry programming. While Postsecondary Correctional Education programs are proven to reduce recidivism and assist…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Education, Student Attitudes
Mihalec-Adkins, Brittany P.; Shlafer, Rebecca – Society for Research in Child Development, 2022
The U.S. has seen a more than five-fold increase in the number of children who experience the incarceration of a parent, such that now 7% of all U.S. children have been impacted. Parental incarceration has been linked to an array of consequences for children's development and well-being, spanning most developmental domains and all developmental…
Descriptors: Parents, Institutionalized Persons, Correctional Institutions, Children
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Bacak, Valerio; Kennedy, Edward H. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2019
A rapidly growing number of algorithms are available to researchers who apply statistical or machine learning methods to answer social science research questions. The unique advantages and limitations of each algorithm are relatively well known, but it is not possible to know in advance which algorithm is best suited for the particular research…
Descriptors: Violence, Census Figures, Correctional Institutions, Institutionalized Persons
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