September is National
Recovery Month, a time to promote the societal benefits of prevention,
treatment, and recovery for mental and substance use disorders, celebrate
people in recovery, laud the contributions of treatment and service providers,
and promote the message that recovery in all its forms is possible. Nowhere is
this emphasis on recovery more profound and necessary than for families
involved with the criminal justice system, because of the far-reaching impact
that incarceration has on parents, their children and future generations.
Nonviolent offenders with drug-related charges would be much better served by
drug treatment rather than mandatory minimum sentences, which do little to
rehabilitate individuals or to increase public safety. In fact, incarceration can have the
opposite effect.
In line with this view, last month Attorney General Eric
Holder announced
that the U.S. Justice Department would cease pursing mandatory minimum
sentences for certain low-level, nonviolent drug offenders. Citing racial disparities, prison
overcrowding as well as the related economic and social impacts, Holder questioned
some assumptions about the criminal justice system's approach to the "war
on drugs," saying that excessive incarceration has been an
"ineffective and unsustainable" part of it.
In their article
in the Future of Children, authors Christopher Wildeman and Bruce
Western compiled multiple sources of research to describe the intergenerational
effects of imprisonment on inequality. Research on adult men suggests that
imprisonment diminishes their earnings, disrupts their romantic unions, and
compromises their health. Likewise, the imprisonment of a partner, on average,
compromises the well-being of those who are left behind. Parental incarceration
has been linked to increased physical aggression in boys, and criminality and
delinquency throughout the life course.
Many studies have considered the consequences of parental
incarceration for children’s behavioral problems more broadly. Having a parent
incarcerated causes children of all ages to express a mix of internalizing
behaviors, such as being anxious, depressed, or withdrawn, and/or externalizing
behaviors, such as acting out or having temper tantrums. The internalizing
behaviors tend to occur in older children, but the externalizing behaviors hold
across the life course.
Not only does parental incarceration affect children’s
behavior, but it is associated with other social problems that can lead to
severe marginalization in childhood and adolescence. Children of incarcerated
parents are at elevated risk of homelessness, foster care placement, and infant
mortality. Maternal incarceration may have even more substantial effects on
foster care placement than paternal incarceration does, a risk especially high
for African-American children.
In an effort to keep families together whenever possible and
to further the action taken by Attorney General Holder, policymakers can
support several policies that will decrease children’s exposure to having a
parent incarcerated:
- Limit prison time so that nonviolent drug offenders are not needlessly exposed to the psychological damage of incarceration, are free to work and earn an income, and spend time with their families.
- Provide effective drug treatment for nonviolent drug offenders to support their recovery, enabling them to improve their health and wellness, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach their full potential.
- Identify and address substance use disorders early on. Research shows that for every $1.00 invested in prevention and early treatment programs, $2.00 to $10.00 could be saved in health costs, criminal and juvenile justice costs, educational costs, and lost productivity.
Providing drug treatment is a family strengthening policy
that rehabilitates individuals, promotes the integrity of the family, and furthers
the justice system’s goal of
public safety. For more policies related to reducing incarceration, including promoting
workforce strategies for reintegrating ex-offenders, see Policyforresults.org.
It is also important to consider alternatives to detention for juveniles. Brain
science has shown that juveniles are resilient and are very likely to be successfully
rehabilitated with appropriate interventions. Many juveniles are also parents, and thus strategies to reduce
juvenile detention will prevent the youngest generation from inheriting the
stressors associated with the incarceration of their young parents.