Morenoff Jeffrey D, Harding David J
University of Michigan.
University of California, Berkeley.
Annu Rev Sociol. 2014 Jul;40:411-429. doi: 10.1146/annurev-soc-071811-145511.
Since the mid-1970s the United States has experienced an enormous rise in incarceration and accompanying increases in returning prisoners and in post-release community correctional supervision. Poor urban communities are disproportionately impacted by these phenomena. This review focuses on two complementary questions regarding incarceration, prisoner reentry, and communities:(1) whether and how mass incarceration has affected the social and economic structure of American communities, and (2) how residential neighborhoods affect the social and economic reintegration of returning prisoners. These two questions can be seen as part of a dynamic process involving a pernicious "feedback" loop, in which mass incarceration undermines the structure and social organization of some communities, thus creating more criminogenic environments for returning prisoners and further diminishing their prospects for successful reentry and reintegration.
自20世纪70年代中期以来,美国的监禁率大幅上升,随之而来的是出狱囚犯数量增加以及释放后社区矫正监管增多。贫困的城市社区受到这些现象的影响尤为严重。本综述聚焦于两个关于监禁、囚犯重新融入社会以及社区的互补性问题:(1)大规模监禁是否以及如何影响了美国社区的社会和经济结构;(2)居民区如何影响出狱囚犯的社会和经济重新融入。这两个问题可被视为一个动态过程的一部分,该过程涉及一个有害的“反馈”循环,即大规模监禁破坏了一些社区的结构和社会组织,从而为出狱囚犯创造了更多犯罪环境,并进一步降低了他们成功重新融入社会的可能性。