University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
University of California, Irvine, USA.
Soc Sci Res. 2020 Nov;92:102485. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2020.102485. Epub 2020 Oct 17.
Vast surveillance, especially of those with criminal justice contact, is a key feature of contemporary societies. As a consequence of this surveillance, formerly incarcerated individuals both avoid and are excluded from institutions, and this dampened institutional engagement may extend to offspring of the incarcerated. Using the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, we examine the relationship between parental incarceration and young adult institutional engagement in different settings, including financial institutions, medical institutions, school and work, volunteer organizations, and religious institutions. We find parental incarceration is associated with diminished institutional engagement in young adulthood. This association is partially explained by reduced parental institutional engagement during adolescence in addition to young adult's impaired health, lack of trust in government, and criminal justice contact. Our findings highlight a subtle and pervasive way that parental incarceration influences the transition to adulthood.
广泛的监控,尤其是对那些有刑事司法接触的人的监控,是当代社会的一个主要特征。由于这种监控,以前被监禁的人既回避又被排除在机构之外,这种机构参与的减少可能会扩展到被监禁者的后代身上。利用全国青少年到成人健康纵向研究,我们研究了父母监禁与年轻人在不同环境中的机构参与之间的关系,包括金融机构、医疗机构、学校和工作、志愿组织和宗教组织。我们发现,父母监禁与年轻人在成年后的机构参与度降低有关。这种关联部分可以通过青少年时期父母机构参与度的降低以及年轻人健康状况不佳、对政府缺乏信任和刑事司法接触来解释。我们的研究结果突出了父母监禁以一种微妙而普遍的方式影响成年过渡期的方式。