Dr. Zimife Umeh Presents August 19th

While men account for 93 percent of the U.S. prison population, women have seen an increase of over 700 percent in incarceration rates since the 1980s. Despite this, most sociological and criminological research examines the incarceration and reentry experiences and consequences of men. Moreover, existing research on system-involved women rarely disentangles the role of race in women’s criminal justice involvement and institutional interactions. Using 40 semi-structured interviews, this research uses an intersectional approach to explore how formerly incarcerated women navigate various institutions during the incarceration and reentry period. This project addresses the following research questions:

  1. How do institutional responses to women’s childhood victimization shape women’s pathways to prison?
  2. How do mothers define and construct their maternal identities while imprisoned?
  3. What strategies do women use to navigate reentering the paid labor market? 

Watch live with a Brown.edu Zoom account.