Mothers in Prison

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A01=Phyllis Jo Baunach
ACLU National Prison Project
Author_Phyllis Jo Baunach
Belle View
Black Mothers
Bond Maintenance
Category=JHB
child development outcomes
Child's Subsequent Development
Child's Welfare
childrearing attitude
Child’s Subsequent Development
Child’s Welfare
correctional sociology
Drug Involvement
Eleventh Grade Education
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
foster care placement
Foster Mothers
Foster Parents
Girl Friend
incarcerated mothers child welfare
incarceration policy analysis
Juvenile Criminal Histories
Large Families
Law Enforcement Assistance Administration Grant
legal custody
Limited Institutional Support
Longer Shifts
Louisville Metropolitan Area
maternal separation effects
Mother's Incarceration
mother-child bonds
Mothers Worked Part Time
Mother’s Incarceration
Natural Mother
Nursery School Program
Prior Felony Convictions
qualitative prison research
racial disparities corrections
Special Visits
Vice Versa
White Mothers
women's prisons
women’s prisons

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138528413
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Several years ago, Terry Moore, a young first offender at the Florida Correctional Institution for Women, gave birth to a baby whose father was a prison guard. Mrs. Moore won the right to have her baby stay with her in prison until she was released a few months later. Although this incarcerated mother was reunited with her child shortly after giving birth, many inmate mothers are not able to be with or see their children on a regular basis during incarceration. Little is known about this significant and emotionally traumatic problem that confronts nearly two-thirds of incarcerated women.

Building upon previous work, this extraordinarily insightful volume offers fresh perspective on issues which surround the separation of inmate mothers and their children, using questionnaire, standardized scales, and individual taped interviews. The author examines issues such as the impact of separation by race; the child's whereabouts at the time of the crime; the child's placement and legal custody during the mother's incarceration; inmate mothers' interest in resuming the parental role after release; child-rearing attitudes of inmate mothers; and the effects of the involvement of drugs on the mothers' relationship with their children.

Through interviews with administrators, staff, and inmates, Dr. Baunach provides a detailed, descriptive analysis of the development and operations of programs to retain mother-child bonds in women's prisons in a variety of states. Dr. Baunach discusses day-long/overnight/weekend visitations, foster care placements, and similar problems of the sort that mothers in prison uniquely must face. The work also has a strong policy content, providing unique and practical recommendations for policies and programs benefiting inmate mothers and children that at the same time can be implemented within the framework of current penological practices.

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