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Barring progress: The influence of paternal incarceration on families’ neighborhood attainment

  • Christine Leibbrandb(Author)
    ,
  • Erin Carllb(Author)
    ,
  • Angela Brunsa(Author)
    ,
  • Hedwig Leec(Author)
  • aUniversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor
    ,
  • bUniversity of Washington
    ,
  • cWashington University in St. Louis
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Abstract

A growing body of literature has recognized that incarceration has implications beyond the offender, with detrimental effects reverberating onto families. In this study, we use the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (N = 3288) to investigate the relationships between paternal incarceration and the neighborhood outcomes of the children of incarcerated fathers and their mothers. Specifically, we examine whether children whose fathers are currently and/or have recently been incarcerated experience more residential instability, live in more socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods, and/or live in less socially cohesive neighborhoods. We find that paternal incarceration is associated with moving more frequently, greater socioeconomic neighborhood disadvantage, and lower social cohesion for the children of incarcerated fathers and their mothers, though some of these relationships depend on the timing of paternal incarceration. Our findings have important implications for understanding the societal costs of incarceration, the nature of neighborhood attainment and inequality for families facing paternal incarceration, and the processes through which some families are sorted into their neighborhood contexts.