Cycles of Debt and Punishment: A Symposium on Prisons of Debt: The Afterlives of Incarcerated Fathers

Jason M. Williams, Lynne Haney, Maretta McDonald, Michael B. Mitchell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In the contemporary United States, millions of fathers cycle through the criminal justice and child support systems—cycles that create new forms of debt and disadvantage. This symposium discusses those cycles and their effects on fathers and their families. Through comments on Lynne Haney's book, Prisons of Debt: The Afterlives of Incarcerated Fathers, the authors analyze the criminalization of child support and the ways it complicates reentry after prison. They engage Haney's arguments about the causes and consequences of prisons of debt and her empirical material on men's struggles as indebted fathers—or, as Michael Mitchell put it, the book's insistence on “getting proximate to human suffering.”

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)567-585
Number of pages19
JournalPrison Journal
Volume103
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2023

Keywords

  • child support debt
  • class
  • gender
  • incarcerated fathers
  • race
  • reentry

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