Publication | Closed Access
Cycles of Pain: Risk Factors in the Lives of Incarcerated Mothers and Their Children
168
Citations
27
References
2000
Year
Family MedicinePain TherapySubstance UsePain MedicinePhysical AbuseCriminal LawSocial SciencesViolence Against WomenGender StudiesAfrican American StudiesCorrectional PracticePain ManagementPrison ViolenceHealth SciencesCriminological TheoryPsychiatryChild AbuseFemale CriminalityIncarcerated MothersRisk FactorsCriminal JusticePain ResearchNursingRisk Factors ModelSubstance AbuseSexual AbuseSociologyJuvenile DelinquencyTheir ChildrenTrauma In Child
This study extends the risk factors model of background or social history analysis to the lives of incarcerated mothers. Interviews were conducted with a sample of incarcerated mothers. The presence of a number of criminogenic influences such as poverty, physical abuse, sexual abuse, and witnessing violence in the lives of women incarcerated for primarily nonviolent—largely drug-related—offenses and in the lives of their children were identified. The implications of these findings for understanding female criminality and breaking the so-called cycle of crime are discussed.
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