Disrupting the family stress-proximal process: A scoping review of interventions for children with incarcerated parents

•Critically reviews the literature on interventions to support children with incarcerated parents.•Twenty-four studies reporting on child outcomes in the United States were reviewed.•Most research has focused on promoting parenting skills and improving visits.•Little research on programs supporting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Children and youth services review 2024-06, Vol.161, p.107604, Article 107604
Hauptverfasser: Obus, Elsia A., Pequet, Allison, Cristian, Chloe R., Garfinkle, Alexa, Pinto, Celeste A., Gray, Sarah A.O.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Critically reviews the literature on interventions to support children with incarcerated parents.•Twenty-four studies reporting on child outcomes in the United States were reviewed.•Most research has focused on promoting parenting skills and improving visits.•Little research on programs supporting at-home caregivers.•Services are typically not developmentally specified and do not acknowledge systems of inequality. The United States’ overreliance on incarceration has resulted in the imprisonment of millions of individuals – the majority of whom are parents of minor children. While mass incarceration has failed to effectively reduce crime or increase safety, it has dramatically harmed children and families in the United States. In turn, a wealth of research confirms the negative social, emotional, and psychological impacts of parental incarceration on children and the disproportionate impact on Black and Hispanic families and families living in poverty. As activists work towards dismantling this discriminatory and overly punitive system, it is also necessary to support children and adolescents currently impacted by parental incarceration. Using the Family Stress-Proximal Process (FSPP) model (Arditti, 2016) as a frame, the current paper critically reviews the literature on interventions to support children with incarcerated parents (CIP). The use of the FSPP frame highlights that while most intervention research has focused on promoting parenting skills of incarcerated parents and improving visit experiences, there is a dearth of research on interventions that (1) support at-home caregivers, (2) provide developmentally-targeted and −appropriate services and (3) acknowledge and counteract systems of inequality like structural racism and poverty that cause and exacerbate incarceration-related stress. These findings support a research agenda that prioritizes interventions framed around the intersectional identities of CIP and the intersecting systems that impact their lives.
ISSN:0190-7409
1873-7765
DOI:10.1016/j.childyouth.2024.107604