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Children of Prisoners

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Title: Children of Prisoners


1
Children of Prisoners
2
  • Mission
  • To stop the intergenerational cycle of crime and
    incarceration

3
  • While many programs reach out to prisoners, very
    few address the crucial needs of their children.

4
Children of Prisoners
  • Children of prisoners face overwhelming
    challenges
  • The absence of one or both parents
  • Dire poverty
  • Social stigmas
  • Hopelessness
  • Lack of direction
  • Unstable living conditions
  • Confusion and mistrust

5
Additional challenges
  • High crime environments
  • Violence
  • Parental substance abuse
  • Neglect
  • Multiple caregivers
  • Uncertainty of the future

6
Children of Prisoners
  • Children of prisoners are at a higher risk for a
    wide variety of emotional and behavioral problems
    including depression, anxiety, poor academics
    performance, drug and alcohol abuse and juvenile
    delinquency.
  • P/PV Ventures in Brief 2004

7
Children of Prisoners
  • Adding the element of incarceration of one or
    both parents to a childs life is more often than
    not a final and overwhelming factor in tipping
    the scale toward juvenile delinquency and
    life-long adult criminality.
  • Big Brothers Big Sisters,
    2008

8
Children of Prisoners
9
  • One in every one hundred adults in America is
    incarcerated. (1 in 100)
  • Pew Charitable Trust, 2008 report

10
1 of every 100 adults in America is behind bars
11
Defining the problem
  • Each prisoner has an average of 2.2 children
  • Department of Justice
  • 58 of the children of prisoners are under 10
    years of age.

12
Defining the Problem
  • Seven (7) out of ten (10), of the children of
    prisoners will follow their parents to a cell of
    their own. (7 out of 10!)
  • 70 of the children of prisoners will go to
    prison themselves without one-to-one
    intervention.
  • U. S. Senate Report, 2000

13
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14
Defining the problem
  • Compare that to 14 out of 100 from the general
    population.
  • OR 70 versus 14.
  • OR of the children in todays society, children
    of prisoners are FIVE times more likely to commit
    a crime and end up in prison during their
    lifetime.

15
The fact is that
  • Having a parent behind bars is the single largest
    factor in the making of juvenile delinquents and
    adult criminals.
  • Incarceration and Child Welfare, Rutgers
    University, 2006

16
In fact.
  • Of all juveniles currently in correctional
    institutions, over 50 have at least one parent
    who is or has been in prison.

17
To add insult to injury.
  • Often inmates meet their sons and grandsons for
    the first time behind prison walls.

18
Prison is no place for a family reunion.
19
What defines these children?
  • Children of prisoners are invisible. They live
    midst a conspiracy of silence which creates for
    them a world of isolation, loneliness,
    disconnectedness, embarrassment, stigma, fear,
    sadness, and anger.
  • Family and Corrections Network, 2005

20
Cycle of illiteracy
  • Children of prisoners inherit a cycle of
    illiteracy
  • 75 of prisoners have not graduated from high
    school
  • The average level of educational attainment of
    prisoners is 8th grade.

21
Functional illiteracy
  • 33 of inmates are functionally illiterate
    (educational attainment below sixth grade)

22
Widespread and endemic
  • 7.3 million children in America have one or both
    parents under some form of state or federal
    supervision.
  • One (1) in five (5) or 20 of the children in
    America under age 18 has a parent under state or
    federal supervision.
  • Pew Charitable Trust, 2007

23
Widespread and endemic
  • Add to that statistic the children of prisoners
    housed in city and county jails and that figure
    rises to near 10 million children in the U.S.

24
Solutions are critical
  • The intergenerational cycle of crime and
    incarceration is endemic to the criminal justice
    system in America
  • We must break the chain that destines children to
    prison even before they are born.

25
  • Most of us will never know the unique form
    of grief and shame that come from having a parent
    who is alive but unreachable.

26
  • But ALL of us will experience dramatic fallout
    from this societal pandemic.
  • The costs to society are staggering.

27
The mission
  • The intergenerational cycle of crime and
    incarceration in America is feeding the system at
    such an alarming rate it can no longer be
    ignored. We must take ownership of the problem,
    wrap our minds and wills around it and move
    forward with solutions to literally save the next
    generation.

28
Summary
  • We must break the cycle of crime and
    incarceration that plagues the children of
    prisoners so that these children can live a life
    of hope and opportunity.
  • - Governor Rick Perry, 2006

29
Summary
  • And so that we as a society can live safe and
    productive lives, full of hope and opportunity.
    So that our children and grandchildren will
    continue to move about free of fear and
    intimidation.
  • We must be willing to own the problem and seek
    solutions.

30
Mentoring works
  • Big Brothers Big Sisters proved that via PPV in
    the late 90s.
  • Does mentoring work as effectively with children
    of prisoners?
  • Intuition says yes, but we need research to
    prove it.

31
Owning a cultural crisis does not mean simply
guessing at solutions.
  • GUESSING is not the answer.
  • We must KNOW what does and does not work in order
    to BREAK THE CHAIN.

32
EVALUATION is the key to discovering what works
  • We must have the answers in order to apply the
    solutions.
  • We must have the answers in order to receive the
    funding to apply the solutions.
  • We must have the answers in order to recruit the
    volunteers to apply the solutions.

33
The key
  • This endemic societal problem is not about hit
    and miss, band-aid type, quick fixes.
  • This problem requires KNOWING that a solution
    exists and taking that solution to scale.
  • EVALUATION is the key. We can not successfully
    apply what we do not know.

34
The skys the limit
  • Research evaluation provides opportunity to take
    solutions to scale.
  • Taking solutions to scale means broad cultural
    impact.
  • Broad cultural impact becomes a tipping point
    for deep seated societal change.

35
Its possible. Its easyAnd its fun.
  • You rarely start with money.
  • You start with the reality that without
    evaluation you are spinning your wheels and
    defrauding your funders and volunteers.
  • You start with the deep seated realization that
    you MUST.

36
  • The rest takes care of itself as the pieces
    come together to provide you with the most
    valuable tools known to the human race.
  • wisdom and knowledge.
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