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Mothers in Trouble: Coping With Actual or Pending Separation From Children Due to Incarceration

NCJ Number
232823
Journal
The Prison Journal Volume: 90 Issue: 4 Dated: December 2010 Pages: 447-474
Author(s)
Katarzyna Celinska; Jane A. Siegel
Date Published
December 2010
Length
28 pages
Annotation
This study examined coping strategies that female offenders employed to deal with potential or actual separation from their children.
Abstract
Although female offenders are the fastest growing population in prison today, relatively few studies focus on their unique experiences as mothers. In this study, the authors utilize 74 semistructured interviews with mothers before trial and during incarceration to document coping strategies employed to deal with potential or actual separation from their children. From the study data, seven strategies emerge: being a good mother, mothering from prison, role redefinition, disassociation from prisoner identity, self-transformation, planning and preparation, and self-blame. The findings show that mothers used multiple strategies and tended to employ emotion-focused and adaptive coping techniques. The policy implications are discussed. (Published Abstract) Tables, notes, and references