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We All Do the Time - (New Perspectives in Crime, Deviance, and Law) by Holly Foster-Talbot
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Highlights
- Breaks new ground by showing how women in prison and their families interact through prison boundaries Although women make up only 7% of the overall prison population in the US, their numbers are rising faster than men's, and yet little research has been done on their lives behind bars.
 - About the Author: Holly Foster-Talbot is Professor of Sociology & Chancellor EDGES Fellow at Texas A&M University.
 - 376 Pages
 - Social Science, Sociology
 - Series Name: New Perspectives in Crime, Deviance, and Law
 
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Book Synopsis
Breaks new ground by showing how women in prison and their families interact through prison boundaries
Although women make up only 7% of the overall prison population in the US, their numbers are rising faster than men's, and yet little research has been done on their lives behind bars. In We All Do the Time, Holly Foster-Talbot focuses on how incarcerated women maintain connections to their families and communities while inside prison, and shows how these connections foster positive emotions and feelings of belonging with broader society, in line with re-integrative and rehabilitative ideals. She argues that generating inclusive emotions is a vital part of how imprisoned women and their families cope with and survive imprisonment. Focusing on the experiences of over 300 women in minimum-security federal prison, Foster-Talbot demonstrates that women and their families navigate the prison-family interface through two key mechanisms: women's intersectionally linked lives and their intergenerationally linked lives. Among core findings is that Latina and Black women suffer worse self-rated mental health in prison than white women, despite having more supportive family ties. And if not for these ties, women's racial and ethnic health disparities in prison would be even greater than they already are. This book also shows how the families and communities hit hardest by mass incarceration are also more heavily affected by resultant caring-related absences when women are incarcerated. Ultimately, Foster-Talbot argues that understanding these important connections behind bars are vital for prison programming and policy.Review Quotes
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In We All Do the Time, Holly Foster sheds crucial light on a central paradox of women's imprisonment: though women make up a smaller share of the incarcerated population, their confinement--particularly that of mothers--has far-reaching consequences for families and communities. Drawing on richly detailed case studies, Foster reveals how the often unseen labor of mothering behind bars deepens marginalization and strains the mostly female kin who shoulder caregiving on the outside. Both empirically rigorous and deeply humane, this book
makes a persuasive case for policies that reduce women's social exclusion, confront racial and ethnic mental health disparities, and strengthen support for all women caring for children--inside and beyond prison walls.
About the Author
Holly Foster-Talbot is Professor of Sociology & Chancellor EDGES Fellow at Texas A&M University. She is a Research Affiliated Scholar at the American Bar Foundation.