“…Carceral care has a structural component, as Hwang (2019, 561) states, “carceral care is not simply the deterrence, reduction, or interruption of carceral violence; rather, it is a mode of tracing how the penal administration of care multiplies the very scales, technologies, and cultural structures of violence itself.” In addition, researchers argues that the U.S. security state uses the social services system as a mechanism to grow the criminalization of racial ethnic marginalized groups, while seemingly appearing to assuage historical injustices, such as racial profiling and coercive policing (Nguyen 2021; Roberts 2022). The data presented here make a case for expanding our understanding of the coercive nature of the state by underscoring the ways in which it becomes embodied in the form of gendered labor, particularly as this labor is often disproportionately performed by women who have loved ones who are involved in the criminal-legal system, whom Joy James (2020, 1) describes as the “captive maternal”—“Black female, male, trans, or ungendered persons, feminized and socialized into caretaking within the legacy of racism and US democracy.” James argues, “As caretakers who minister to the needs of their communities and families, Captive Maternals expend emotional and physical labor in stabilizing the social and state structures that prey upon them” (Insko et al 2021, e29). In this vein, the state is coercively co-opting the care work of Black women as subsistence to maintain the violence of the carceral state (James 2021; Monterrosa and Hattery 2022).…”