2021
DOI: 10.1037/law0000274
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Parental incarceration and the mental health of youth in the justice system: The moderating role of neighborhood disorder.

Abstract: Neighborhood-level characteristics may inform youths' experience of parental incarceration; however, their precise role has not yet been established. Some empirical evidence indicates that neighborhood disorder compounds the psychological distress of parental incarceration because youth living in disorderly neighborhoods are more likely to be affected by other related stressors. Other theorists suggest that neighborhood disorder mitigates the psychological distress of parental incarceration because the residen… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The type and quality of parental relationships have been identified as important contributing factors toward those risks (Breslau et al, 2007;Farrington, 2010;Turney, 2018). Likewise, high levels of internalizing behaviors and other mental health issues have been associated with many negative outcomes, such as antisocial behaviors, substance abuse, suicidality, and depression (Kitzmiller, Cavanagh, Frick, Steinberg, & Cauffman, 2020;Murray et al, 2012;Pottie, Dahal, Georgiades, Premji, & Hassan, 2015). Murray and Farrington (2008) analyzed internalizing problems among children of incarcerated parents in a large-scale and longitudinal study in which they followed participants from adolescence to mid-adulthood.…”
Section: Mental Health and Substance Abusementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The type and quality of parental relationships have been identified as important contributing factors toward those risks (Breslau et al, 2007;Farrington, 2010;Turney, 2018). Likewise, high levels of internalizing behaviors and other mental health issues have been associated with many negative outcomes, such as antisocial behaviors, substance abuse, suicidality, and depression (Kitzmiller, Cavanagh, Frick, Steinberg, & Cauffman, 2020;Murray et al, 2012;Pottie, Dahal, Georgiades, Premji, & Hassan, 2015). Murray and Farrington (2008) analyzed internalizing problems among children of incarcerated parents in a large-scale and longitudinal study in which they followed participants from adolescence to mid-adulthood.…”
Section: Mental Health and Substance Abusementioning
confidence: 99%