Over seven percent of all children in the United States--more than 5
million children--have experienced a parental incarceration, and an
estimated 2.7 million children currently have a parent who is
incarcerated. An additional 5 million children under age 18 live with
at least one parent who is unauthorized to be in the United States and
faces deportation. Children and other dependents suffer the collateral
consequences of "preventive justice" measures increasingly used by
liberal democratic countries to combat a broad range of suspected
crime and anti-state activities. But what does the state owe to the
innocent dependents of accused caregivers? In Born Innocent, Michael
J. Sullivan explores the impact of vicarious punishment on children,
with a particular focus on children in socioeconomically disadvantaged
and racialized communities that are disproportionately subject to
family separation based on their identity, allegiances, and
immigration status. Sullivan advocates a turn from retribution to
rehabilitation for convicted offenders, with a view towards helping
them to become more effective caregivers who can continue to support
their dependents during their sentence. Born Innocent goes beyond the
children's rights literature on the collateral consequences of
punishment to consider how "punishment drift" creates problems for
both retributive and utilitarian theories of punishment. He draws on
care ethics theory to widen our understanding of the range of
collateral victims of punishment as well as possible rehabilitative
and restorative measures. Sullivan also considers the limits of this
approach, especially where it pertains to offenders who victimize
their families, and those who resist rehabilitation and persist in
anti-state actions that harm others. Original and compelling, Born
Innocent provides one of the first unified treatments of
state-sponsored family separation and its impact on disadvantaged
citizens and immigrants.
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Protecting the Dependents of Accused Caregivers
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197671245
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter