Abstract

In the United States of America, 2.2 million people are incarcerated in public and private facilities and over 700,000 are released yearly back to their home communities. Almost half are rearrested within a year. These problems have been excluded from mainstream sustainability narratives, despite their serious implications for sustainability. This paper addresses how the criminal justice, prison-industrial complex and foster care systems negatively impact these communities and families. To comprehend the system links, a sustainability lens is used to examine and address interlinking system impacts obstructing achievement of sustainability and the necessary community characteristics for building sustainable communities. Communities characterized by environmental degradation, economic despair and social dysfunction are trapped in unsustainability. Therefore, a system-of-communities framework is proposed which examines the circumstances that bring about prison cycling which devastates family and community cohesion and social networking, also negatively affecting the ability of other communities to become truly sustainable. We contend that a fully integrated social, economic and environmental approach to a major, complex, persistent problem as it relates to poor, marginalized communities faced with mass incarceration and recidivism can begin creating sustainable conditions. Further, we articulate ways sustainability narratives could be changed to engage with core challenges impeding these communities.

Highlights

  • Incarceration is a common occurrence in the United States of America with 2.2 million people incarcerated in public and private facilities [1,2,3] which has resulted in 2.7 million children having a parent in prison [4,5]

  • Inequality is a driver of environmental degradation which adds to the problem of climate change [10,11,12,13]

  • We use a sustainability wide lens systems-based approach to examine poor marginalized communities with high incarceration, reentry and recidivism rates and find that these communities’ ability to build the capacity necessary to become sustainable is tremendously hindered by the major interlinking systems of the U.S criminal justice, foster care and the prison-industrial complex systems

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Summary

Introduction

Incarceration is a common occurrence in the United States of America with 2.2 million people incarcerated in public and private facilities [1,2,3] which has resulted in 2.7 million children having a parent in prison [4,5]. The process of prison cycling causes disorganization and dysfunction in families and poor marginalized communities [15,16] They are forced to heavily interlink with external systems (U.S justice system, prison-industrial complex and the foster care systems) that tear the fabric of their communities and families, decreasing social cohesion, social inclusion and equity. We use a sustainability wide lens systems-based approach to examine poor marginalized communities with high incarceration, reentry and recidivism rates and find that these communities’ ability to build the capacity necessary to become sustainable is tremendously hindered by the major interlinking systems of the U.S criminal justice, foster care and the prison-industrial complex systems. It offers a new way of thinking about transitioning unsustainable communities into sustainable ones, a way to examine impediments to social sustainability and it offers a way to engage new stakeholders in the race toward sustainability

Current Social Sustainability Debate
Theoretical Context
Sustainability and the Social Justice Systems
A System-of-Communities Framework
Children with Incarcerated Parents
Foster Care System
Prison Towns
System Links to Poor and Marginalized Communities
Cash Bail System
Prison-Industrial Complex
Findings
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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