Litcius/Paper detail

“I Don’t let These Felonies Hold me Back!”: How Street-Identified Black Men and Women Use Resilience to Radically Reframe Reentry

Yasser Arafat Payne, Tara M. Brown

2021Race and Justice11 citationsDOI

Abstract

This street participatory action research project trained 15 local residents to document a community sample of street-identified Black men and women’s (ages 18–35 years) experiences with reentry in two low-income Black neighborhoods. The following multi-method data were collected: (a) 520 surveys; (b) 24 individual interviews; (c) four dual interviews; and (d) three group interviews. Descriptive and univariate analysis of variance analysis revealed most participants as a function of gender and age-groups held positive attitudes toward reentry, overall; positive attitudes toward returning citizens; negative attitudes toward reentry programs; and negative attitudes toward the reentry process. Qualitative analysis suggested negative experiences with reentry were the result of a racialized structural violence complex; and strategies employed to navigate reentry included legal and illegal approaches. Also, short and long-term goals with reentry were generally achieved through enduring major bouts of unemployment, economic poverty, and low-wage work.

Topics & Concepts

ReentryPrisonCriminologyCognitive reframingSociologyDescriptive statisticsTruancyPsychologyGender studiesSocial psychologyMathematicsStatisticsNeuroscienceHomelessness and Social IssuesCriminal Justice and Corrections AnalysisUrban, Neighborhood, and Segregation Studies