The Distribution of Carceral Harm: County-Level Jail Incarceration and Mortality by Race, Sex, and Age.

IF 3.6 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY Demography Pub Date : 2024-09-11 DOI:10.1215/00703370-11555025
Anneliese N Luck
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Abstract

Jail incarceration remains an overlooked yet crucial component of the U.S. carceral system. Although a growing literature has examined the mortality costs associated with residing in areas with high levels of incarceration, far less is known about how local jails shape this burden at the intersection of race, sex, and age. In this study, I examine the relationship between county-level jail incarceration and age-specific mortality for non-Hispanic Black and White men and women, uniquely leveraging race-specific jail rates to account for the unequal racial distribution of jail exposures. This study finds evidence of positive associations between mortality and jail incarceration: this association peaks in late adulthood (ages 50-64), when increases in jail rates are associated with roughly 3% increases in mortality across all race-sex groups. However, patterns vary at the intersection of race, sex, and age. In particular, I find more marked and consistent penalties among women than among men. Additionally, a distinctly divergent age pattern emerges among Black men, who face insignificant but negative associations at younger ages but steep penalties at older ages-significantly larger among those aged 65 or older relative to their White male and Black female counterparts. Evidence further suggests that the use of race-neutral incarceration measures in prior work may mask the degree of harm associated with carceral contexts, because the jail rate for the total population underestimates the association between jail rates and mortality across nearly all race-age-sex combinations. These findings highlight the need for future ecological research to differentiate between jail and prison incarceration, consider the demographic distribution of incarceration's harms, and incorporate racialized measures of exposure so that we may better capture the magnitude of harm associated with America's carceral state.
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Carceral Harm 的分布:按种族、性别和年龄划分的县级监狱监禁和死亡率。
监狱监禁仍然是美国carceral系统中一个被忽视却又至关重要的组成部分。尽管越来越多的文献研究了居住在高监禁率地区与死亡率相关的成本,但对于地方监狱如何在种族、性别和年龄的交叉点上形成这种负担,人们所知甚少。在本研究中,我考察了县级监狱监禁与非西班牙裔黑人和白人男女特定年龄死亡率之间的关系,利用特定种族的监狱服刑率来解释监狱暴露的不平等种族分布。这项研究发现了死亡率与监狱监禁之间正相关的证据:这种关联在成年晚期(50-64 岁)达到顶峰,此时监狱监禁率的增加与所有种族-性别群体约 3% 的死亡率增加相关。然而,在种族、性别和年龄的交叉点上,模式却有所不同。特别是,我发现女性比男性受到的惩罚更明显、更一致。此外,在黑人男性中出现了明显不同的年龄模式,他们在较年轻时面临不显著的负相关,但在较年长时则面临急剧的惩罚--与白人男性和黑人女性相比,65 岁或以上的黑人男性面临的惩罚明显更大。有证据进一步表明,之前的研究中使用种族中立的监禁措施可能会掩盖与监禁环境相关的危害程度,因为总人口的监禁率低估了几乎所有种族-年龄-性别组合的监禁率与死亡率之间的关联。这些发现突出表明,未来的生态学研究需要区分监狱和监禁,考虑监禁危害的人口分布,并纳入种族化的暴露测量,这样我们才能更好地把握与美国监禁状态相关的危害程度。
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来源期刊
Demography
Demography DEMOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
82
期刊介绍: Since its founding in 1964, the journal Demography has mirrored the vitality, diversity, high intellectual standard and wide impact of the field on which it reports. Demography presents the highest quality original research of scholars in a broad range of disciplines, including anthropology, biology, economics, geography, history, psychology, public health, sociology, and statistics. The journal encompasses a wide variety of methodological approaches to population research. Its geographic focus is global, with articles addressing demographic matters from around the planet. Its temporal scope is broad, as represented by research that explores demographic phenomena spanning the ages from the past to the present, and reaching toward the future. Authors whose work is published in Demography benefit from the wide audience of population scientists their research will reach. Also in 2011 Demography remains the most cited journal among population studies and demographic periodicals. Published bimonthly, Demography is the flagship journal of the Population Association of America, reaching the membership of one of the largest professional demographic associations in the world.
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