Social workers' perspectives on anti-Black racism and parenting outcomes for incarcerated pregnant women with substance use histories.

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL WORK
Journal of Social Work Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-15 DOI:10.1177/14680173241283393
Noelle G Martinez, Camille T Kramer, Crystal M Hayes, Audry S Motlagh-Harvey, Shira Y Tikofsky, Carolyn B Sufrin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Summary: Black women who use substances face significant barriers to accessing resources and parenting their children, largely as a result of interactions with the criminal legal, child welfare, and healthcare systems. While extensive literature has demonstrated how structural racism and punitive policy approaches underpin the operation and impact of these systems, minimal attention has been paid to how social workers approach child, maternal, and family well-being when interacting with clients who use substances and have been incarcerated. To address this gap, we conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with 19 social workers practicing in jail/prison, community, and hospital settings across the United States.

Findings: Interviews identified the cyclical and intergenerational nature of harms perpetuated through criminal legal, child welfare, and healthcare systems. Participants described structural racism, inadequate resources (i.e., housing), and previous criminal legal and child welfare involvement as compounding barriers to an individual's ability to parent and maintain recovery, particularly among Black families. Participants described the pervasiveness of structural racism but did not perceive themselves as active participants in perpetuating racist and oppressive structures.

Applications: Social workers engage with Black pregnant women who use substances across diverse practice settings and as such have the potential to both contribute to systemic harms and to champion interventions that target the root causes of inequity. Study findings support structural interventions that dismantle punitive systems and re-center the needs of Black communities, thereby supporting Black mothers in their fundamental right to parent their children.

社会工作者对有药物使用史的被监禁孕妇的反黑人种族主义和养育结果的看法。
摘要:使用药物的黑人妇女在获取资源和抚养孩子方面面临重大障碍,这主要是与刑事法律、儿童福利和医疗保健系统相互作用的结果。虽然大量的文献已经证明了结构性种族主义和惩罚性政策方法是如何支撑这些系统的运作和影响的,但很少有人关注社会工作者在与使用药物并被监禁的客户互动时如何处理儿童、母亲和家庭的福祉。为了解决这一差距,我们对美国各地监狱、社区和医院的19名社会工作者进行了半结构化的定性访谈。调查结果:访谈确定了通过刑事法律、儿童福利和医疗保健系统长期存在的危害的周期性和代际性。参与者描述了结构性种族主义、资源不足(即住房)、以前的刑事法律和儿童福利参与,这些都是阻碍个人养育和维持康复能力的综合障碍,特别是在黑人家庭中。与会者描述了结构性种族主义的普遍存在,但并不认为自己是使种族主义和压迫结构永久化的积极参与者。应用:社会工作者与使用药物的黑人孕妇接触,这些孕妇在不同的实践环境中使用药物,因此有可能造成系统性危害,并支持针对不平等根源的干预措施。研究结果支持结构性干预措施,取消惩罚制度,重新关注黑人社区的需求,从而支持黑人母亲养育孩子的基本权利。
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来源期刊
Journal of Social Work
Journal of Social Work SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Social Work is a forum for the publication, dissemination and debate of key ideas and research in social work. The journal aims to advance theoretical understanding, shape policy, and inform practice, and welcomes submissions from all areas of social work.
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