“Let Me Be Bill-free”: Consumer Debt in the Shadow of Incarceration
Harper A, Bardelli T, Barrenger S. “Let Me Be Bill-free”: Consumer Debt in the Shadow of Incarceration. Sociological Perspectives 2020, 63: 978-1001. DOI: 10.1177/0731121420968124.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPredatory financial practicesCriminal justice systemHouseholds of colorBody of scholarshipExperiences of peopleCarceral institutionsMass incarcerationPrison costsJustice systemEconomic inequalityComplex entanglementsVulnerable peopleQualitative researchFurther debtFinancial practicesSocial relationshipsIncarcerationIdentity theftRecent incarcerationU.S. householdsConsumer debtMental illnessPeopleHouseholdsFinancial stabilityDebt, Incarceration, and Re-entry: a Scoping Review
Harper A, Ginapp C, Bardelli T, Grimshaw A, Justen M, Mohamedali A, Thomas I, Puglisi L. Debt, Incarceration, and Re-entry: a Scoping Review. American Journal Of Criminal Justice 2020, 46: 250-278. PMID: 32837173, PMCID: PMC7417202, DOI: 10.1007/s12103-020-09559-9.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchCriminal justice systemExperience of incarcerationCriminal justice involvementJustice-involved populationsCriminal justice populationsUnited StatesReentry experiencesReentry outcomesJustice systemChild supportEveryday survivalBurden of debtExtensive reformsForm of debtFamily structureJustice involvementJustice populationsIncarcerationDebt burdenFinancial hardshipOriginal researchDebtScoping ReviewPeopleFinancial debt