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The lived experience of mothering during incarceration. PDF

168 Pages·2017·7.99 MB·English
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University of Louisville ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository Electronic Theses and Dissertations 5-2011 The lived experience of mothering during incarceration. Barbara M. Jackson University of Louisville Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd Recommended Citation Jackson, Barbara M., "The lived experience of mothering during incarceration." (2011). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 667. https://doi.org/10.18297/etd/667 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has retained all other copyrights. For more information, please contact THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERING DURING INCARCERAn ON By Barbara M. Jackson B.S.N, Indiana University- Southeast, 2005 A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty ofthe School of Nursing of the University of Louisville In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements F or the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Nursing University of Louisville Louisville, Kentucky May 2011 Copyright 2011 by Barbara M. Jackson All rights reserved THE LIVED EXPERIENCE OF MOTHERING DURING INCARCERATION By Barbara M. Jackson B.S.N., Indiana University-Southeast A Dissertation Approved on April 15,2011 By the fullowing Dissertation Committee: Dr. Vicki Hines-M~ Dissertation Cil'air ) Dr. Deborah Armstrong ,- , ~ggy EI-Mallakh Iii. J. Price Foster Dr. Muriel Harris 11 DEDICATION This dissertation is dedicated to my husband, John, for giving me encouragement and love when the road became rough and for always being on my side, regardless. You are my champion and your support has let me succeed. Thank you for holding things together for these last few years and for giving me the freedom to pursue my goal. To my daughters, Amanda and Cynthia, thank you for giving me a reason to forge ahead and providing me with endless hours of laughter and joy. You make me want to be a better person and a better mother and it is because of who you are as young women that I treasure being your mother. To my dad, thank you for always believing that I could and would finish this piece of work, providing me the countdown to the finish and always giving me unwavering love and support. To my mom, thank you for giving me the inspiration to pursue this degree and allowing me to find my own way. I cherish you as my colleague, my mother, and my friend. III ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank my dissertation chairperson, Dr. Vicki Hines-Martin. You have given me much motivation throughout this process with your enthusiasm for my research. Your optimism and confidence in my work allowed me to reach new heights. I would also like to thank Dr. Deby Armstrong for being there from the beginning of this adventure and giving me so much encouragement and support. To Drs. EI-Mallakh, Harris, and Foster: thank you for your invaluable guidance with my research and dissertation. As my dissertation committee, you all have inspired me with your knowledge and freely imparted your wisdom. I would like to thank Janet Conover, the warden at the Kentucky Correctional Institution for Women. I appreciate you opening the doors to your prison and allowing me to work with the mothers who reside at your facility. To Shannon Butrum, Procedures Officer at Kentucky Correctional Institution for Women, thank you so very much for all of the time you committed to organizing and scheduling my visits to KCIW. You have been a gracious and kind collaborator in this project and I appreciate everything you did to assist me in reaching my goal. I would also like to express my gratitude to Dr. Jacque Reid, associate professor at the School of Nursing at Indiana University Southeast for inspiring me to work with the women at KCIW. Providing me with the opportunity to teach prenatal classes to the incarcerated women at KCIW in my undergraduate program started me on this path and I will be forever grateful for your guidance and friendship. As well, I would like to thank IV Dr. Mimi McKay, Dean at the School of Nursing at Indiana University Southeast, who along with Jacque, introduced me to conducting research with incarcerated women by allowing me to assist in collecting data for their study. To my colleagues and friends, thank you for lending me a sympathetic ear, even when my thoughts were jumbled and my perspective was skewed, and for being my cheerleaders and showing me the love that helped guide me along the yellow brick road. v ABSTRACT The Lived Experience of Mothering During Incarceration Barbara M. Jackson April 15. 2011 A phenomenological study of the lived experience of mothering during incarceration was conducted at a women's multi-custody level prison in Kentucky. The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the experience of mothering among incarcerated women to address the gap within this body of literature. Semi-structured interviews, observation, and field notes from 24 participants were collected and analyzed to provide an in-depth understanding of the mothering experience for the participants. Burnard's method was used for analysis of the interview data. Two major themes emerged including: Living in the fire: The lived experience of incarcerated mothers which stemmed from two sub-themes: "Mistakes were made" and the 'Here and Now' of it and "Emerging from the fire: Dreams for the future as mothers" which arose from the sub-themes "Motivated to change" and "Redefining themselves". VI TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ....................................................................... .iv ABSTRACT .......................................................................................... vi LIST OF TABLES ....................................................................................x LIST OF FIGURES ..................................................................................x i INTRODUCTION .................................................................................... 1 Background and Significance ofthe Problem .......................................... .l Purpose of the Study .......................................................................4 Definition of Terms ......................................................................... 5 Importance of the Study ......................................................... , .......... 5 REVIEW OF THE LITERATURE 8 Incarceration Period ........................................................................ 8 Reasons women commit crimes ................................................... 8 Characteristics of incarcerated women ......................................... 11 Substance abuse .......................................................... 11 Education .................................................................. 12 Socioeconomic status ................................................... 13 Consequences for the children ................................................... 14 Parenthood .................................................................................. 16 Mothering ........................................................................... 16 Preparing to Go Home ..................................................................... 19 Vll

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