When these men have been pulled away from their families it destroys the family structure, leaving women as a single head of household to raise children. “Incarceration often results in the removal of an important source of family income” (Green, Ensminger, Robertson & Juon, 2006) continues to explain how the family is impacted by an incarcerated family member. Green et al., conducted an interviews comparing mothers with and without adult sons that are incarcerated asking how their sons incarcerations impacted their lives. The results yielded that mothers suffer psychological distress. “Incarceration of a loved one is a stigmatizing …show more content…
The criminal justice system is not fairly distributing crime control with a valid reason but falsely mass incarcerating people of color. My research supports the topic of racial disparities within the criminal justice system as it demonstrates the police, prosecutors and judges have not been upholding the law fairly since the 13th amendment. Clear et al., (2017) suggests these invisible punishments restrict the offender from being able to productively enter back into society thus keeping them as second class citizens. The film demonstrates the loopholes enacted to ensure slavery after the abolishment of slavery. My research continues to demonstrate the different sanctions that correlate with the film to oppress those of color by enacting laws that increase mass incarceration. These laws have consequences not only for the people arrested but as Green, Ensminger, Robertson & Juon (2006) suggests it disrupts the family structure.
Racial Disparity in the criminal justice system continues to be put aside. The vast amount of research shown demonstrates there is an awareness and revisions of the law have been made but then the increase of incarceration continues because the loopholes allow it. Coker (2003) and Keen and Jacobs (2009) both suggest that the media negative influence about African Americans affect the perception to not only white citizens, but white republican lawmakers who create an enact the laws. Clair and Winter (2016) research discussed how judges are aware and biased of racial disparities in their