
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Rafael Mangual joins Kay Hymowitz to discuss evidence suggesting that children are often better off when criminal parents are imprisoned—the subject of Mangual's story, "Fathers, Families, and Incarceration," from the Winter 2020 Issue of City Journal.
A common criticism of incarceration in the United States, notes Mangual, is that it harms children by taking parents or siblings out of their homes. But recent studies show that children living with a parent who engages in high levels of antisocial behavior may be worse off than kids with incarcerated parents.
By Manhattan Institute4.7
629629 ratings
Rafael Mangual joins Kay Hymowitz to discuss evidence suggesting that children are often better off when criminal parents are imprisoned—the subject of Mangual's story, "Fathers, Families, and Incarceration," from the Winter 2020 Issue of City Journal.
A common criticism of incarceration in the United States, notes Mangual, is that it harms children by taking parents or siblings out of their homes. But recent studies show that children living with a parent who engages in high levels of antisocial behavior may be worse off than kids with incarcerated parents.

3,314 Listeners

2,279 Listeners

708 Listeners

1,839 Listeners

1,402 Listeners

5,168 Listeners

4,883 Listeners

497 Listeners

6,611 Listeners

2,014 Listeners

2,836 Listeners

799 Listeners

1,230 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

1,089 Listeners