TY - JOUR PY - 2023// TI - "Nothing but a rope to hang yourself:" the toll of mass supervision on mental well-being JO - SSM - mental health A1 - LeMasters, Katherine A1 - Camp, Hannah A1 - Benson, Angela A1 - Corsi, Christopher A1 - Cullins, Zaire A1 - Brinkley-Rubinstein, Lauren SP - e100269 EP - e100269 VL - 4 IS - N2 - While incarceration has proven detrimental to mental well-being, it remains unknown if community supervision is better for mental well-being than incarceration. Our objective was to explore the individual- and community-level relationships between community supervision and mental well-being and to examine inequities by race. We conducted 20 in-depth interviews with individuals on community supervision (e.g., probation, parole) in North Carolina and conducted thematic analysis separately by race. For many, criminal legal involvement began at a young age, often due to substance use for White individuals or over-policing for Black participants. The themes were: (1) "It's a Thursday. Move on.": surviving over the life course in the context of the criminal legal system; (2) "Merry go round of death": the criminal legal system as a trap; (3) "I love you, but I have to love you from over here": social support as a double-edged sword while on community supervision; and (4) " [Probation] ain't nothing but a rope to hang yourself": mental health issues created and exacerbated by criminal legal involvement. Individuals' experiences on community supervision were often dehumanizing and difficult, preventing them from achieving well-being. This system must be redesigned to meet individual and community needs.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 2666-5603 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmmh.2023.100269 ID - ref1 ER -