Maybe because violent crime gets people’s attention, or maybe because we all like to look at problems from one dimension, I’ve noticed that analysis about people in prison has very little if anything to say about the family life of a criminal. Sure many of these guys and gals are thugs. Most don’t return home to streets shaded by old growth oaks and lined by tidy homes. But some do. And some have relationships outside of crime; and all have parents, possibly brothers and sisters and children.
The most galvanizing activity in the life of a criminal maybe their husstle. The monetary and materialist attraction to crime certainly has a strong allure. Undoubtedly for some that is all they have in life along with their network of work associates. But for most people family matters. It is a lifelong bond that can’t be shaken easily. And even if there is no connection to parents, these (mostly) men have women in their lives and children in their lives. It would be pretty cynical to think they elude the attraction of family that most of us hold dear.
In order to understand the dynamics of a certain population it is necessary to account for all the interests that draw their attention, especially the ones they are willing to act on. After personal security from harm and some form of sustenance for food, and housing, it must be family. Sometimes this is refered to as community. But that’s down the list from family. Sometimes the criminal try to tell each other they are family. But I don’t buy the omission of lovers and wives from this calculus.
At least for some, and certainly not for all, persuasion by family relations has got to play into the lifestyle choices of those who have found their way to prison. Support from these connections is the most likely way to prevent recidivism. Pulling this subgroup out of the main prison population could very well worth the effort.
