RT Article T1 The family policing industrial complex: The shadow carceral state in sites intended for the support of families JF Theoretical criminology VO 28 IS 4 SP 516 OP 533 A1 Battle, Brittany Pearl A1 Ubel, Marleina A1 Nepomnyaschy, Lenna A2 Ubel, Marleina A2 Nepomnyaschy, Lenna LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1908929847 AB The US criminal punishment system, undergirded by carceral logics that center retributive punishment for all measure of offenses, has extended far beyond the walls of formal institutions of incarceration as a shadow carceral state, including into the institution of the family. Families, particularly those of color and who are low-income, face these carceral logics in systems expected to provide support and services, but that often reinforce and reproduce the criminal punishment system's structural violence and retributive responses. We contribute to the understanding of the carceral state's impact on families by conceptualizing the family policing industrial complex through a synthesis of the carcerality experienced by families in two sites—the immigration system and the child support enforcement system. We conclude by calling for the abolition of this complex, exploring transformative justice-oriented remediations of its harm found in various alternative responses to policing families. K1 carceral state power K1 prison industrial complex K1 child support enforcement system K1 immigration system K1 family policing K1 Carceral logics DO 10.1177/13624806241274761