Education
Ph.D., Criminal Justice, Rutgers University School of Criminal Justice
M.A., Criminal Justice, Rutgers University School of Criminal Justice
B.A., Cum Laude, Honors in Sociology, Honors in Psychology, CUNY Macaulay Honors College: Hunter College
About Janet
Dr. Janet Garcia-Hallett is an Associate Professor of Criminal Justice in the University of New Haven. She earned her Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from the Rutgers University-Newark School of Criminal Justice. Her research is primarily focused on the detrimental impact of incarceration on communities of color and the intersectional obstacles women of color face before, during, and after incarceration. Her book, Invisible Mothers, explores how mothers of color navigate motherhood post-incarceration, and how their reentry into the community is shaped by mothers鈥 treatment and 黑料社s at the intersection of gender, motherhood, racial-ethnic background, and criminal record. In doing so, her book examines the concept of visibility in how social institutions treat mothers of color as invisible mothers restricted from equal opportunities, but also simultaneously as visible (m)others who are criminalized and penalized for surviving their circumstances. Dr. Garcia-Hallett鈥檚 scholarship can be found in The Prison Journal, Feminist Criminology, Sociology Compass, and the International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology.
Publications
Canada, K.E., Givens, A., Huebner, B.M., Garcia-Hallett, J., Taylor, E., Inzana, V., Edwards, D., Peters, C.M., & Plunkett Cafourek, D. (2023). Perceptions of Vaccine Safety and Hesitancy among Incarcerated Adults and Correctional Staff in the Rural Midwest. Vaccine: X, 13.
Garcia-Hallett, J. (2022). Invisible Mothers Unseen Yet Hypervisible after Incarceration. University of California Press.
Canada, K. E., Huebner, B., Garcia-Hallett, J., Givens, A., Inzana, V., Taylor, E., & Peters, C. (2022). Community-engaged Prison-based Research in a Pandemic: The Efficacy of Summative Content Analysis for Understanding Prison Culture and Climate. Journal of Crime & Justice.
Garcia-Hallett, J., & Christian, J. (2021). Gender and (Fictive) Family in a Women鈥檚 Post-Incarceration Mentoring Program. British Journal of Criminology.
Garcia-Hallett, J., Like, T., Torres, T., and Iraz谩bal, C. (2020). Latinxs in the Kansas City Metro Area: Policing and Criminalization in Ethnic Enclaves. Journal of Planning Education and Research, 40(2), 151鈥168.
Garcia-Hallett, J. (2019). 鈥淲e're Being Released to a Jungle鈥: The State of Prisoner Reentry and the Resilience of Women of Color. The Prison Journal, 99(4), 459鈥483. Special issue on Race as a Carceral Terrain:
Black Lives Matter Meets Reentry [Invited Contribution].
Garcia-Hallett, J. (2019). Maternal Identities and Narratives of Motherhood: A Qualitative Exploration of Women鈥檚 Pathways Into and Out of Offending. Feminist Criminology, 14(2), 214鈥240.
Honorable Mention: Feminist Criminology's Helen Eigenberg Best Article of the Year Award for 2019.
Novich, M., & Garcia-Hallett, J. (2018). Strategies for Balance: Examining How Parents of Color Navigate Work and Life in the Academy. The Work-Family Interface: Spillover, Complications, and Challenges (Contemporary Perspectives in Family Research, Vol. 13, pp. 157鈥184). Emerald Publishing Limited.
Garcia, J. (2016). Understanding the Lives of Mothers after Incarceration: Moving Beyond Socially Constructed Definitions of Motherhood. Sociology Compass, 10(1), 3鈥11.
Garcia, J. (2016). The Importance of the Mentor-Mentee Relationship in Women鈥檚 Desistance from Destructive
Behaviors. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 60(7), 808鈥827.
Selected Grants
Prison Research and Innovation Network (PRIN) with the Missouri Department of Corrections and Research Team: Kelli Canada, Beth Huebner, Ashley Givens, and Clark Peters. Urban Institute and Arnold/Ventures. ($200,000)
Selected Fellowships, Honors, and Awards
Award. 2023 American Sociological Association (ASA) Section on Crime, Law, and Deviance Ida B. Wells-Barnett Distinguished Book Award.
Honorable Mention. 2023 American Sociological Association (ASA) Section on Race, Gender and Class Distinguished Contribution to Scholarship Book Award.
Finalist. 2023 American Sociological Association (ASA) Family Section鈥檚 William J. Goode Book Award.
Finalist. 2023 Evident Change鈥檚 Media for a Just Society Book Award.
University of Missouri President鈥檚 Award for Intercampus Collaboration (along with PI Kelli Canada, MU; Co-PI Beth Huebner, UMSTL; Co-PI Ashley Givens, MU; Co-PI Clark Peters, MU).
Honorable Mention. Feminist Criminology's Helen Eigenberg Best Article of the Year Award for 2019. Recognition for publication: 鈥淢aternal Identities and Narratives of Motherhood: A Qualitative Exploration of Women鈥檚 Pathways Into and Out of Offending.鈥
2019 SAGE Junior Faculty Professional Development Teaching Award. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences.