The Politics of Punishment: How Policy Shapes the Aging Experience in Prison and After Release
Kenzie Latham-Mintus, Raya Kheirbek, Elizabeth Vásquez

TL;DR
This paper examines how policies affect the aging experience of incarcerated individuals and their reentry into society.
Contribution
The paper introduces a multidisciplinary analysis of aging in prison and reentry, emphasizing policy reform and advocacy.
Findings
Policies like compassionate release and geriatric parole are underutilized despite their importance.
Privatization of prison hospice care raises ethical and systemic concerns.
Aging individuals face significant social vulnerability after release.
Abstract
As the U.S. carceral system faces an unprecedented aging crisis, policies such as compassionate release, geriatric parole, and end-of-life care have emerged as critical yet underutilized mechanisms. This symposium explores how these policies profoundly influence the experiences of aging incarcerated individuals and those navigating reentry. Presentations will examine the systemic barriers to geriatric release and reentry, the ethical complexities of medical decision-making for incapacitated older adults in prison, and the privatization of prison hospice care. Additionally, this session will explore social vulnerability post-incarceration, analyzing how aging individuals experience social networks, social integration, and loneliness after release. By incorporating policy analysis, legal archival research, and a review of existing geriatric parole programs, this session highlights the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCriminal Justice and Corrections Analysis · Homelessness and Social Issues · Alexander von Humboldt Studies
