Who Counts, Who’s Accountable: The Struggle for Transparency in Carceral Health
This perspective piece in the American Journal of Public Health examines the critical role of independent scholarship in overseeing mortality within carceral systems. It argues that official data on deaths in prisons and jails is often incomplete or obscured, creating a significant public health blind spot. The article advocates for robust, independent research and data collection as essential tools for accountability, transparency, and ultimately, for protecting the health of a marginalized population.
Why it might matter to you:
This work highlights a systemic failure in data collection that directly impedes effective public health intervention and policy reform for a vulnerable group. For professionals focused on prevention and health equity, it underscores the necessity of methodological rigor and advocacy to uncover hidden health disparities. It presents a concrete challenge: how to apply public health principles in environments designed to limit oversight and accountability.
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