In the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, jails and prisons have become particularly vulnerable to the spread of the novel coronavirus, putting millions of incarcerated people at risk. In this essay for the “Covid-19 and the Social Sciences” series, David C. Pyrooz, Ryan M. Labrecque, Jennifer J. Tostlebe, and Bert Useem draw on their research in Oregon facilities, and reflect on the complex issues of doing research with prisoners under pandemic conditions. They report on prisoners’ sense of safety given the health risks inside prisons and speak to efforts to mitigate the spread of the virus.
David C. Pyrooz
David C. Pyrooz, PhD, is an associate professor of sociology at the University of Colorado Boulder. He focuses his research on incarceration and reentry, criminal justice practice and policy, and criminal groups. He is the author of Competing for Control: Gangs and the Social Order of Prisons (Cambridge University Press, 2019). He can be reached via email david.pyrooz@colorado.edu or Twitter @dpyrooz.