Data Explainer Visualizes the Human Impact of Mass Incarceration

Vera Institute of Justice / 2026 / Economics, Gender Equality, Human Rights, Racial Equity

Hero image in the Vera Institute's data story titled: “I’m Free, but I’m in Prison” The Economic Impacts on Mothers of Having an Incarcerated Co-parent. Designed and built by Graphicacy.

Overview

The Vera Institute of Justice partners with communities and government leaders across America to end mass incarceration and transform the criminal justice and immigration systems. Vera selected Graphicacy to build a data explainer that would visually tell the story of the emotional and economic toll incarceration takes on families.

Background and Challenge:

Nearly half of all imprisoned men in America are fathers to children under 18, which leaves mothers to shoulder the costs and other burdens associated with an absent co-parent. To complement their newly launched data explorer tool, Vera wanted to build a narrative piece that called attention to the plight of those families hurt by policies of mass incarceration.

They hoped to bring to life the compelling narratives that emerged from a research paper to make these important stories accessible to a broader audience beyond academics.

Opportunity and Solution:

Vera and Graphicacy worked together to transform the stories of several mothers into a multimedia scrollytelling page comprising central narration alongside original photography of the women featured, audio clips from their interviews, callout text boxes and two new data visualizations based on findings presented in the associated research paper.

For the first visualization, Graphicacy designed a color-coded constellation of moving dots to depict the total number of incarcerated men. As readers scroll through, the dots split to illustrate the number of incarcerated men with minor children.

The second visualization incorporates bar charts to contextualize the income loss associated with a co-parent’s incarceration. The charts show how this amount compares to other annual expenses for U.S. households, on average, including housing and utilities, food and in-state college tuition.

The visualizations support the page’s other components, including photo treatments. Graphicacy used a full-width scroll effect for some of the photo transitions, incorporating a fade to black or white to convey the emotional tone of the story in the moment.

The scrollytelling page ends with a call to action section that invites readers to support organizations and initiatives fighting for reforms at both national and state levels.

Image of the Take action final section in Vera Institute's data story titled: “I’m Free, but I’m in Prison” The Economic Impacts on Mothers of Having an Incarcerated Co-parent. Designed and built by Graphicacy.

 

Montage image from the Vera Institute's data story titled: “I’m Free, but I’m in Prison” The Economic Impacts on Mothers of Having an Incarcerated Co-parent. Designed and built by Graphicacy.

Interested in working on a project like this?