AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
James E. Pfander , Wade Formo The past and Future of Equitable Remedies: an Essay for Frank Johnson 71 Alabama Law Review 723 (2020) Introduction. 724 I. Grupo Mexicano and the Propriety of Mareva Injunctions. 730 A. Foreign Attachment in the United States. 732 B. Equity's Attitude Toward Pre-Judgment Creditors' Remedies. 735 C. Foreign Attachment After the Due Process Revolution. 739 D. Grupo Mexicano and Federal Equity in a Post-Erie World. 742 II. Ziglar/Hernandez and the...; Search Snippet: ...wide relief to address a range of problems, including segregated schools, inadequate prisons, persistent racial discrimination in public employment, and schemes to disenfranchise minority voters... 2020
Claire P. Donohue The Unexamined Life: a Framework to Address Judicial Bias in Custody Determinations and Beyond 21 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 557 (Spring, 2020) Scholars and litigators alike have long wondered about what is on the minds of judges. Kahan et al. have studied how judges' political commitments influence their perception of legally consequential facts. Sheri Johnson et al. confirmed the presence of implicit bias among a sample of judges and analyzed the relationship between that bias and the...; Search Snippet: ...presumption of parental fitness and valuable family ties by the racist history of our child welfare system and systemic forces such... 2020
Amy B. Cyphert Tinker-ing with Machine Learning: the Legality and Consequences of Online Surveillance of Students 20 Nevada Law Journal 457 (Spring, 2020) All across the nation, high schools and middle schools are quietly entering into contracts with software companies to monitor the online activity of their students, attempting to predict the next school shooter or to intervene with a student who might be contemplating suicide. Systems using algorithms powered by machine learning trawl the Facebook...; Search Snippet: ...the student or not. In light of the well-documented racial disparities present in school discipline decisions, there is good reason to worry about bias. 7... 2020
Nancy Chi Cantalupo Title Ix & the Civil Rights Approach to Sexual Harassment in Education 25 Roger Williams University Law Review 225 (Spring, 2020) Thanks very much, Caitlyn, and my thanks to the entire Roger Williams Law Review for inviting me to speak today. Some of you may wonder why I start a keynote address for a symposium about Title IX and investigating claims of sexual misconduct with photos of people, mainly women, but plenty of men, too, engaged in political protest. I do so...; Search Snippet: ...See Laura Meckler, Trump Administration Revokes Effort to Reduce Racial Bias in School Discipline Wash. Post (Dec. 21, 2018), https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/trump-administration-revokes-effort-to-reduce- racial-bias-in- school- discipline/2018/12/21/3f67312a-055e-11e9-9122-82e98f91ee6f_story.html?noredirect... 2020
Steven L. Nelson Towards a Transnational Critical Race Theory in Education: Proposing Critical Race Third World Approaches to Education Policy 26 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 303 (Winter, 2020) Scholars have applied Critical Race Theory in both domestic and international contexts; however, a theory on the transnational role of race and racism in education policy has not emerged. In this Article, I borrow from the tenets of Critical Race Theory (CRT) and Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) to formulate Critical Race Third...; Search Snippet: ...treatment. As mentioned earlier, the existence and perpetuation of the school- to- prison pipeline has roots in the United States' deeply problematic racial past. [FN216] It is possible to use a variety of critical race frameworks to analyze the school- to- prison pipeline. Cheryl I. Harris' critique of whiteness as a protected... 2020
Noa Ben-Asher Trauma-centered Social Justice 95 Tulane Law Review 95 (November, 2020) This Article identifies a new and growing phenomenon in the American legal system. Many leading agendas for gender, racial, and climate justice are centered on emotional trauma as the primary injury of contemporary social injustices. By focusing on three social justice movements--#BlackLivesMatter, #MeToo, and Climate Justice--the Article offers...; Search Snippet: ...wage jobs. [FN214] Another example of a non-trauma-related racial justice policy is the education justice movement, which has challenged educational policies such as privatization of schools and zero tolerance policies that have disproportionate negative effects on Black students. [FN215... 2020
Krystal D. Williams Why White Privilege Is a Necessary Part of Any Conversation on Racism 35 Maine Bar Journal 110 (2020) Editor's Note: The following letter was submitted to the Maine State Bar Association following remarks delivered during a regularly scheduled edition of Bar Talk, the MSBA's Zoom forum for discussing law practice and MSBA activities during the coronavirus pandemic. In the Maine State Bar Association's June 15, 2020 Bar Talk Program, Attorney Leah...; Search Snippet: ...just a cop's knee on a Black man's neck. Systemic racism is also predatory lending in communities of color, high infant mortality rates among Black women, the school to prison pipeline, and the use of 911/the police as a... 2020
Andrea Freeman You Better Work: Unconstitutional Work Requirements and Food Oppression 53 U.C. Davis Law Review 1531 (February, 2020) Work requirements attached to the receipt of welfare (TANF) and food stamps (SNAP) disproportionately harm people of color. They arose out of unfounded fears of fraud based on racial stereotypes like the Welfare Queen. While food assistance helps raise households out of poverty, work requirements do not. Instead, they lead to greater food...; Search Snippet: ...on-Racial-Disparities.pdf. See Katherine Rosich, Am. Soc. Ass'n, Race, Ethnicity, and the Criminal Justice System 8 (2007); Marilyn Elias, The School- to- Prison Pipeline Teaching Tolerance , Spring 2013, https://www.tolerance.org/magazine/spring-2013/the- school-to- prison-pipeline. See Harris, SNAP Work Requirements supra note 239... 2020
Stephen S. Worthington Beacon or Bludgeon? Use of Regulatory Guidance by the Office for Civil Rights 2017 Brigham Young University Education and Law Journal 161 (2017) When Congress established the U.S. Department of Education in 1979, it directed the Department's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) to enforce civil rights law in the nation's schools and colleges. OCR ensures that educational institutions that receive federal funds comply with half-a-dozen federal civil rights statutes and their implementing... 2019
Kelly Alison Behre Deconstructing the Disciplined Student Narrative and its Impact on Campus Sexual Assault Policy 61 Arizona Law Review 885 (Winter, 2019) The national discourse about campus sexual assault is currently dominated by two powerful narratives: the student survivor narrative and the disciplined student narrative. These narratives continue to shape and inform the public's understanding of campus sexual assault and the role of colleges and universities in preventing and responding to sexual... 2019
Paul Stancil Discovery and the Social Benefits of Private Litigation 71 Vanderbilt Law Review 2171 (November, 2018) Introduction. 2172 I. Identifying the Social Goals of Litigation and Measuring The Results. 2181 A. Legislators Use EPRAs to Help Accomplish Social Goals. 2181 B. Measurement Is Hard. 2183 1. The Resource-Constraint Problem. 2184 2. The Competing-Values Problem. 2186 C. Measurement in the Messy Middle--What Level of Enforcement Does the Legislature... 2019
Nancy Chi Cantalupo Dog Whistles and Beachheads: the Trump Administration, Sexual Violence, and Student Discipline in Education 54 Wake Forest Law Review 303 (Spring, 2019) Beachhead: A defended position on a beach taken from the enemy by landing forces, from which an attack can be launched. --Oxford English Dictionary Beachhead: A strategy to infiltrate academia, push back Obama-era policies, undermine collective civil rights, and impose large-scale federal deregulation. --Dr. Anne McClintock, Who's Afraid of... 2019
Pamela J. Meanes Equity in American Education: the Intersection of Race, Class, and Education 50 University of Richmond Law Review 1075 (March, 2016) A fourteen-year-old Henrico County girl faces assault and battery charges because she threw a baby carrot at one of her former teachers. School disciplinary documents allege the baby carrot was used as a weapon. A Huron High School student threatens to do chopper rounds in his hallway. An Ames, Iowa middle school student brings a BB gun to... 2019
Joanna R. Steele In the Little World: Breaking Virginia's Foster-care-to-prison Pipeline Using Restorative Justice 54 University of Richmond Law Review 313 (Annual Survey 2019) Introduction. 314 I. Virginia and the Foster-Care-to-Prison Pipeline. 314 A. Virginia's Foster Care System. 315 B. Virginia's Foster Care Population. 318 C. Termination of Parental Rights and Available Placements. 320 D. Counseling Services for Virginia's Foster Youth. 323 E. Virginia's Prison Pipelines. 324 II. Northern Ireland and its Out-of-Home... 2019
Josh Gupta-Kagan Reevaluating School Searches Following School-to-prison Pipeline Reforms 87 Fordham Law Review 2013 (April, 2019) The U.S. Supreme Court held in New Jersey v. T.L.O. that school officials could search students without a warrant and with only reasonable suspicion, not probable cause, because of schools' need for discipline and the relationship between educators and students. That case belongs to a body of Fourth Amendment cases involving, in T.L.O.'s terms,... 2019
Areto A. Imoukhuede The Right to Public Education and the School to Prison Pipeline 12 Albany Government Law Review 52 (2018-2019) The school-to-prison pipeline is a controversial concept and a disappointing reality. It refers to the draconian disciplinary trend of schools directly referring students to law enforcement or creating conditions under which students are more likely to become involved in the justice system-- such as suspending or expelling them. Public schools... 2019
Laila Hlass The School to Deportation Pipeline 34 Georgia State University Law Review 697 (Spring, 2018) The United States immigration regime has a long and sordid history of explicit racism, including limiting citizenship to free whites, excluding Chinese immigrants, deporting massive numbers of Mexican immigrants and U.S. citizens of Mexican ancestry, and implementing a national quotas system preferencing Western Europeans. More subtle bias has... 2019
Tara Carone The School to Prison Pipeline: Widespread Disparities in School Discipline Based on Race 24 Public Interest Law Reporter 137 (Spring, 2019) The Great Equalizer. The Passport to the Future. The key to unlocking the door to the American dream. All of these catchphrases are suggestive of a longstanding American belief: that education allows people of all backgrounds to dramatically improve their situation in life. However, today and throughout history, an extraordinary amount of... 2019
  Arrested for a Belch in Gym Class: A.m. V. Holmes , Excessive Force on Schoolchildren, and Qualified Immunity 54 Criminal Law Bulletin ART 4 (No Date) Ramón A. Soto will graduate from the University of New Mexico School of Law in May 2018. He is the Professional Articles Editor for the New Mexico Law Review. Civil rights became Ramón's passion after clerking at Freedman Boyd Hollander Goldberg Urias & Ward. Named Partner, David H. Urias, hired Ramón as a summer law clerk. The firm acted as local... 2018
Elizabeth L. Earle Banishing the Thirteenth Juror: an Approach to the Identification of Prosecutorial Racism 92 Columbia Law Review 1212 (June, 1992) With their client's execution imminent, defense lawyers for James Russell worked feverishly on briefs for submission to the Texas courts, to the lower federal courts, and ultimately to the United States Supreme Court. They alleged, inter alia, that the county prosecutor in Russell's capital murder trial had injected the issue of race into the... 2018
DeAnna Baumle Creating the Trauma-to-prison Pipeline: How the U.s. Justice System Criminalizes Structural and Interpersonal Trauma Experienced by Girls of Color 56 Family Court Review 695 (October, 2018) The staggering number of girls in the juvenile justice system who have experienced abuse is described as the sexual-abuse-to-prison pipeline. However, this pipeline does not capture the entire picture, nor does it fully explain the unjustifiable disproportionality of girls of color and girls from low-income communities in the system. This article... 2018
Hon. Jay Blitzman Deconstructing the School-to-prison Pipeline 62 Boston Bar Journal B.J. 9 (Special Edition 2018) The Supreme Court has abolished the juvenile death penalty, mandatory juvenile life without parole, and in acknowledging the reality of adolescent brain development, has outlined a regime of proportional accountability. Children are constitutionally different than adults. Research has demonstrated that reducing detention also reduces recidivism by... 2018
Claire Raj Disability, Discipline, and Illusory Student Rights 65 UCLA Law Review 860 (May, 2018) Congress enacted the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) to prevent the widespread exclusion of children with disabilities from public schools. While today's schools no longer formally exclude students with disabilities, they routinely achieve this same end through school discipline policies. In fact, students with disabilities are... 2018
Fatema Ghasletwala Examining the School-to-prison Pipeline: Sending Students to Prison Instead of School 32 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 19 (Summer, 2018) Juvenile delinquents are often thought of as intrinsically evil. These youths are blamed for their own plight, believed to be a result of innate character flaws. However, such an obtuse perception is problematic. In many cases, these juvenile delinquents were made delinquents by a faulty system, namely, the School-to-Prison Pipeline. The School-to-... 2018
Emily Bauer Infant Inmates: an Analysis of International Policy on Children Accompanying Parents to Prison 27 Michigan State International Law Review 93 (2018) Mass incarceration has created a class of innocent victims, namely, children of incarcerated parents. These children are only guilty of having an incarcerated parent yet are punished through parental separation and the accompanying detrimental effects on childhood development. International steps have been taken to solve this dire problem through... 2018
Eric Berger Lethal Injection and the Problem of Constitutional Remedies 27 Yale Law and Policy Review 259 (Spring 2009) Introduction. 260 I. An Overview of Lethal Injection. 263 A. The Three-Drug Protocol. 263 B. The Supreme Court's Fractured Decision in Baze v. Rees. 273 II. Remedial Anxieties and Lethal Injection. 280 A. How Remedy Constrains the Right. 280 1. Remedial Concerns in Baze. 283 2. Remedial Concerns in Other Lethal Injection Cases. 286 3. Concerns... 2018
Danielle Dankner No Child Left Behind Bars: Suspending Willful Defiance to Disassemble the School-to-prison Pipeline 51 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 577 (2018) With the criminalization of school discipline and the subsequent increased involvement between students and the juvenile justice system, a path from school to prison became entrenched. Public schools across the nation continued to increase their reliance on punitive disciplinary measures to punish a range of behaviors. Through these measures,... 2018
Johanna F. Roberts No Excuses for Charter Schools: How Disproportionate Discipline of Students with Disabilities Violates Federal Law 70 Oklahoma Law Review 729 (Spring, 2018) Senator Tim Kaine: Should all K-12 schools that receive taxpayer funding be required to meet the requirements of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act? [Betsy] DeVos: I think that is a matter that's best left to the states. Kaine: So some states might be good to kids with disabilities, and other states might not be so good. And... 2018
Margot E. Kaminski Privacy and the Right to Record 97 Boston University Law Review 167 (January, 2017) Introduction. 168 I. The Expanding First Amendment. 172 II. Recording as Speech. 177 A. Recording as Nonspeech. 177 B. Protecting the Right to Record: First Amendment Theory. 179 C. A Note on Automation. 182 D. Free Speech Intuitions and the Right to Record. 184 E. First Amendment Doctrine and the Right to Record. 185 F. Recording as Speech?. 190... 2018
Lydia Nussbaum Realizing Restorative Justice: Legal Rules and Standards for School Discipline Reform 69 Hastings Law Journal 583 (February, 2018) Zero-tolerance school disciplinary policies stunt the future of school children across the United States. These policies, enshrined in state law, prescribe automatic and mandatory suspension, expulsion, and arrest for infractions ranging from minor to serious. Researchers find that zero-tolerance policies disproportionately affect low-income,... 2018
Greg Carter Repairing the Neglected Prison-to-school Pipeline: Increasing Federal Oversight of Juvenile Justice Education and Re-entry in the Reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act 25 Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy 371 (Spring, 2018) I. Introduction. 372 II. Federal Role in Educational Programming in Juvenile Facilities. 375 A. Early History of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) and Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act (JJDPA). 376 B. Title I, Part D and No Child Left Behind (NCLB). 378 C. Changes in Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). 379 III. Problem:... 2018
Marlies Spanjaard School Discipline in Massachusetts Today 62 Boston Bar Journal B.J. 2 (Special Edition 2018) Even if you haven't heard the term school-to-prison pipeline, you probably know what it describes: The national trend by which students are funneled out of the public schools and into the juvenile and criminal justice systems. Instead of getting the education they need, generations of our state's most vulnerable children have been pushed out of... 2018
Liza Hirsch , Janine Solomon School Discipline Law, Ch. 222 of the Acts of 2012: Effective Application and Challenges with Ongoing Implementation 62 Boston Bar Journal B.J. 6 (Special Edition 2018) In Massachusetts and nationwide, one of the most commonly used responses to students who exhibit misbehavior is to exclude them from school, effectively depriving them of education. While out-of-school suspension has been used in schools as a form of discipline since the 1960s, it was not until the 1990s, during the era of tough on crime and zero... 2018
Reginald Leamon Robinson Searching for the Parental Causes of the School-to-prison Pipeline Problem: a Critical, Conceptual Essay 32 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 31 (Summer, 2018) I believe that we're all born good, uncorrupted and life itself does the corrupting. But, you know, someone like [these children] . [they] just [aren't] capable of something like this. In the extreme, moral poverty is the poverty of growing up surrounded by deviant, delinquent, and criminal adults in abusive, violence-ridden, fatherless, Godless,... 2018
Jack B. Weinstein Some Reflections on United States Group Actions 45 American Journal of Comparative Law 833 (Fall 1997) Professor Per Henrik Lindblom's discussion of proposals regarding group actions in Sweden seems sound to a person steeped in the United States experience. I assume general agreement with the proposition that civil procedure should be designed to vindicate the substantive rights of each person in the jurisdiction by, to quote Rule 1 of the Federal... 2018
Blakely Evanthia Simoneau Special Education in American Prisons: Risks, Recidivism, and the Revolving Door 15 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 87 (June, 2019) The deprivation of public education is not like the deprivation of some other governmental benefit. Public education has a pivotal role in maintaining the fabric of our society and in sustaining our political and cultural heritage: the deprivation of education takes an inestimable toll on the social, economic, intellectual, and psychological... 2018
Shameka Stanford , Bahiyyah Muhammad The Confluence of Language and Learning Disorders and the School-to-prison Pipeline among Minority Students of Color: a Critical Race Theory 26 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 691 (2018) Introduction. 691 I. Decreased Access to Services for Minority Students with Language and Learning Disorders. 695 II. Zero Tolerance Policy in Schools. 699 III. Symbolic Racism: Harsh Disciplinary Laws in Low-Ses Title I Schools. 703 IV. The School-To-Prison Pipeline: Punishment Policy in Schools. 711 V. The Correlation Between Special Education... 2018
Gail Heriot, Alison Somin The Department of Education's Obama-era Initiative on Racial Disparities in School Discipline: Wrong for Students and Teachers, Wrong on the Law 22 Texas Review of Law and Politics 471 (Spring, 2018) Introduction. 473 I. The Department of Education's Disparate Impact Policy Is Encouraging Discrimination Rather Than Preventing It.. 481 II. The Department of Education's Policy Is Leading to Increased Disorder in Schools.. 495 III. Racial Disparities in School Discipline Have Not Been Shown to Be the Root Cause of Racial Disparities in Adult Life,... 2018
Bianca A. White The Invisible Victims of the School-to-prison Pipeline: Understanding Black Girls, School Push-out, and the Impact of the Every Student Succeeds Act 24 William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law 641 (Spring, 2018) Introduction I. Brief History II. Understanding Black Girlhood and the School-to-Prison Pipeline III. The Necessity of Programs for Black Girls IV. Every Student Succeeds Act V. Ending School Push-out Conclusion A stigma follows Black girls: they are said to be unruly, defiant, unsophisticated, and to have bad attitudes. This stigma is reinforced... 2018
Brian G. Sellers , Bruce A. Arrigo Virtue Jurisprudence and the Case of Zero-tolerance Discipline in U.s. Public Education Policy: an Ethical and Humanistic Critique of Captivity's Laws 21 New Criminal Law Review 514 (Fall, 2018) This article empirically investigates how the humanistic critique at the core of virtue jurisprudence can illuminate the laws of captivity at the level of judicial decision making. One point of reference is the set of cases that makes up the constitutional challenges to and the resolutions of zero-tolerance public school discipline. These court... 2018
Drew Findling , Findling Law Firm, Atlanta, Georgia, 404-460-4500, Website www.findlinglawfirm.com, Email drew@findlinglawfirm.com, Twitter @drewfindling, Instagram @drewfindling Will 'Zero Tolerance' at the Border Finally Bring a Spotlight on the Injustice That Is 'Zero Tolerance'? 42-AUG Champion Champion 5 (August, 2018) On April 11, 2018, Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke in Las Cruces, New Mexico, to a group of sheriffs from southern border towns. In his speech, Attorney General Sessions began with the usual litany of fear-mongering that runs hand-in-hand when discussing immigration--referencing guns, drugs, and gangs in the same breadth as those who commit... 2018
Ilana Friedman Youth at the Center: a Timeline Approach to the Challenges Facing Black Children 63 Saint Louis University Law Journal 583 (Summer, 2019) At the center of Forward Through Ferguson's Action Plan are children, a demographic critical to any long-range plan of reform in St. Louis. Yet the challenges facing African American children are often looked at in isolation to one another, whether it be education, health care, or juvenile justice. To fully capture the labyrinth of hurdles facing... 2018
Tyler B. Bugden Addressing Utah's School to Prison Pipeline 2017 Utah Law Review 1061 (2017) On May 19, 2011, thirteen-year-old middle school student F.M. was removed from his physical education class for generating fake burps that made the other students laugh and hampered class proceedings. Ms. Mines-Hornbeck, the middle school physical education teacher, requested assistance from the School Resource Officer (SRO), Officer Arthur... 2017
Nancy G. Abudu , Ron E. Miles Challenging the Status Quo: an Integrated Approach to Dismantling the School-to-prison Pipeline 30 Saint Thomas Law Review 56 (Fall, 2017) When it comes to challenging school disciplinary policies that have an especially disparate and negative impact on students of color and students with disabilities, courts cannot be the sole or final arbiter for addressing this serious problem. Rather than acting as a discouraging force, courts routinely uphold these disruptive school disciplinary... 2017
Leland Ware Discriminatory Discipline: the Racial Crisis in America's Public Schools 85 UMKC Law Review 739 (Spring, 2017) A police officer assigned to a high school in Columbia, S.C., was asked to remove a disruptive female student from a classroom this afternoon. He responded by violently flipping the young student out of her chair and throwing her across the room. The incident sparked strong condemnation after a video from Spring Valley High School went viral. This... 2017
Leah Aileen Hill Disrupting the Trajectory: Representing Disabled African American Boys in a System Designed to Send Them to Prison 45 Fordham Urban Law Journal 201 (December, 2017) This Essay presents the narrative of three African American brothers as they journey through the special education system. Their narrative illustrates the human cost of the failure to implement reforms meant to combat the systemic inequality that supports the school-to-prison pipeline. The brothers' narrative is shaped by several factors all too... 2017
William Stacy Johnson God Vs. The Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law. By Marci A. Hamilton. Cambridge University Press 2005. Pp. 408. $28.00. Isbn: 0-521-85304-4. 22 Journal of Law and Religion 287 (2006-2007) Marci A. Hamilton, Paul R. Verkuill Chair in Public Law at Cardozo School of Law, has written an engaging and copiously researched book on the place of religious communities in a democratic republic. The ample case studies alone make this an important contribution. Nevertheless, Hamilton's approach to religious liberty is misguided. Hamilton... 2017
Ben Trachtenberg How University Title Ix Enforcement and Other Discipline Processes (Probably) Discriminate Against Minority Students 18 Nevada Law Journal 107 (Fall, 2017) This Article argues that university discipline procedures likely discriminate against minority students and that increasingly muscular Title IX enforcement-- launched with the best of intentions in response to real problems--almost certainly exacerbates yet another systemic barrier to racial justice and equal access to educational opportunities.... 2017
Yasser Arafat Payne , Tara Marie Brown It's Set up for Failure . And They Know This!: How the School-to-prison Pipeline Impacts the Educational Experiences of Street Identified Black Youth and Young Adults 62 Villanova Law Review 307 (2017) I had dropped out in the 10th grade . 'cause, I was bad . all I wanted to do was crimes and fight and sell drugs. Like, school wasn't for me .. Before I got into that type of phase, a lot of my teachers were disrespectful, [and they] told me that I wouldn't be successful. I've even been hit by teachers. And, I've always been a very smart, educated... 2017
Johanna E. Miller Protecting Children's Rights in School Discipline 34 No. 2 GPSolo 28 (March/April, 2017) During the 2011-2012 school year, more than 3 million students were suspended front school across the United States, including more than 720,000 students with diagnosed disabilities. The majority of students are suspended from school for vague and subjective offenses such as insubordination, not for dangerous behavior. The overuse of suspensions is... 2017
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