Image for The prison school  : educational inequality and school discipline in the age of mass incarceration

The prison school : educational inequality and school discipline in the age of mass incarceration

See all formats and editions

Public schools across the nation have turned to the criminal justice system as a gold standard of discipline.

As public schools and offices of justice have become collaborators in punishment, rates of African American suspension and expulsion have soared, drop out rates have accelerated, and prison populations have exploded.

Nowhere, perhaps, has the War on Crime been more influential in broadening racialized academic and socioeconomic disparity than in New Orleans, Louisiana, where in 2002 the criminal sheriff opened his own public school at the Orleans Parish Prison. "The Prison School," as locals called it, enrolled low-income African American boys who had been removed from regular public schools because of nonviolent disciplinary offenses, such as tardiness and insubordination. By examining this school in the local and national context, Lizbet Simmons shows how young black males are in the liminal state of losing educational affiliation while being caught in the net of correctional control.

In The Prison School, she asks how schools and prisons became so intertwined.

What does this mean for students, communities, and a democratic society?And how do we unravel the ties that bind the racialized realities of school failure and mass incarceration?

Read More
Available
£20.00 Save 20.00%
RRP £25.00
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
0520281462 / 9780520281462
Paperback / softback
22/11/2016
United States
English
208 pages : illustrations (black and white)