Placeholder image

CAMPAIGN: The School-to-Prison Pipeline

Last updated on January 01, 2020

CAMPAIGN: The School-to-Prison Pipeline

Over the years, the ACLU of Rhode Island has issued a number of reports examining racial disparities in certain areas of public interaction with the government, including traffic stops and school suspension rates. Each report has revealed statistical evidence to back up the anecdotal evidence: significant racial disparities exist, and community concerns about racial profiling have a basis in fact.

Despite this growing body of evidence and consistent work by many to address these disparities, Rhode Island has lacked a comprehensive response to these issues. Worse, even as these disparities persist in the background, too many people refuse to acknowledge their presence and their damaging effects.

This campaign is a series of reports highlighting the “school-to-prison-pipeline,” a governmental pattern of pushing students, usually racial minorities, out of school and into the criminal justice system. The disparities experienced in elementary school beget the ones in the juvenile justice system, are exacerbated by those in traffic stops, which in turn are connected to those in arrests and, finally, in the makeup of the prison population.

Related Content

Publication
Jun 5, 2013
REPORT: Blacklisted (June 2013)
  • Students’ Rights|
  • +1 Issue

REPORT: Blacklisted (June 2013)

This report shows that in ALL school districts in RI, black and Hispanic students are suspended at substantially higher rates than their representation in the student population, while white students are suspended less often than their representation predicts.
Publication
Mar 10, 2014
REPORT: Blacklisted: An Update (March 2014)
  • Students’ Rights|
  • +1 Issue

REPORT: Blacklisted: An Update (March 2014)

Publication
May 5, 2015
Blacklisted: Final Report (May 2015)
  • Students’ Rights|
  • +1 Issue

REPORT: Blacklisted: Final Report (May 2015)

School suspensions in RI reached their highest rates in a decade in 2014, and racial disparities in school discipline data got worse, not better, since our previous reports on this issue.
Publication
Nov 11, 2015
Report
  • Students’ Rights|
  • +2 Issues

REPORT: Oversuspended and Underserved: RI's School Suspension Disparities 2014-2015 (November 2015)