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Pushout

The Criminalization of Black Girls in Schools

Monique Couvson

EPUB
ca. 19,99

The New Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Schulpädagogik, Didaktik, Methodik

Beschreibung

The “powerful” (Michelle Alexander) exploration of the harsh and harmful experiences confronting Black girls in schools, and how we can instead orient schools toward their flourishing

On the day fifteen-year-old Diamond from the Bay Area stopped going to school, she was expelled for lashing out at peers who constantly harassed and teased her for something everyone on the staff had missed: she was being trafficked for sex. After months on the run, she was arrested and sent to a detention center for violating a court order to attend school.

In a work that Lisa Delpit calls “imperative reading,” Monique W. Morris chronicles the experiences of Black girls across the country whose complex lives are misunderstood, highly judged—by teachers, administrators, and the justice system—and degraded by the very institutions charged with helping them flourish. Painting “a chilling picture of the plight of black girls and women today” (The Atlantic), Morris exposes a world of confined potential and supports the rising movement to challenge the policies, practices, and cultural illiteracy that push countless students out of school and into unhealthy, unstable, and often unsafe futures.

At a moment when Black girls are the fastest growing population in the juvenile justice system, Pushout is truly a book “for everyone who cares about children” (Washington Post).

Book cover photograph by Brittsense/brittsense.com.

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Schlagwörter

Black girls, antiracism, underrepresented minority, police brutality, lunch debt, social justice, feminism, gender discrimination, public school, #sayhername, school suspensions, gender studies, ghetto, restorative justice, education, mandatory minimum, racial inequality, African American girls social conditions, antiracist, urban poverty, intersectionality, Black women, racial disparities, African American girls discrimination, criminalization, school-to-confinement, unemployment, African American girls, rape culture, African American girls discrimination in education. Discrimination in education, Bettina love, Black Lives Matter, nonfiction, women’s studies, prison abolition, sing a rhythm, dance a blues, school-to-prison pipelines, underemployment, free lunch programs, African American girls education, human trafficking, personal stories, we want to do more than survive, school resource officer