Statement on the effects of law enforcement in school settings

Author:

Tocci Charles1,Stacy Sara T.2ORCID,Siegal Rachel3,Renick Jennifer4,LoCurto Jamie5,Lakind Davielle6,Gruber Jennifer7,Fisher Benjamin W.8

Affiliation:

1. School of Education Loyola University Chicago Illinois USA

2. University of Cincinnati Evaluation Services Center Cincinnati Ohio USA

3. Health Psychology Program University of North Carolina at Charlotte Charlotte North Carolina USA

4. Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology and Research University of Memphis Memphis Tennessee USA

5. Child Health and Development Institute of Connecticut, Inc. Farmington Connecticut USA

6. Department of Clinical Psychology Mercer University Macon Georgia USA

7. Department of Psychology Michigan State University East Lansing Michigan USA

8. Department of Civil Society and Community Studies University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison Wisconsin USA

Abstract

AbstractSchool‐based law enforcement (SBLE) have become increasingly common in U.S. schools over recent decades despite the controversy surrounding their presence and lack of consensus around their associated benefits and harms. Drawing on the history and evidence base regarding SBLE, we advocate for an end to SBLE programs. Grounding our argument in principles of Community Psychology and positive youth development, we outline how the presence and actions of SBLE negatively affect individual students as well as school systems, with particularly harmful outcomes for students with minoritized and marginalized identities. Research on SBLE and school crime does not provide consistent evidence of positive impacts, and many studies find null effects for the relationship between SBLE and school crime or increases in crime and violence in schools. Though funding for SBLE is often prompted by high‐profile acts of gun violence in schools, evidence suggests that SBLE neither prevents these incidents, nor lessens the severity when they do occur. Thus, we advocate for removing law enforcement from school settings and redirecting resources into inclusive, evidence‐informed responses that are generally safer and more effective than SBLE. We close by outlining the policy landscape governing SBLE programs and ways communities can lobby for change.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Applied Psychology,Health (social science)

Reference171 articles.

1. ACLU of Colorado(2011 October 17).ACLU urges roaring Fork School Board to stop school resource officers from collaborating with ICE[Press release].https://www.aclu-co.org/en/news/aclu-urges-roaring-fork-school-board-stop-school-resource-officers-collaborating-ice

2. Advancement Project & Alliance for Educational Justice. (2018).We came to learn: A call to action for police free schools. The Advancement Project.https://advancementproject.org/wp-content/uploads/WCTLweb/docs/We-Came-to-Learn-9-13-18.pdf?reload=1536822360635

3. Allen T. Bryan I. Guererro A. Teng A. &Lytle‐Hernández K.(2018).Policing our students.http://milliondollarhoods.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Policing-Our-Students-MDH-Report-Final.pdf

4. Perceptions of School Resource Officers: Protectors or Prosecutors ?

5. American Federation of Teachers(2020a).AFT expands anti‐racism efforts calls for separating police and schools.https://www.aft.org/news/aft-expands-anti-racism-efforts-calls-separating-police-and-schools

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