Abstract
In this article, Derron Wallace examines how Black Caribbean youth perceive and experience stop-and-frisk and stop-and-search practices in New York City and London, respectively, while on their way to and from public schools. Despite a growing body of scholarship on the relationship between policing and schooling in the United States and United Kingdom, comparative research on how students experience stop-and-frisk/search remains sparse. Drawing on the BlackCrit tradition of critical race theory and in-depth interviews with sixty Black Caribbean secondary school students in London and New York City, Wallace explores how adolescents experience adult-like policing to and from schools. His findings indicate that participants develop a strained sense of belonging in British and American societies due to a security paradox: a policing formula that, in principle, promises safety for all but in practice does so at the expense of some Black youth. Participants in the ethnographic study learned that irrespective of ethnicity, Black youth are regularly rendered suspicious subjects worthy of scrutiny, even during the school commute.
Publisher
Harvard Education Publishing Group
Cited by
44 articles.
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1. The Power of the Culture Trap: Highlighting the Importance of Comparative and International Perspectives in Sociology of Education, Derron Wallace, The Culture Trap: Ethnic Expectations & Unequal Schooling for Black Youth: Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2023, 296 pp., £19.99 (paperback), £74.00 (hardback), ISBN 978019753146
The Power of the Culture Trap: Highlighting the Importance of Comparative and International Perspectives in Sociology of Education
, Derron Wallace, The Culture Trap: Ethnic Expectations & Unequal Schooling for Black Youth: Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2023, 296 pp., £19.99 (paperback), £74.00 (hardback), ISBN 978019753146;International Studies in Sociology of Education;2024-07-30
2. The Institutional Hearing Program and the Incarceration-to-Deportation Pipeline;Critical Criminology;2024-07-29
3. Can Black Critical Theory sit with Mad Studies in education in Britain?;Pedagogy, Culture & Society;2024-06-12
4. Academic profiling in Britain? Exploring Black youth’s experiences of tracking in schools;Ethnic and Racial Studies;2024-03-11
5. Criminalized or Stigmatized? An Intersectional Power Analysis of the Charter School Treatment of Black and Latino Boys;Urban Education;2024-02-06