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Built Beyond American Borders: Comparing the Construction and Maintenance of the School-to-Prison Pipeline in the United States and New Zealand

Authors

Beck, Emily

Supervisor

Item type

Journal Article

Degree name

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand (SAANZ)

Abstract

The school-to-prison pipeline (STPP) is the process by which children of colour are disproportionately funnelled from education institutions into the criminal justice system. This article investigates how the STPP was developed through unfolding systems of oppression in both the United States and New Zealand. Harsh disciplinary measures and zero-tolerance policies were implemented in both countries, facilitating a rise in exclusionary discipline for minority youth. Compounded by negative police contact, state care involvement, and structural inequality, children who face disciplinary measures in school are significantly more likely to become involved in the criminal justice system. The analysis presented here demonstrates how systemic racism and ongoing oppression embedded within the education systems of both the United States and New Zealand produce long-lasting, detrimental outcomes for minority children. By uncovering the underlying contributors to the pipeline, options to dismantle it can be explored.

Description

Keywords

1608 Sociology, 4404 Development studies, 4410 Sociology, school-to-prison pipeline, juvenile justice, school exclusion, inequality, systemic racism

Source

New Zealand Sociology, ISSN: 0112-921X (Print); 1173-1036 (Online), 40(2), 59-74. doi: 10.64399/v6pqwv83

Rights statement

Copyright (c) 2025 Emily Beck. Creative Commons License. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.