Florida – Only Young Once: The Systemic Harm of Florida’s School-to-Prison Pipeline and Youth Legal System

Florida routinely pushes Black children out of schools and into a legal system with well-documented harms. In recent years, the state has made significant investments in school law enforcement and self-proclaimed “tough love” youth legal system policies, purportedly in the name of public safety. However, these investments have yielded a system that disparately disciplines, arrests, prosecutes and incarcerates Black youth more harshly than their counterparts. Florida’s welldeveloped school-to-prison pipeline has thus created an easy entryway for children into its legal system – even for those as young as 7 years old and children dealing with mental health issues. This report explores the scope and impact of this system and ways Florida can disrupt it.

File Type: pdf
Categories: Policy Tool, Resource Library
Tags: Age of Jurisdiction, Alternatives to Incarceration, Conditions of Confinement, Cost/Benefit Analysis, Detention, Harms of Incarceration, Health & Mental Health, Racial and Ethnic Disparities, School and Special Education, Solitary Confinement, Structural Racism, Transfer, Youth in Adult Court, Youth in Adult Facilities