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 Report, Resource Library
Tags: Age of Jurisdiction, Alternatives to Incarceration, Conditions of Confinement, Cost/Benefit Analysis, Detention, Harms of Incarceration, Health and Mental Health, Racial and Ethnic Disparities, Solitary Confinement, Special Education, Structural Racism, Transfer or Bindover or Certification, Youth in Adult Court, Youth in Adult Facilities