Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC.
Georgetown School of Medicine, Washington, DC.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2022 Aug;61(8):977-979. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2022.04.006. Epub 2022 Apr 27.
The current pediatric mental health crisis, recently named by AACAP and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), is inextricably linked to school-based policies and practices. Fueled by public fears of crime and violence, "tough on crime" approaches took root in the United States during the 1980s, when school systems became an extension of a national-scale punitive apparatus. Punitive policies (eg, zero-tolerance policies) became a reflex response to disruptive behaviors at school, and police presence within schools increased. Envisioned to deter crime and violence, these policies instead too often criminalized routine, nonviolent misbehaviors, producing an intimate connection between school discipline and incarceration systems, often referred to as the "school-to-prison pipeline" disproportionately affecting Black students. In the contemporary context of calls for racial justice, local and state officials are re-examining the impacts of school-based police and strict discipline policies to better understand the potential academic and psychological consequences.
当前的儿科心理健康危机最近被 AACAP 和美国儿科学会(AAP)命名,与基于学校的政策和实践密切相关。受公众对犯罪和暴力的恐惧的推动,“严厉打击犯罪”的方法在美国 20 世纪 80 年代扎根,当时学校系统成为国家规模惩罚机构的延伸。惩罚性政策(例如零容忍政策)成为学校内破坏性行为的本能反应,学校内的警察数量增加。这些政策旨在威慑犯罪和暴力,但往往将常规的非暴力不当行为定为犯罪,从而在学校纪律和监禁系统之间建立了密切联系,通常被称为“从学校到监狱的流水线”,不成比例地影响着黑人学生。在当前呼吁种族正义的背景下,地方和州官员正在重新审视基于学校的警察和严格纪律政策的影响,以更好地了解潜在的学业和心理后果。