Department of Sociology, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States of America.
FXB Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard University T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2023 Jul 26;18(7):e0287701. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0287701. eCollection 2023.
BACKGROUND & METHODS: Youth of color are surveilled and arrested by police at higher rates than their White peers, contributing to racial inequities across the life course and in population health. Previous research points to schools as an increasingly relevant site for youth criminalization, but existing studies emphasize within-school mechanisms, with limited analysis of policing in surrounding school areas. To fill this gap, we study changes in police arrests of youth after initial COVID-19 school closures in 2020 across four US cities overall and in relation to public school locations. We analyze geocoded arrest records and use interrupted time series negative binomial regression models with city and month fixed effects to estimate change in weekly arrest rates among White, Black, and Latinx youth. We estimate arrest densities within school areas before and after school closures using spatial buffers of 300 feet.
In the immediate weeks and months following COVID-19 pandemic school closures, youth arrest rates fell dramatically and with lasting impacts compared to other age groups. During the period of remote learning, weekly youth arrest rates declined by 54.0% compared to youth arrests rates in 2019, adjusting for city and seasonality (Incident Rate Ratio 0.46, 95% CI: 0.41, 0.52). We estimate Black youth weekly arrests fell from 43.6 to 16.8 per 100,000, vs. 4.6 to 2.2 per 100,000 among White youth. However, Black youth arrest rates during the remote learning period were still nearly 5 times that of White youth pre-pandemic. We also find that youth arrest rates declined during two school closure periods: at the start of the pandemic in 2020 and during Summer 2019. A spatial analysis shows Black and Latinx youth arrest densities in the surrounding 300 feet of K-12 schools were at least 15 and 8.5 times that of White youth, respectively, in both pre- and remote-learning periods.
Black and Latinx youth face a higher likelihood of being arrested near a school than do White youth and older age groups, and racial inequities in arrests remains after school closures. Our findings show school closures significantly reduced arrests of urban youth of color, and policies addressing youth criminalization and structural racism should consider the joint spatial context of schools and policing. Although school closures may have resulted in learning loss and harms to youth wellbeing, closures interrupted comparatively high levels of arrest for Black and Latinx youth.
与同龄的白人相比,有色人种青年被警察监视和逮捕的比例更高,这导致了整个生命过程和人口健康方面的种族不平等。先前的研究指出,学校是青年犯罪日益相关的场所,但现有研究强调了校内机制,对学校周边地区的治安工作分析有限。为了填补这一空白,我们研究了 2020 年新冠疫情初期学校关闭后,美国四个城市的白人、黑人、拉丁裔青年的警察逮捕率的变化,以及与公立学校位置的关系。我们分析了地理编码的逮捕记录,并使用城市和月份固定效应的中断时间序列负二项回归模型,估计了白人、黑人、拉丁裔青年每周逮捕率的变化。我们使用 300 英尺的空间缓冲区,在学校关闭前后估计学校区域内的逮捕密度。
在新冠疫情大流行学校关闭后的几周和几个月里,与其他年龄组相比,青年逮捕率大幅下降,并产生了持久的影响。在远程学习期间,每周青年逮捕率与 2019 年相比下降了 54.0%,调整了城市和季节性因素(发病率比 0.46,95%置信区间:0.41,0.52)。我们估计黑人青年每周逮捕人数从 43.6 人降至 16.8 人/每 10 万人,而白人青年从 4.6 人降至 2.2 人/每 10 万人。然而,在远程学习期间,黑人青年的逮捕率仍接近新冠疫情前白人青年的 5 倍。我们还发现,青年逮捕率在两次学校关闭期间都有所下降:2020 年大流行开始时和 2019 年夏季。一项空间分析显示,在预学习和远程学习期间,黑人青年和拉丁裔青年在 K-12 学校周边 300 英尺范围内的逮捕密度分别是白人青年的至少 15 倍和 8.5 倍。
与白人青年和年龄较大的群体相比,黑人青年和拉丁裔青年在学校附近被逮捕的可能性更高,而在学校关闭后,逮捕方面的种族不平等仍然存在。我们的研究结果表明,学校关闭显著减少了城市有色人种青年的逮捕,解决青年犯罪和结构性种族主义的政策应该考虑学校和治安的联合空间背景。尽管学校关闭可能导致学习损失和对青年福利的伤害,但关闭中断了黑人青年和拉丁裔青年相对较高水平的逮捕。