抵牾是什么意思| 行经是什么意思| 路由器什么牌子好| 月经量少吃什么调理快| 雨后的彩虹像什么| 脑挫伤是什么意思| 霉菌性阴炎用什么药好得快| 胰岛素高是什么原因| 拜阿司匹林和阿司匹林有什么区别| 左眼皮跳是什么预兆呢| 灰色裤子配什么上衣好看| 吹空调流鼻涕吃什么药| 茶水费是什么意思| 舌苔黑是什么病| 疾控中心是做什么的| 西太后手表什么档次| 小孩为什么经常流鼻血| 太阳一晒脸就红是什么原因| 晞字五行属什么| 阴部潮湿是什么原因| 忘恩负义的负是什么意思| wink是什么意思| 什么叫房颤| 耳结是什么原因造成的| ll是什么意思| 凌迟是什么意思| 干邑是什么意思| 什么辕什么辙| 什么克风| 乙型肝炎病毒表面抗体阳性是什么意思| 赵本山什么时候去世的| 罗纹布是什么面料| 为什么一直流鼻血| 眼皮老跳是什么原因| 脂浊是什么意思| 一个马一个并念什么| 河豚为什么有毒| 耽美什么意思| 零申报是什么意思| 鳞状上皮增生什么意思| 茯苓长什么样| 肺部感染吃什么药效果好| 胆结石什么原因引起的| 试纸一深一浅说明什么| 蛋白粉什么牌子好| 因人而异什么意思| 走马灯什么意思| 低血压是什么症状| 晕车喝什么| 三个火念什么| 健康证照片用什么底色| 红斑狼疮是什么病图片| 做梦掉牙齿是什么意思周公解梦| 三魂七魄是什么| 深圳副市长什么级别| 四眼狗有什么迷信说法| 紫癜病是什么病| 头疼呕吐吃什么药| geya是什么牌子的手表| 疱疹用什么药好得快| decaf是什么意思| 什么时候可以上环最好的| 手上长水泡痒用什么药| 美国报警电话为什么是911| 牙齿发软是什么原因| 外阴痒用什么洗| 木危读什么| guess是什么品牌| 美纹纸是干什么用的| 菠萝蜜什么季节最好吃| superman什么意思| 自然卷的头发适合什么发型| 上火耳鸣吃什么药最好| 煮黑豆吃有什么功效| 养胃吃什么好| 生肖猴和什么生肖最配| 1963年是什么年| 大三阳吃什么药好| 人工念什么字| 龟头炎用什么药膏| 脾胃虚寒吃什么药好| 什么阻力| 贝壳吃什么| 食管反流用什么药| 张家界地貌属于什么地貌| 什锦菜是什么菜| 陈晓和赵丽颖为什么分手| 喝苹果醋有什么好处和坏处| 明了是什么意思| 走路出汗多是什么原因| 小孩子肚子痛吃什么药| 情不自禁的禁是什么意思| dell是什么牌子的电脑| 梦见摘丝瓜有什么预兆| 什么食物含维生素a| 花儿为什么这样红歌词| 心里烦躁是什么原因| 什么是闭口| 萎缩性胃炎吃什么药能治好| 私是什么意思| 血糖高什么不能吃| 尿酸高的人吃什么食物好| 康康是什么意思| 史密斯夫妇什么意思| hbsag是什么意思| 静脉曲张 看什么科| 女生吃什么能淡化胡子| 支气管挂什么科| 凤凰男是什么意思| 白羊和什么星座最配| bld是什么意思| 长期腹泻是什么病| 疝气是什么病怎样治疗| 西布曲明的危害及副作用分别是什么| p是什么意思医学| 原位杂交技术检查什么| 肝小钙化灶是什么意思| 93年属什么的生肖| 头晕耳鸣是什么原因引起的| mens是什么意思| 可字属于五行属什么| 鸟是什么生肖| 阴道口溃疡用什么药| 脉搏是什么意思| 气血虚吃什么| 讥讽的笑是什么笑| 澳门是什么时候回归的| 甲虫吃什么食物| 奶油小生什么意思| 大蒜有什么功效| 毛重是什么| 西米是什么做成的| 做梦梦见前男友是什么意思| 折耳根是什么| 什么是特异性皮炎| 田螺姑娘是什么意思| 透析是什么意思| 翼龙吃什么食物| 众里寻他千百度是什么意思| 碳是什么| aut0是什么意思| ipf是什么病| 脆皮鸭什么意思| 人参适合什么人吃| 晚上睡觉口干舌燥是什么原因| 做b超可以检查出什么| 南方的粽子一般是什么口味| dht是什么意思| 空调多少匹是什么意思| 梦见抓鱼是什么意思| 漂脱是什么意思| 压迫硬膜囊是什么意思| 什么是血脂| 自在什么意思| 黄芪和北芪有什么区别| 祠堂是什么意思| 看演唱会需要准备什么| 是什么为什么怎么办| 人流后吃什么最补子宫| 肾囊肿有什么症状表现| 睡觉后脑勺出汗多是什么原因| 猫怕什么气味| 得寸进尺是什么生肖| 惨绿少年什么意思| 女人左眼皮跳是什么预兆| 什么时候排卵| 三班两倒是什么意思| 男人右眉毛里有痣代表什么| 梦见老公出轨预示什么| 吃什么东西可以除湿气| 三人死亡属于什么事故| 脚凉吃什么药| 在什么中间| 血糖仪什么牌子的好用又准确| 鱼不能和什么食物一起吃| 小狗什么时候断奶| 什么是梅花肉| 玉皇大帝叫什么名字| gcp是什么意思| barbie是什么意思| 夜字五行属什么| 交配是什么意思| 南辕北辙是什么意思| 续弦是什么意思| 世界上笔画最多的字是什么字| 包皮龟头炎用什么药膏| 嗓子疼咳嗽挂什么科| 潜意识是什么意思| ercp是什么检查| 做包皮挂什么科| 十一月二十九是什么星座| 肆无忌惮的意思是什么| 孔雀的尾巴像什么| 念珠菌阳性是什么意思| 早上起来有痰是什么原因| 飞天是什么意思| 成年人改名字需要什么手续| feedback是什么意思| 轻度脂肪肝什么意思| 眼睛红红的是什么生肖| 帕斯是什么意思| 尿液有泡沫是什么原因| 感冒喝什么汤| 每天吃一根黄瓜有什么好处| 为什么要小心吉普赛人| 美白吃什么| 含漱是什么意思| pf是什么意思| 爰是什么意思| 爱说梦话是什么原因| 肝肾阴虚吃什么中成药| 药师是干什么的| 电头是什么| 6.20什么星座| 梦见大蟒蛇是什么征兆| 胸疼挂什么科| 荷花代表什么| 女生喜欢吃酸说明什么| 妇炎康片主要治什么妇科病| 腿疼膝盖疼是什么原因| 输血前常规检查是什么| 乳酪和奶酪有什么区别| 男人左手有痣代表什么| 阿q精神是什么意思| 什么的去路| 什么叫传统文化| 为什么小腹总是胀痛| 乙肝恢复期是什么意思| 容易静电的人说明什么| yet是什么意思| 早泄吃什么药好| 改善是什么意思| 口引念什么| 鱼水之欢是什么意思| 粉瘤不切除有什么危害| 699是什么意思| 办身份证要带什么| 相刑什么意思| 摔伤用什么药好得快| 甲沟炎涂抹什么药膏最有效| 痈疽是什么意思| x线检查是什么| 维生素d滴剂什么时候吃最好| 商朝之后是什么朝代| 卖萌是什么意思| 什么什么不安| 乳腺点状钙化是什么意思| 心脏消融术是什么手术| 什么样才是包皮| 1943年属什么生肖| 三高人群适合吃什么| msv是什么单位| 什么东西进去是硬的出来是软的| 房速与房颤有什么区别| 乘晕宁又叫什么| 心动过速吃什么药| 为什么可乐能溶解鱼刺| 二聚体测定是什么| 鸡胗是什么| 1310是什么意思| 吃什么能长胖| 吃什么水果对皮肤好又美白| 小仓鼠吃什么| 多才多艺是什么生肖| 百度Jump to content

镜花水月什么意思

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
百度 美国游客排在第三位,共有193,985人,其次是日本游客117,300人,澳大利亚游客是50,404人。

The youth control complex is a theory developed by Chicano scholar Victor M. Rios to describe what he refers to as the overwhelming system of criminalization that is shaped by the systematic punishment that is applied by institutions of social control against boys of color in the United States. Rios articulates that there are many components of this complex which are enacted upon youth throughout their daily lives. For example, "while being called a 'thug' by a random adult may seem trivial to some people, when a young person is called a 'thug' by a random adult, told by a teacher that they will never amount to anything, and frisked by a police officer, all in the same day, this combination becomes greater than the sum of its parts."[1][2] Scholars trace the origins of the youth control complex back to the mid-1970s. In addition, the criminalization and surveillance of Black and Latino bodies increased in the post-9/11 era.[3]

Rios notes that the youth control complex affects how youth perceive their futures and has deep negative psychological consequences for the mental health of Black and Latino boys while also normalizing harmful practices, such as transforming schools into prison-like institutions and proliferating child abuse. The youth control complex involves both symbolic and material criminalization and its impact on Black and Latino youth is described as intentional to funnel them into the school-to-prison pipeline, rather than benign. Rios himself experienced contact with this system of criminalization growing up in Oakland, California and drew on his personal experience as well as interviews with other youths of color in developing the theory.[1][4][3] Rios also envisions a "youth support complex" as a potential solution to the youth control complex. This new model would shift decision-making power from school administrators and law enforcement to students themselves.[1]

History

[edit]

According to scholar Henry A. Giroux, the origins of the youth control complex in America begin with the shift to a neoliberal state in the mid-1970s. Through the war on poverty, which manifested as a war on crime, law enforcement began targeting Black and brown bodies in the 1980s. In the mid-1990s, the rise in high-profile school shootings ushered more law enforcement into schools as school resource officers. Finally, the Bush administration's post-9/11 war on terror led to the creation of a racialized warfare state that relied heavily on the surveillance and criminalization of children of color. All these historical events contributed to the creation of the school-to-prison pipeline in American public schools.[5] Scholars like Victor M. Rios and Paul Hirschfield have also proposed solutions to the school-to-prison pipeline, such as the youth support complex and restorative justice.[1][6]

Enactment

[edit]

The youth control complex is enacted upon boys of color through a host of institutions, including "schools, families, businesses, residents, mass media, community centers, and the criminal justice system," before they ever commit a potential criminal offense.[1] This system of social control exerts harsh punishments whenever youth fail to follow directions, exerting a zero-tolerance approach from a very young age. As Rios states, "these young people experienced a kind of social death; they were outcasts before they even committed their first offense. This kind of targeting creates a system that metes out brutal symbolic and physical force on young people." The complex is enacted within a racist culture that Rios describes as "obsessed with control."[4]

Within this complex, young people lose themselves because of the violent way in which they are treated. Those in power criminalize their everyday behaviors, such as style of dress, and treat them as deviant. Rios compares the inside experience of the youth control complex to that of a pinball in of a pinball machine.[1] Additionally, Rios notes that the intentions of this complex are ultimately enacted in order to trap youth of color through management, control, and incapacitation, all of which direct them towards incarceration, recidivism, subjugation, exploitation, and death.[2]

Legal scholar Kate Weisburd applies the youth control complex in an analysis of youth electronic monitoring. Weisburd states that electronic monitoring is being enacted by authority figures as a substitute to youth incarceration, who claim that it "effectively rehabilitates," "lowers incarceration rates," and is "cost-effective." However, she finds that there is no empirical evidence to support these claims. Instead, Weisburd determines that electronic monitoring is likely more harmful because it institutes a constant and demanding system of mass surveillance. Monitors must be constantly serviced by youth detainees at all times with the constant threat of incarceration and punishment looming. Weisburd describes how some youth are expected to charge the device daily, remain in their homes unless attending school (otherwise activity would have to be approved 48 hours in advance), and call the electronic monitoring office 3 times per day. Any minor violations result in youth being taken into custody, separated again from their homes and families. This process of separation may occur repeatedly and has intense psychological implications on youth.[7]

In educational institutions, scholar Henry A. Giroux states that Columbine (1999) contributed to the developed of policies and practices of social control in schools: "Rather than giving rise to a concern for young people, Columbine helped to put into place the development of a youth control complex in which crime has become the fundamental axis through which children's lives are both defined and monitored while the militarization of schools became the order of the day." Giroux states that this heightened practices of treating students like prisoners, and school like prison, especially for youth of color, "who are too often considered as utterly disposable."[3]

Statistical evidence

[edit]

There are numerous statistics which illuminate the presence of the youth control complex:

  • 95% of all juveniles sent to adult courts (tried as adults) are youth of color.[2]
  • In California, youth of color are 2.5 times more likely than white kids to be tried as adults and 8.3 times more likely to be incarcerated by adult courts.[2]
  • In Florida, pretrial juvenile detention has been found to have significantly harsher negative effects on downstream case outcomes (such as dismissal, conviction, and sentencing) for Black youth than for their White and Latino counterparts.[8]
  • In 2003, 12% of all Black men in their twenties were incarcerated, and almost 4% of Latino men.[2]
  • A Black male born in 2001 has a 1 in 3 chance of being incarcerated; a Latino male has a 1 in 6 chance.[9]
  • In states such as California, where the Latino population is much higher, Latino youth make up 60% of the state's juvenile detainees and 36% of the state youth prison population.[2]
  • In California, Black youth make up only 7.8% of the state population, yet comprise approximately 30% of the state's juvenile detainees.[2]

Effects

[edit]

Scholars describe how effects of the youth control complex often result in long-term consequences for boys of color. Some psychological implications include the development of extreme anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and different forms of behavioral disorders that are viewed as disruptive.[7] Alex S. Vitale mentions that the complex also "undermines their life chances by driving them into economic and social failure and long-term criminality and incarceration."[10]

As this complex is enacted, Rios notes that youth of color begin to internalize their own criminalization because "they are already seen as suspects by many in the community." As a result, they develop "identities that they often wish they could renounce" and in some cases end up embracing the criminality they are already expected to commit.[2]

For Rios, the youth control complex reveals that there is a "crisis of 'governance'," or a failure on the part of institutions which claim to be for the people, but actually use criminalization to govern and control them. When enacting this system of social control, Rios states that the government becomes "an abusive step-parent figure, beating its children and throwing them in a room with no windows nor doors," normalizing and justifying child abuse in the process.[2]

Solutions

[edit]

Victor M. Rios proposes a "youth support complex" as the solution to the youth control complex. He calls on lawmakers, law enforcement, educators, and community members to create a system that empowers young people to rectify their mistakes and engage in building their own futures. Rios also calls for the end of zero-tolerance policies in schools that mandate strict, sweeping punishments for designated behaviors regardless of context.[11] Other scholars advocate for the implementation of restorative justice in schools. Restorative justice focuses on conflict resolution rather than punishment. In addition to in-school arrests, restorative justice provides an alternative to suspensions and expulsions, which isolate students from the school community and often lead to out-of-school arrests. Peacemaking and conferencing practices give legitimacy to school authorities while also elevating the voices of youth.[6]

State legislators have also made efforts to end the school-to-prison pipeline. For example, Virginia Senate Bill 3, which was passed in the Virginia General Assembly in July of 202, prohibits law enforcement from charging students with disorderly conduct during the school day or at school events.[12] Also part of the package was SB 729, which abolished a law that required school principles to refer student misbehavior to local law enforcement.[13] Senator Jennifer McClellan, who sponsored the bill, is also concerned with equipping school officials and law enforcement with proper information about adolescent psychology. She said in an interview to AP News, "Everyone in the school building that interacts with kids, but especially school resource officers and school board members who ultimately make decisions about the code of conduct and discipline, need to have basic training on child brain development."[14]

Local officials are also making changes at the school board level. For example, in October 2020, the Richmond school board in Richmond, Virginia approved a plan to appoint a committee charged with overseeing school resource officers, as in-school juvenile arrests began skyrocketing in the district. During the 2018-2019 and 2019-2020 school years, there were 400 arrests in Richmond Public Schools. The proposal passed after a plan to ban police officers from schools failed in a 5-to-4 vote.[15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Rios, Victor M. (2011). Punished: Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys. New York University Press. pp. xiv, 40–42.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rios, Victor M. (2007). "The Hypercriminalization of Black and Latino Male Youth in the Era of Mass Incarceration". In Steinberg, I.; Middlemass, K.; Marable, M. (eds.). Racializing Justice, Disenfranchising Lives: The Racism, Criminal Justice, and Law Reader. Palgrave Macmillan US. pp. 17–21. ISBN 9780230607347.
  3. ^ a b c Giroux, Henry A. (3 November 2009). "Ten Years after Columbine: the tragedy of youth deepens". Policy Futures in Education. 7 (3): 356–57. doi:10.2304/pfie.2009.7.3.356. S2CID 140400164.
  4. ^ a b Rios, Victor M.; Vigil, James Diego (2017). Human Targets: Schools, Police, and the Criminalization of Latino Youth. University of Chicago Press. pp. 5–6. ISBN 9780226090993.
  5. ^ Giroux, Henry (2010). "Locked Up: The Youth Crime Complex and Education in America". JAC. 30 (1/2): 11–52. JSTOR 20866938.
  6. ^ a b Hirschfield, Paul (2018). "The Role of Schools in Sustaining Juvenile Justice System Inequality". The Future of Children. 28 (1): 11–36. doi:10.1353/foc.2018.0001. JSTOR 26641545. S2CID 81505504.
  7. ^ a b Weisburd, Kate (2015). "Monitoring Youth: The Collision of Rights and Rehabilitation" (PDF). Iowa Law Review. 101: 297–330.
  8. ^ Thomas, C.; Wolff, K.; Baglivio, M. (2022). "Understanding juvenile pre-adjudicatory detention and front-end juvenile case processing: The moderating role of race". Journal of Criminal Justice. 81 (1): 101916. doi:10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2022.101916. S2CID 248041465. Retrieved 2 June 2022.
  9. ^ Giroux, Henry (2010). "Locked Up: The Youth Crime Complex and Education in America". JAC. 30 (1/2): 11–52. JSTOR 20866938.
  10. ^ Vitale, Alex S. (2017). "Gang Suppression". The End of Policing (E-book). Verso Books. ISBN 9781784782917.
  11. ^ Rios, Victor (2011). Punished : Policing the Lives of Black and Latino Boys. New York: New York University Press. pp. 157–168. ISBN 9780814769324.
  12. ^ "SB 3 Disorderly conduct; students". Virginia's Legislative Information System.
  13. ^ "SB 729 School principals; incident reports". Virginia's Legislative Information System.
  14. ^ Shillingford, Brendan (December 3, 2020). "New Virginia laws seek to close 'school-to-prison pipeline'". AP News.
  15. ^ Pauly, Megan (October 5, 2021). "Police officers will remain in Richmond Schools, despite school-to-prison pipeline effect". NPR.
[edit]
精液是什么 整夜失眠是什么病 进仓是什么意思 天兵神将是什么动物 什么筷子好
福星高照是什么生肖 车加尿素起什么作用 女团是什么意思 菌群异常是什么意思 18k金是什么材质
晚上睡觉多梦是什么原因 hcg翻倍不好是什么原因造成的 当归不能和什么一起吃 什么洗发水最好 后背凉凉的是什么原因
水至清则无鱼什么意思 什么的流着 报恩是什么意思 菠萝蜜什么时候成熟 晚上喝什么茶好
商人是什么意思mmeoe.com 为什么有眼袋是什么原因引起的hcv8jop1ns7r.cn 易孕期是什么时候jasonfriends.com 罗红霉素治什么病hcv8jop5ns5r.cn 女宝胶囊的作用和功效是什么bjhyzcsm.com
叶酸每天什么时候吃最好hcv7jop9ns5r.cn 查尿常规挂什么科hcv7jop7ns3r.cn 安欣是什么电视剧hcv8jop4ns6r.cn 心梗是什么原因造成的hcv8jop1ns0r.cn 骗婚是什么意思hcv8jop3ns8r.cn
外阴炎用什么药膏hcv8jop0ns4r.cn 临床药学在医院干什么wuhaiwuya.com 包皮龟头炎用什么药膏hcv7jop7ns3r.cn 今天什么生肖冲什么生肖hcv8jop2ns3r.cn 一醉方休下一句是什么hcv8jop1ns2r.cn
右下眼皮跳是什么原因hcv8jop4ns6r.cn 道歉送什么花huizhijixie.com 两点水的字和什么有关hcv7jop4ns8r.cn 感冒拉肚子吃什么药hcv9jop4ns5r.cn 职务是什么意思jinxinzhichuang.com
百度