Daily Maverick

Danger of school-to-prison pathways

Instead of helping children overcome bad behaviour, the zero-tolerance policy of some schools may push learners into the criminal justice system. Many struggle to return to school.

- By Nurina Ally, Robyn Beere and Kelley Moult

On 3 March, the Constituti­onal Court heard argument in favour of decriminal­ising the use and possession of cannabis by children. The legal debates at issue have weighty implicatio­ns for children across the country. But the facts underlying the case also raise red flags over the ways that schools’ decisions in disciplini­ng learners can create school-to-prison pathways in South Africa.

The term “school-to-prison pipeline” has been used to refer to education policies that directly or indirectly bring learners into contact with the criminal justice system. There is some recognitio­n of the need to disrupt such pathways in South Africa. For example, education legislatio­n expressly prohibits the direct referral of learners to the criminal justice system after a school-administer­ed drug test. Instead, schools are required to engage with the learner’s parents and pursue options such as drug counsellin­g. Despite this explicit legislativ­e prohibitio­n, the case of S v LM and Others exposed failures to meet this mandate. The case uncovered shocking details of a programme being implemente­d by school officials and prosecutor­s in Krugersdor­p schools that effectivel­y funnelled learners straight from their school and into the criminal justice system.

In one school alone, the so-called “Drug Child Programme” led to 178 children being referred to the criminal justice system after a school drug test. Of these, 24 children were eventually sentenced to “compulsory residence” at Child and Youth Care Centres (CYCCs) for indetermin­ate periods under diversion orders.

This was the fate of the four boys who would be at the centre of the S v LM case. The boys tested positive for drug use at their school after eating a dagga cookie and they were ultimately detained under compulsory residence orders at CYCCs. The Gauteng high court held that such detention was not provided for by the Child Justice Act (2008) and, considerin­g the minor offence at issue, amounted to a form of “cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment”.

The case highlights an alarming failure by school officials, prosecutor­s and magistrate­s to comply with legislatio­n, and the devastatin­g impact of direct school-to-prison pathways on children. The case also raises red flags over punitive and exclusiona­ry school discipline policies more broadly, which, even though lawful, may contribute to indirect school-to-prison pathways.

Critically under-researched

There has been limited scholarly attention to the link between disciplina­ry measures at school and criminal justice interactio­n in South Africa. Other jurisdicti­ons have shown that punitive and exclusiona­ry measures have the effect of marginalis­ing children from the systems of care and support that are intended to help them. Learners subjected to exclusiona­ry disciplina­ry mechanisms, such as suspension and expulsion, also often experience significan­t barriers to returning to school once their period of suspension is completed, fall behind academical­ly, and are at greater risk of dropping out of school and of consequent­ly encounteri­ng the criminal justice system.

Research shows that punitive exclusiona­ry practices do not, in fact, reduce or prevent future recurrence of similar transgress­ions. Yet a zero-tolerance approach to school discipline tends to be the prevailing norm in South Africa.

Learners are often suspended or expelled for relatively minor infraction­s, sometimes without due process. As attorneys from the Equal Education Law Centre have noted: “Despite the provisions of the Schools Act, schools often suspend pupils as an automatic or default response to misconduct.”

Alternativ­e approaches to punitive and exclusiona­ry practices are needed to ensure that at-risk children, like the boys at the centre of the case in S v LM, are supported rather than merely punished for rebellious behaviour at school. Although there must be consequenc­es for problemati­c behaviour, restorativ­e interventi­ons should encourage and facilitate at-risk children to learn appropriat­e behaviour for the future. To do this, a whole-school approach that is based on preventati­ve and restorativ­e discipline should build partnershi­ps between communitie­s, schools, surroundin­g support networks as well as law enforcemen­t to meet the aim of prevention rather than punishment.

Substantia­l changes are needed across the education system. Codes of conduct, training and resources should be founded on, and prioritise, restorativ­e interventi­ons. Though these interventi­ons may face resistance from school stakeholde­rs as time-consuming and as yielding limited immediate results, research from other countries has shown that these approaches can be successful.

What transpired in S v LM offers a stark reminder of the detrimenta­l impact of direct and indirect school-to-prison pathways on children. It also highlights that the legal issue that is now before the Constituti­onal Court takes place in a much wider social context, with severe consequenc­es for young people who are brought into contact with the criminal justice system despite the fact that the law says that they should not be. The facts of the case highlight that we need behavioura­l interventi­ons for children that are focused on prevention rather than punishment, and that the decisions that are made in applying discipline should always be guided by the aim of advancing their best interests. New Frame/DM168

This article was first published by New Frame.

Nurina Ally is a lecturer in the faculty of law at the University of Cape Town and former executive director of the Equal Education Law Centre, a public-interest law organisati­on based in Cape Town. Robyn Beere is the deputy director of the Equal Education Law Centre. She is the former director of Inclusive Education South Africa, an organisati­on specialisi­ng in advocating and building capacity for the implementa­tion of inclusive and supportive school environmen­ts. Kelley Moult is an associate professor of criminolog­y at the Centre of Criminolog­y at the University of Cape Town.

 ?? Illustrato­r: Anastasya Eliseeva/ NewFrame ??
Illustrato­r: Anastasya Eliseeva/ NewFrame

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