2019
DOI: 10.11606/0103-2070.ts.2019.143282
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Rios, Victor M. Human targets: schools, police, and the criminalization of Latino youth

Abstract: Resenha do livro de Victor M. Rios. Human Targets: Schools, Police, and the Criminalization of Latino Youth, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2017.

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Cited by 14 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Gender-responsive strategies should focus on the findings that emotional support from teachers is just as important for male adolescents as it is for female adolescents, dismantling the assumption that teachers may be making about Latinx male adolescents-specifically, that Latinx male adolescents do not require as much emotional support from teachers because of their gender. Rather than hiring more police, more focus on employing counselors in schools is needed (Rios, 2017). However, this study suggests that both female and male adolescents require emotional and academic support and that this support may help to alleviate some of the negative outcomes produced by structural inequality.…”
Section: Practice Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 91%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Gender-responsive strategies should focus on the findings that emotional support from teachers is just as important for male adolescents as it is for female adolescents, dismantling the assumption that teachers may be making about Latinx male adolescents-specifically, that Latinx male adolescents do not require as much emotional support from teachers because of their gender. Rather than hiring more police, more focus on employing counselors in schools is needed (Rios, 2017). However, this study suggests that both female and male adolescents require emotional and academic support and that this support may help to alleviate some of the negative outcomes produced by structural inequality.…”
Section: Practice Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…In an ethnographic study, Morris (2012) argued that schools are spaces that prescribe to gender roles, allowing for teachers to lower expectations for male students' academic performance in the classroom. Previous research has demonstrated that Latinx male students are often punished or ignored by educators (Conchas et al, 2012;Huerta, 2015;Rios, 2017), whereas Latinx female students are more likely to perform better academically in high school and eventually graduate (E. J. López et al, 2002;Valenzuela, 1999;Wojtkiewicz & Donato, 1995).…”
Section: Intersectionality and Academic Settingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Gang involvement. There is a growing concern among school faculty, administrators, security personnel, and law enforcement who argue that immigrant students are affiliated with a gang within their schools and engage in violence, illicit substance sales, and crime (Durán, 2013(Durán, , 2018Rios, 2011Rios, , 2017. As noted, opportunity structure approaches stress the structure of US society.…”
Section: Conceptual Argument For a Positive Immigration School-level ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent research has considered the impact of high levels of police contact and police use of force as it relates to mass incarceration (Hinton 2015;Rios 2009Rios , 2017, deleterious health effects (Sewell and Jefferson, 2016), increased deportation (Armenta 2017;Golash-Boza 2014), overall trust in police (Desmond et al, 2016;Fox-Williams 2018), as well as attitudes toward local and national authorities more broadly (Lerman and Weaver, 2014). Studies post-Ferguson find that mainstream news representations largely support official police narratives of instances where Black victims are killed by police, and that digital media is often used to challenge these narratives (Bonilla and Rosa, 2015;Stone and Socia, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%