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Education and Urban Society
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Urban Youth in Correctional Facilities

Segregation Based on Disability and Race

Theresa A. Ochoa

Suzanne E. Eckes

Indiana University

Research indicates that a disproportionate number of minority students are assigned to special education programs in urban school districts. Oftentimes, these programs are inadequate and they deny minority students with special needs a free appropriate public education. These concerns are not only applicable to urban public schools; research also suggests similar problems for youth in correctional facilities. In this article, the authors explore the following issues: segregation and disability in youth correctional facilities and the legal issues involved; the barriers of providing a free appropriate public education in youth correctional facilities; and excerpts from interviews with an incarcerated female with disabilities and one of her teachers regarding her education in an urban juvenile correctional facility.

Key Words: special education • correctional facilities • special education law • segregation • incarcerated youth • disability • race

Education and Urban Society, Vol. 38, No. 1, 21-34 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0013124505280750


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