Answer:
Systemic violence and disparate school discipline policies hinder equitable, just, and safe schooling. They also restrict access to social opportunities and civil liberties. Research shows that schooling contexts and social policies set up the conditions for young people of color to experience violence in regularized, systematic, and destructive ways. This policy report centers on questions of race and disparate racial impacts. The authors draw from critical race theory (CRT) to redirect how educators might talk more productively about students’ social contexts, violence, and school discipline. They also explore how CRT might help educators consider how attempts to achieve “law and order” unfairly target students of color with a systemic form of violence that harms their ability to secure equitable, just schooling and social opportunity. The report ends with recommendations for shifting state and local policy to better reflect research evidence on the best approaches to keeping all children safe as they make their way through schools and society. A focus on state and local action becomes critical under the current federal civil rights and education policy context.
Communists did not want the people to be able to gain more money than they allowed and the nobles wanted to make sure nobody moved up in their caste system
Answer:
Swing voters are people who have not made up their minds at the start of the campaign.
Explanation:
A swing vote is that which is not decided and could go, in fact, in various ways and pick one among many candidates (if there are many) or one between two. This type of voter is not affiliated with any particular political party. They could vote for Trump or Bernie Sanders, or could not vote at all. This is a percent of voters that can't be really accounted for as there aren't many ways to catalogue them or to really influence them.