Reports & Resources

Our Reports

#AssaultAtSpringValley: The Legacy of Lynching in School Policing

#AssaultAtSpringValley: The legacy of lynching in school policing analyzes 460 school policing assaults to assess the extent to which school policing places students at risk of physical and sexual assault. Additionally, the report utilizes two lynching datasets to explore the relationship between lynching in the U.S. and current school police violence, demonstrating that school policing assaults are acts of state sanctioned violence that extend the legacies of lynching into the modern classroom.

Resources

Protecting Immigrant Students Action Kit

Since taking office on January 20, 2025, the Trump-Vance administration has taken countless steps to irreparably harm communities across the country. Our students and immigrant communities are at the forefront experiencing these harms, as law enforcement violates their schools and safest places within their communities, all in the name of immigration enforcement that aims to break apart their families and force beloved community members into the shadows. 

We hope that by sharing a current landscape and various resources, we can help inform and support organizing efforts within communities so that they may protect themselves and their neighbors and hold their local power structures accountable for supporting its residents.

Luci & Anthony Fight Back! How School Surveillance Harms Students

This zine workbook is a guide to help understand how surveillance is used to criminalize and police students at school, at home, and in their communities. As the National Campaign, we define school surveillance as the state, its agents, and the private sector’s monitoring and interpreting of information and data to control, punish, criminalize, police, and profit off of our students, families, and communities. Schools are increasingly using surveillance as a false solution for real issues that young people are facing – often with little evidence, oversight, or accountability. School surveillance is an over $3 billion industry, fueled in part by federal laws that provide grant money for schools to spend on keeping students “safe.”