Rooting out racism in schools

by Good Law Project

Rooting out racism in schools

by Good Law Project
Good Law Project
Case Owner
Good Law Project's mission is to achieve change through the law. We uphold democracy, protect the environment, and ensure no one is left behind.
Closed
on 01st June 2022
£13,690
pledged of £30,000 target from 581 pledges
Good Law Project
Case Owner
Good Law Project's mission is to achieve change through the law. We uphold democracy, protect the environment, and ensure no one is left behind.

Latest: June 1, 2022

Thank you for your support

We are incredibly grateful for your support for this case. 

We haven’t managed to garner the level of support for Sarah’s case, and our further work supporting families experiencing r…

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Schools should be places in which every child feels safe and respected. But for too many children from Black and minoritised communities, that is simply not the case.

Studies have shown that Black students in particular are more likely to be excluded from school, with severe consequences for their futures. Expectations for them tend to be lower and willingness to punish them for perceived wrongdoing tends to be higher.

The challenges and sometimes trauma faced by schoolchildren from minoritised ethnicity backgrounds are well-documented. The recent story of Child Q, a 15-year-old girl strip-searched by police at her school, is a chilling example of a Black child being falsely accused, ‘adultified’, and horribly mistreated.

Earlier this month we were contacted by Sarah* about her children’s shocking experience at an after-school club in London. Sarah’s then five-year-old daughter, who has medical issues, had soiled herself. Rather than taking care of her, the club’s staff made her eight-year-old brother clean her up himself, in full view of other pupils and staff. He says that a staff member told him, “I’m not cleaning her; she’s your sister, you clean her.” When she asked to be taken to the toilet to be cleaned up in private, she was ignored. Thanks to Sarah’s advocacy on her children’s behalf, the school has taken some steps to improve its safeguarding. But Sarah feels that, as a Black mum, she has faced extra obstacles to making her voice heard, which have compounded her family’s trauma.

If racism is to be rooted out of society, it must be rooted out of schools. Increased public awareness, better teacher training and improved regulation are all essential tools to bring about that change. The law is another tool; we believe that empowering pupils and parents to better understand their rights and, where appropriate, enforce them is an essential part of the jigsaw.

To that end, Good Law Project is bearing all the costs incurred by a leading law firm in supporting Sarah with whatever assistance she needs to fight for justice for her family. But Sarah knows, and we know, that her family's experience is not unique.

That's why we are crowdfunding; so we can support not just Sarah and her children, but the so many other families from Black and minoritised communities who have similar experiences to Sarah's.

Thank you for your support. 


The Details: Any money you donate, save for our standard 10% contribution to Good Law Project's core costs, will go to providing legal support for Black and other minoritised families facing racism in schools. We will use that money to supply free specialist legal advice to families like Sarah's.

*We’ve given Sarah a pseudonym to protect her identity. 

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Update 1

Good Law Project

June 1, 2022

Thank you for your support

We are incredibly grateful for your support for this case. 

We haven’t managed to garner the level of support for Sarah’s case, and our further work supporting families experiencing racism in schools, that we had hoped. We will not hit the crowdfunding target of £30,000 and so the very kind pledge you had made will not be taken from your account.

These things do happen; not all of our campaigning strategies succeed. We have been meeting Sarah’s costs of instructing a leading law firm and will continue to meet those costs for so long as she has legally sensible remedies. And we will continue to support families experiencing racism in schools from our own resources.

Thank you again for your kind offer of support for Sarah. And to those of you who support our ongoing work.

Best wishes, and happy Jubilee weekend, 

Jolyon Maugham

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