“…Moreover, they represent the more than 70% of youth who are involved in school-related arrests and are more likely to be sentenced as adults, in spite of state and federal legislation to produce more equitable treatment in courts (Brinkley-Rubenstien, Craven & McCormack, 2014; Mendel, 2011; Rodriguez, 2010; Rodriguez, 2007; United States Department of Education, 2012). Consequently, scholars suggest that these disparities are the result of blatant bias or racial discrimination based on social and structural factors (e.g., poverty, population density, female-headed households, racial composition, residential mobility) or legal factors (e.g., penalties for drug crimes, or the aforementioned unfair sentencing practices) and play a significant role for Black versus White youth (Brinkley-Rubinstein, Craven, & McCormack, 2014; Case, 2008; Freiburger & Jordan, 2011; Mitchell & Caudy, 2015; Sampson & Loeffler, 2010). However, more research is needed to disentangle the complex associations among systems involvement, academic outcomes, and the presence of organizational, systemic, and intersectional structural factors impacting Black youth.…”