“…ubstantial research highlights that Black students are more likely to be suspended and expelled than their White classmates (see, e.g., U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights, 2016), and scholars argue that these disparities in educational experiences exacerbate disparities in adult criminal justice contact (Wald & Losen, 2003). The reliance on exclusionary discipline, policing, and harsh security measures creates school environments that criminalize youth of color (Kupchik & Ward, 2014;Rios, 2011), as the school-to-prison nexus brings carceral logics from the criminal justice system into schools and normalizes the control and monitoring of people of color (Becker et al, 2017;Sojoyner, 2013). Although existing research underscores how school discipline contributes to racial inequities in shorter term educational outcomes by constructing criminalized identities (e.g., Rios, 2011), the degree to which such experiences shape later-life disadvantage and contribute to long-term disparities is not well established.…”