Alvin Chang takes a look at school
district secession in a piece for Vox.
The Advocate School
district secessions more difficult in Louisiana, but other states have more safeguards, report says
Not exact matches
Outside of the smaller number of
districts where
secession is taking place, trends in segregation are more complicated, since the student population has become more diverse over time, Steve Rivkin writes in an article for Education Next.
Our culture of home rule and the state's profligate granting of
secessions to segregated portions of towns has resulted in what Paul Tractenberg calls «apartheid
districts,» or
districts with intense segregation, and what the late Alan Karcher called «municipal madness.»