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Original Article

Student Rights and the Special Characteristics of the School Environment in American Jurisprudence

J.C. Blokhuis

Corresponding Author

Correspondence: J.C. Blokhuis, JD, PhD, Renison University College, University of Waterloo, Canada N2L 3G4.

Email: jcblokhuis@uwaterloo.ca

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First published: 14 August 2014

Abstract

In American jurisprudence, there can be no presumption of constitutional rights coextensive with those of adults for children in any institutional context. This includes public schools, in part because of the legal status of minors and in part because the ‘special characteristics of the school environment’ are predicated on a ‘custodial and tutelary’ relationship between teachers and pupils.