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Institutional harm refers to harm that arises from the policies, practices, or decisions of an organisation rather than from the actions of a single individual. In school settings, institutional harm can occur when systems are structured in ways that repeatedly produce negative outcomes for students—for example through inaccessible environments, failure to implement accommodations, exclusionary discipline, delayed responses to safety concerns, or processes that make it difficult for families to obtain support. Even when individual staff members are trying to help, the overall structure of the system may still produce harm if resources, policies, or decision-making processes create persistent barriers. Institutional harm often becomes visible through patterns rather than isolated incidents. Recognising institutional harm shifts the focus from blaming individuals to examining how systems can be redesigned to better protect student safety, dignity, and access to education.

This page addresses physical restraint, isolation, crisis intervention, and unsafe school conditions in BC schools, and specifically their impact on disabled and neurodivergent children, who are disproportionately subjected to these practices. A child in crisis is a child whose nervous system…

This page addresses punitive discipline and behaviour management practices in BC schools, and specifically their impact on disabled and neurodivergent children, who bear a disproportionate share of their harm. When a school applies a behaviour system to a disabled child without…

When a school fails to accommodate a disabled child, it rarely announces the failure plainly. The accommodation does not arrive; the IEP goal sits unimplemented through term after term; the education assistant’s hours are quietly reduced without consultation; the psychoeducational assessment…

Exclusion takes many forms in BC schools, and most of them have been given names designed to obscure what they are. A “gradual entry plan” is a partial schedule. A “room clear” is the isolation of a disabled child in an…