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Published byBrenda Sims Modified over 8 years ago
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Why Girls Must Matter: PACE Center for Girls Mary Marx, President & CEO Nona C. Jones, Chief External Affairs Officer Amelia Paz, PACE Alumnae
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Presentation Overview What: The Statistics Who: PACE Center for Girls How: Program and Funding Model Why: Mia’s Story Where: Scaling PACE Results Nationally
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WHAT: THE STATISTICS
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Girls in Juvenile Justice In 2010 in the US 480,000 girls were arrested representing 29% of all juvenile arrests In 2010 in Florida, where arrest rates are 34% higher than the national average, 23,498 girls were arrested, representing 31% of all juvenile arrests
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Girls in Juvenile Justice In 2010, the national arrest rate for girls for assault was at its highest in two decades, while boys was at its lowest Nationally, 78% of incarcerated girls have been sexually abused and 70% have a mental health disorder
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Why Girls Become Delinquent Exposure to TRAUMA Physical and/or sexual VIOLENCE Mental and physical HEALTH problems Substance ABUSE Family INSTABILITY and conflict FAILURE in school, particularly middle school
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Why Girls Must Matter GIRLS become women. Women BECOME MOTHERS. Girls and women are 51% of our population Girls of color are more likely to be victims of rape and/or sexual assault
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Why Girls Must Matter Graduation rates disproportionately low and out- of-school suspension and expulsion rates disproportionately high among girls of color Girls with juvenile justice contact are 10 to 40 times more likely to become criminals as adults
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Investment in Girls? $300 million for national public-private My Brothers Keeper partnership Overall foundation giving dedicated to girls and women remains below 7.5% for more than 15 years
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