Institutional betrayal refers to the pain and disorientation that arise when an institution charged with care or protection—such as a public school—becomes the source of harm. This betrayal is often layered: not just the initial failure to support a student, but the denial, deflection, or cover-up that follows. For families of disabled or neurodivergent children, it often feels like being gaslit by an entity that claims to be inclusive.
Examples include schools that ignore parent concerns until there’s a crisis, rewrite the narrative to protect staff, or pressure families into silence through appeals to ‘teamwork’ or ‘tone.’ Institutional betrayal is not simply about mistakes—it’s about harm that is embedded in structures, routines, and strategic omissions.
The impact is profound. Families may lose trust in the entire system, withdraw children, or internalise guilt and confusion. Students may learn that even when they speak up, no one will listen—or worse, that speaking up leads to retaliation. Naming this betrayal is a powerful step toward repair and prevention, but most schools are still deeply uncomfortable acknowledging it exists at all.
-
Institutional responses to complaint
I have been reading Sara Ahmed’s Complaint! and it almost feels as though I have been working backwards. I wish…
-
The cancellation
When the principal cancelled the volleyball game, she did more than remove an afternoon of play from a…
-
Fuck your independence dogma
How schools use ‘self-reliance’ to justify abandoning disabled kids. They told me my daughter needed to build her…
-
Why schools use collective punishment to stay in control
Some of our articles speak in a more academic voice, especially when we’re naming systems that silence or…
-
Why outspoken mothers face retaliation for advocacy in BC schools
Some of our articles speak in a more academic voice, especially when we are naming systems that silence…
-
The orange shirt I folded
I was folding laundry late one night, brain running on the kind of background grief that rarely quiets,…
-
A thousand cranes, a thousand truths
When I was a little girl, I folded cranes. Hundreds of tiny, meticulous, brightly patterned creatures, each creased…
-
Coercive proceduralism, bandwidth theft, and the colonisation of neurodivergent childhood
Families of neurodivergent children are often coerced into endless therapy to access school support—yet the harm lies in…
-
Procedural policing of pain: what happens if I keen?
Keening—the sad, piercing wails often heard at a funeral for a child—is a human expression, older than the…
















