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    There is something deeply exhausting about having the same conversation in 2026 that we were having in 2006. Black girls in the UK are still being sent home, isolated, or disciplined for wearing their hair in braids, locs, or afros. Schools continue to dress it up as “uniform policy” while ignoring the cultural and practical reality of Black hair.
    Let’s be honest. This is not about neatness. It is about control.
    Policies that ban “extreme styles” disproportionately target Black children, because what is considered “extreme” is often just natural texture or protective styling. A slick ponytail on straight hair is “tidy”. Cornrows are “too much”. The bias is obvious, even when institutions pretend it is not.
    What makes it worse is the emotional cost. These are young girls learning early that their natural selves are a problem to be managed. That message sticks.
    We have seen legal challenges, we have seen headlines, and still schools push the line. The question is not whether policies need updating. They do. The question is why it is taking so long.
    At some point, this stops being ignorance and starts being wilful.

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