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Wilson Center, 2025
On December 3, 2024, the U.S.-Mexico Foundation and the Woodrow Wilson Center's Mexico Institute hosted the fourth edition of the Convocation program, coined Convocation 4.0. This event brought together thirteen former American, Canadian, and Mexican ambassadors to the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, along with two current ambassadors and various…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Officials, Expertise, Debate
David Martínez-Prieto – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2024
This study analyzes the impact that U.S. curricula have on Mexican transnational returnees. Specifically, this article focuses on the ideological development of the army and imperialism promoted in U.S. schools among Mexican populations. Using a framework that combines critical literacies, transnationalism, and Bourdieu's concepts of…
Descriptors: Power Structure, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Meixi; Kongkaew, Sukanda; Theechumpa, Panthiwa; Pinwanna, Amornrat; Ling, Alison – Comparative Education Review, 2022
We write this article as educators working at Sahasatsuksa school, an urban Indigenous school in Thailand, who also maintain ties with related Redes de Tutoría work in Mexico. This article engages the stories of our trans-Indigenous teacher collective to illustrate how poetic ways of making relatives across time advanced our intellectual, ethical,…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Ethics
Kasun, G. Sue; Scott, Jessica; Kaneria, A. Jyoti; Delavan, M. Garrett – Bilingual Research Journal, 2021
Colonial and decolonial tensions manifested in a unique, Mexican school for the deaf that used Mexican Sign Language for instruction. (De)colonial tensions were inherent in the school's work, from its non-Mexican, Foreign-origin school board to its child-of-deaf-adults principal's vision. We observed the presence of a colonial legacy, decolonial…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Deafness, Sign Language, Mexicans
Dutro, Elizabeth; Haberl, Ellie – Journal of Literacy Research, 2018
Spurred by burgeoning racist and xenophobic immigration policy and rhetoric, we analyzed the writing of seven second-grade children about their experiences of living connections that span the United States-Mexico border. Informed by research on children's "testimonios" in literacy classrooms and Anzaldúa's concept of the border/lands, we…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Childrens Writing, Race, Ethnicity
Solís, Silvia Patricia – Global Studies of Childhood, 2017
Initially written in the form of an essay, this letter is written to my children from a place called Land. It unveils the entanglements coloniality creates in young, racialized, and gendered lives through the colonial logics structuring childhood, memory, and borders. From a diasporic perspective, Land emerges as "flesh" rooted in the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge, Foreign Policy, Children
Marcelín-Alvarado, María A.; Collado-Ruano, Javier; Orozco-Malo, Miguel – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2021
This article develops a qualitative, descriptive, and analytical methodological approach, to critically rethink the problems of cultural and linguistic inclusion that indigenous peoples fase. The modern/colonial world-system and the geopolitics of knowledge that hegemonic countries impose upon others are introduced. Then, this study describes the…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Universities, Educational Philosophy, Educational Change
Namala, Doris – History Teacher, 2019
With the (re-)discovery and gradual transcription and translation of native-language primary sources in the twentieth century, a new branch of Mexican ethnohistory developed around Mesoamerican native-language research. This scholarship has profoundly reshaped the understanding of a history that for centuries had followed a Eurocentric paradigm.…
Descriptors: History, American Indians, History Instruction, Foreign Countries
López-Gopar, Mario E.; Schissel, Jamie L.; Leung, Constant; Morales, Julio – Applied Linguistics, 2021
This article involves the work of four language educators/researchers collaborating on an ongoing longitudinal multilingual participatory action research (PAR) project in a Bachelor of Arts (BA) language teaching program in Oaxaca, Mexico. Overall, this PAR project aims at the co-construction of social justice in ELT in Mexico. In particular, it…
Descriptors: Language Teachers, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, English (Second Language)
Lagunas, Rosalva Mojica – International Review of Education, 2019
Although more than a million people still speak Nahuatl, this number is rapidly diminishing. Historically, Nahuatl was the dominant language of Coatepec de los Costales, a small village in Guerrero, Mexico. The last 50 years have seen a pronounced shift there from Nahuatl to Spanish. The ultimate cause of language shift is a disruption in…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Spanish, American Indian History, Language Maintenance
Gonzales, Laura; Ybarra, Mónica González – English Education, 2020
In this article, we examine fugitivity and fugitive literacies as they are enacted by transfronterizx youth--young people who cross and experience life on both sides of the border between Mexico and the United States. Through a community-based literacy project located on the border between El Paso, Texas, USA, and Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico,…
Descriptors: Geographic Regions, Migrants, Literacy, Community Programs
Anzzolin, Kevin – Hispania, 2017
This article examines Octavio Paz's canonical study of Mexican identity, "El laberinto de la soledad", against the backdrop of the current political environment in the United States; it interrogates how we can make Paz's rich, ambitious text meaningful for today's undergraduates. How can we teach "El laberinto de la soledad" in…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Mexicans, Self Concept, Undergraduate Students
Hamann, Edmund; Perez, William; Gallo, Sarah; Zúñiga, Victor – Equity Assistance Center Region III, Midwest and Plains Equity Assistance Center, 2017
The purpose of this brief is to examine the biases associated with the term "immigrant" and the challenges educators may experience when students are engaged in bi-national education. As the current administration's immigration policies are enacted, many students who have been educated in the United States may soon transition into…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Responsibility, Immigrants, Global Education
Cervantes-Soon, Claudia G. – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2016
Set against colonial narratives of border women and neoliberal ideologies increasingly permeating school systems around the world, this article maps out ways in which a group of young women in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico embody and reconstruct notions of smartness. I draw on Chicana feminist theory to introduce the concept of "mujeres…
Descriptors: Females, Neoliberalism, Feminism, Foreign Policy
Espericueta, José – Hispania, 2015
In his "Relación de Texcoco," Juan Bautista de Pomar (c. 1535-90) takes a political and moral stance against Spanish colonialism in Texcoco and the entire viceroyalty of New Spain. Responding to the "Instrucción y memoria's" (1577) request for information about the history and cultural practices of local populations, Pomar…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mexicans, History, Foreign Policy