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Shirazi, Roozbeh – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2017
This article offers three meditations on the 2016 election of Donald Trump for consideration by the readers of "Anthropology & Education Quarterly": first, to query what is "new" about this political era; second, to draw attention to the performance of political opposition and violences of solidarity; third, to document my…
Descriptors: Presidents, Elections, Political Attitudes, Immigration
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Negrón-Gonzales, Genevieve – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2017
Part-reflection, part-qualitative analysis, the author draws on ten years of qualitative and ethnographic research on undocumented young people in order to make sense of the political possibilities in this moment. I posit there is much to be learned from these undocumented young activists and their struggle as we consider how to respond to the…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Public Policy, Presidents, Qualitative Research
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Vieira, Kate – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2018
A study of migrants' homeland family members in Latvia, a country undergoing drastic political change, this article examines migration-driven literacy-learning in shifting transnational contexts. Building from critiques of place-based literacy ethnographies, it documents three kinds of informal literacy learning--print literacy learning, digital…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Immigration, Foreign Countries, Ethnography
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Gallo, Sarah – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2016
This article draws from an ethnography on Mexican immigrant fathers and their children to examine humor in immigration narratives as acts of resistance. The analysis focuses on the devices employed by a father and daughter during their everyday talk and co-narration of an incident with police officers. Findings illustrate how the form and content…
Descriptors: Humor, Fathers, Daughters, Racial Discrimination
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Hamann, Edmund T.; Morgenson, Cara – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2017
A university professor and high school ESL teacher, both based in Lincoln Nebraska, each write two short essays that detail implications of the Trump administration immigration policies for students, teachers, schools, and communities. The first two dispatches come from the transition period (after Trump won but while Obama still presided) while…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Immigration, Presidents, Public Policy
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DeJaeghere, Joan G.; McCleary, Kate S. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2010
This article examines how Mexican youth's civic identities are being made in school and community settings in relation to discourses and practices of immigration. Taking a transnational approach, we argue that Mexican youth civic identities are an embodiment of security and fear, freedom and vulnerability. The discourse and practices of…
Descriptors: Mexicans, Migrants, Youth, Citizenship
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Gordon, Daryl M. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2010
Dramatic increases in immigration pose challenges for democratic citizenship education to involve national members with different historical memories and current experiences of national belonging. The article draws on ethnographic research with Laotian refugees, who were the target of U.S. violence during the Vietnam War and later became…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Democracy, Citizenship Education, Ethnography
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Hamann, Edmund T.; Reeves, Jenelle – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2012
Extant cultural models articulated in "Flyover Country" print media responses to ICE workplace raids showed a welcome of sorts of Latino newcomers. These models suggest a place for Latino students at school and more broadly for Latino children and parents in these communities. Thus, they index an unwillingness to see Latino newcomers in…
Descriptors: Printed Materials, Immigrants, Models, Textbook Bias
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Wortham, Stanton; Mortimer, Katherine; Allard, Elaine – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2009
Rapid Mexican immigration has challenged host communities to make sense of immigrants' place in New Latino Diaspora towns. We describe one town in which residents often characterize Mexican immigrants as model minorities with respect to work and civic life but not with respect to education. We trace how this stereotype is deployed, accepted, and…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Immigration, Immigrants, Educational Anthropology
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Suarez-Orozco, Marcelo M. – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1996
The current status of immigration issues at both national and global levels is examined. A psychocultural theory is presented of Proposition 187 as a paradigm of economic, demographic, and cultural anxieties produced by current immigration. Several potential outcomes of full implementation of Proposition 187 are explored. (MMU)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnic Discrimination
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Keaton, Trica – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2005
National identity politics in France have taken an interesting turn since the 1980s, a period accentuated by social movements led by youth of immigration who self-asserted in terms of ethnonational origins. Now French-born or -raised youth, stigmatized by those origins, self-identify as French, although they are not so perceived in French society.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Muslims, Acculturation
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van Zanten, Agnes – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 1997
A model relying on state institutions and schools for its transmission, the Republican model, has strongly influenced the perception and treatment of immigrants in France. An analysis of contemporary French schooling shows that the model is still producing cultural assimilation but is less successful in promoting the economic and social…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Economic Factors, Elementary Secondary Education, Foreign Countries